Spare Parts (audio story): Difference between revisions

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* Mondas began to drift through space, due to the sudden arrival of [[The Moon|a moon]] between Earth and Mondas. This upset the gravitational equilibrium of Mondas, causing it to escape its orbit. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tenth Planet (TV story)|The Tenth Planet]]'')
* Mondas began to drift through space, due to the sudden arrival of [[The Moon|a moon]] between Earth and Mondas. This upset the gravitational equilibrium of Mondas, causing it to escape its orbit. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Tenth Planet (TV story)|The Tenth Planet]]'')
* [[Cyber-Commander]] [[Zheng]] would return for a cameo appearance in [[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]''. That story depicted him as still being operational in [[September]] [[1984]].
* [[Cyber-Commander]] [[Zheng]] would return for a cameo appearance in [[AUDIO]]: ''[[The Reaping (audio story)|The Reaping]]''. That story depicted him as still being operational in [[September]] [[1984]].
* The Doctor's desire to eliminate the Cybermen from history is rather illogical, and certainly contradicts the [[Fourth Doctor]]'s rationale for not destroying the Daleks in ''[[Genesis of the Daleks (TV story)|Genesis of the Daleks]]''. The problematic effects on just the Doctor's ''personal'' timeline are easy to see. Eliminating Cybermen means not only that [[Adric]] might not die, but also that [[Zoe Heriot]] might never start travelling with the [[Second Doctor]] and [[Jamie McCrimmon]], and it would alter the circumstances of his first [[regeneration]].
* The Doctor's desire to eliminate the Cybermen from history is rather illogical, and certainly contradicts the [[Fourth Doctor]]'s rationale for not destroying the Daleks in ''[[Genesis of the Daleks (TV story)|Genesis of the Daleks]]''. The problematic effects on just the Doctor's ''personal'' timeline are easy to see. Eliminating Cybermen means not only that [[Adric]] might not die, but also that:
** [[Zoe Heriot]] might never start travelling with the [[Second Doctor]] and [[Jamie McCrimmon]]
** the Second Doctor might not have encountered [[UNIT]], and therefore the conditions of the [[Third Doctor]]'s [[exile on Earth]] might have been substantially different
** the [[First Doctor]]'s [[regeneration]] might have happened under radically changed conditions
* Nyssa has sympathy with people losing their family. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken]]'')
* Nyssa has sympathy with people losing their family. ([[TV]]: ''[[The Keeper of Traken (TV story)|The Keeper of Traken]]'')



Revision as of 04:37, 13 August 2013

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audio stub

Spare Parts was the thirty-fourth monthly Doctor Who audio story produced by Big Finish Productions. It was released in July 2002. It saw a return to Mondas for Peter Davison's Fifth Doctor and his companion Nyssa, played by Sarah Sutton. This story was the inspiration for two 2006 Doctor Who television episodes; it had a credit in both TV: The Age of Steel and TV: Rise of the Cybermen.

Publisher's summary

"I'm not even sure they are people by the end. They’re just so many tinned left-overs..."

On a dark frozen planet where no planet should be, in a doomed city with a sky of stone, the last denizens of Earth's long-lost twin will pay any price to survive, even if the laser scalpels cost them their love and hate and humanity.

And in the Mat-infested streets, round about tea-time, the Fifth Doctor and Nyssa unearth a black market in secondhand body parts and run the gauntlet of augmented police and their augmented horses.

And just between the tramstop and the picturehouse, the Doctor's worst suspicions are finally confirmed: the Cybermen have only just begun, and the Doctor will be, just as he always has been, their saviour...

Plot

to be added

Cast

References

Species

  • Yvonne has a pet Cybermat.
  • The Doctor tries to fight off a Cyberman with gold, but it has no effect.
  • This story marks the first chronological appearance of a Cyber-Planner. It originates in a union of the brightest minds of the Mondasian Council.
  • Part of the Cybermen design is structured after the Doctor's own brain.
Preview illustration by Martin Geraghty featured in DWM 320

Notes

Continuity

  • This story takes place at the beginning of the Cybermen's creation. Many of its events lead into those of TV: The Tenth Planet.
  • Mondas began to drift through space, due to the sudden arrival of a moon between Earth and Mondas. This upset the gravitational equilibrium of Mondas, causing it to escape its orbit. (TV: The Tenth Planet)
  • Cyber-Commander Zheng would return for a cameo appearance in AUDIO: The Reaping. That story depicted him as still being operational in September 1984.
  • The Doctor's desire to eliminate the Cybermen from history is rather illogical, and certainly contradicts the Fourth Doctor's rationale for not destroying the Daleks in Genesis of the Daleks. The problematic effects on just the Doctor's personal timeline are easy to see. Eliminating Cybermen means not only that Adric might not die, but also that:
  • Nyssa has sympathy with people losing their family. (TV: The Keeper of Traken)

External links