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Doctor Who - The Age of Steel

A few months ago, when the Noise to Signal team first started to think about how we would cover the second series of New Who and this review structure was decided upon, I would never have thought in a million years that five weeks in to the run we'd still be waiting for our first 5 Star episode. Seb Patrick thought The Girl in the Fireplace deserved full marks, but Austin Ross, the main reviewer for that week, thought differently. As it happens, I had similar thoughts about last week's Rise of the Cybermen - a sure fire 5 Star episode for me, but a more reserved 4 star rating was what was forthcoming from Seb's review.

So, the chances are I could well be dolling out 5 red, glimmering stars to this week's conclusion of the Cybermen's return. Yes? Well, let's see, shall we.

Lumic the Cybercontroller and his bitches.
Lumic the Cybercontroller and his bitches.

It's obviously not an easy task to wrap the second half of a two part story than it is to set it all up. For me, Rise of the Cyberman did a brilliant job of creating this odd world, giving us an unsettled feeling and, of course, introducing our main villains, Mr. Lumic and The Cybermen. The assault on the house and the cliff hanger were perfect and my expectations were sky high for the resolution.

I really shouldn't do that.

Anyway, before I go any further I will tell you now that I have rated Age of Steel 4 Stars out of 5. I honestly thought I'd be the first of the NTS team to hand out full marks, but I was sadly disappointed. We'll see why in a moment, but first some good points.

Firstly, the visuals were wonderful. This comes as no surprise to anyone familiar with the original series, as Graham Harper, the director responsible for one of the finest regeneration stories ever, The Caves of Androzani, was the man in charge of the pretty pictures. Also, the Cybermen themselves looked lovely, voiced perfectly and regained all menace and impressiveness they possessed before the regrettable 80s incarnations. In fact, I'd even go out on a limb and say that Mickey/Rickey and Rose and her family stuff was handled well, too. It didn't make me want to claw of eyes out, which is the usual reaction I get, so kudos to the writer Tom MacRae for that achievement.

Second Opinion

To summarise The Age of Steel in a sound: pffft.

I loved the first episode, and thought some of the criticisms of it were unfair. It was a great start, and The Age of Steel was set up to be incredible. Except, it wasn't. It was good. Maybe even great. But somehow that's not enough any more.

The cliffhanger resolution was of Red Dwarf standards of badness. That broken bit of TARDIS suddenly becomes a lethal weapon, does it? It did pick up after that, though, with all the commando type stuff, and Jackie becoming a Cyberman! That was a great concept, but it could have been better; given the trend for sentimentality, I was expecting the cyberised Jackie to find Pete afterwards and die in his arms, or something.

I liked the concept of the Cybs being defeated by their emotions, and the scene where the Doctor and Mrs Whatserface find this out is done well. Tennant came in to his own once again during his scene with the Cyber Controller, with his brilliant hint-dropping speech. And Noel Clarke was great. I don't get the criticism of his acting, or indeed the character of Mickey. I think he was a good cast member, and I'll be disappointed if this is the last we ever see of him.

But overall, it just didn't really live up to its promise. Yes, it had a lot of good, nay great bits, but it simply didn't join up properly, thanks to the skaky plot. Also, I've recently watched Genesis of the Daleks, and this is pretty much the same thing: big mad scientist creating machines supposedly to house life-forms and thus prolong life, but taking out the emotions so that they become heartless killers. I was expecting some Thals to turn up with a bomb at the end.

A good episode, but not as good as it should have been.

However, there was one great big whopping problem with the whole thing. The very fabric that held together all the decent elements of Cybermen and human drama was full of holes the size of your fist.

For a start there was the cliff-hanger resolution. It was quite possibly the worst resolutions I've ever seen in Who, and I've seen plenty of bad ones. Quite how we're meant to believe that a tiny power cell, which was previously only in the charging stages, could suddenly deliver such a huge amount of energy that it *evaporated* anything it touched, is beyond me. Even with bad solutions like that you've got to give some sort of set-up so at least it feels less clunky to the viewer. This, for me, was clunk city.

And that resolution basically set the tone for anything even remotely sci-fi in the rest of the episode. Lines like "I found a file on the mainframe", the constant catch-all solution that is that fucking Sonic Screwdriver (honestly, Doctor, stop waving it about and put it away - the ladies aren't impressed) and the sudden reveal that Mickey can hack computers by just mashing some keys and looking determinedly at an unchanging computer screen were just a few of the bits that had me wincing.

And that's without mentioning the resolution! Oh, the resolution. The idea of deactivating The Cybermen's emotional inhibitors and basically torturing the Cybermen to death was very chilling, and was, in the main, beautifully handled by some nice Cyberacting and pretty damn nasty noises - but the fact that *all this* was brought about by TEXTING a code to Rose's MOBILE and then The Doctor PLUGGING IT IN to some handy slot was just patently ridiculous and stretched my suspension of disbelief well beyond breaking point. I honestly don't think the youth of Britain would be too confused if you actually attempted to write *proper* sci-fi, Tom, and not some watered down, supposedly trendy and 'modern' shit that undermines the whole creepy as hell nature of the scene.

And here in lies the problem with the story. The writer, Tom MacRae seems pretty inept at writing about sci-fi concepts. The reason I loved Rise so much is that it was very light on sci-fi and was concentrating more on setting up this strange, different world and its characters. I loved that and I loved the excellent cliff-hanger he set up - he obviously does stuff like that well, it seems. But, when it came to the real meat of actually taking all those threads and tying them up into a neat second part in an imaginative and believable way he seemed to fall apart. It all seemed messy, slap dash and poorly thought out and was in serious need of someone to step in and do some serious script editing. But, if the Doctor Who Confidential programmes are anything to go by, everyone is too busy getting sexually excited by how wonderful they all are to actually see a shit script when it's staring them in the face.

People may argue that wild leaps of logic and quick fix solutions are part of Doctor Who's pedigree. Well, yes, this is true, but none of those leaps of logic have left me physically convulsing in disgust, and thus upsetting the 15 year old cat perched on my knee. Tom MacRae's appalling writing startled me and my cat into a foul mood for the rest of the evening, something which was only rectified by some much needed genital licking.

"Please, God, make it stop!" - Billie's on set singing proved to be a little distracting.
Lumic the Cybercontroller and his bitches.

However, I thought, in the main, the cast were all at the strongest I've ever seen them. Tennant continues to improve and grow but I would say he's still not got up to Ecclestonian standards yet. Billie managed not to annoy me too much, which is a miracle, as since the series 1 finale she's seemed completely unnecessary. She was an excellent character in series 1 as she and the audience were both learning and growing with The Doctor, but now she's seen it all the character's lost most of her appeal and relegated to a position where I'd just prefer to shush and let The Doctor get on with the interesting stuff. Noel Clarke was great, though, mainly because he is going through the same journey as Rose did in series 1, and that's infinitely more interesting. Also, he seems to know when to piss off before over staying his welcome, too, although his goodbye scene was mawked up to the max, which bothered me quite a bit. It was wasted time that could have been spent on Cybermen kicking some arse.

As with last week, I utterly *loved* John Lumic, with Roger Lloyd Pack putting in what could well be one of the best Who villain performances ever and Nick Briggs confirmed his position as king of the Ring Modulators, with his obvious respect for the villains shining through one again as he delivers the best Cybervoices since Tomb of the Cybermen. Of course, the greatest injustice here is that we didn't see nearly enough of Lumic and his Cyberarmy, which was especially disappointing as I was hoping for a great deal of screen time for the stars of the show.

So, on the whole a very disappointing story, indeed. But, I think a little perspective is in order here. I know it sounds like an obvious thing to say, but even a bad episode of Who at the moment, is still the best thing on TV by quite a way. To give this episode 3 Stars would be perhaps justifiable if I was judging each episode internally, but I'm not going to do that. In the grand scheme of things, this was a remarkable story, even if, by Who standards, it stunk just a little. So, 4 Stars here. I'm saving the lower scores for episode that truly deserve them - and let's hope they never turn up.

4 Stars

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Comments

>the sudden reveal that Mickey can hack computers

Not sudden, really. He hacked into some site or other in the first series. Plus if you followed the games on the BBC who site he hacks into things before you have to play the games.

>me and my cat into a foul mood for the rest of the evening, something which was only rectified by some much needed genital licking.

You want to watch what you imply on the internet, Cappsy...

By Spid
May 22, 2006 @ 9:46 pm

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"You want to watch what you imply on the internet, Cappsy..."

It was a very funny joke of misdirection, and top marks to Cappsy.

I agree totally with the criticisms of this episode. Frustrating use of objects and skills we'd never seen before - suddenly throwing an electro magnet, suddenly having a vial of sleepy potion for the guards, and what are the limits of the Sonic Screwdriver? FOR FUCK'S SAKE. Also, RTD et al had better remember that the real Cybes upgraded voluntarily, because if they forget and bring the emotional inhibitor into a Cybermen episode in our dimension I'll be fully riled.

By James
May 22, 2006 @ 10:29 pm

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"Not sudden, really. He hacked into some site or other in the first series."

It's as sudden as any other handy skill that's only ever mentioned when it's needed. If Rose starts cartwheeling and backflipping again it'll also be sudden, even though her gymnastics were evident in her first episode. They are problems of bad storytelling.

"Plus if you followed the games on the BBC who site he hacks into things before you have to play the games."

Teh canons, etc.

By James
May 22, 2006 @ 10:38 pm

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and Nick Briggs confirmed his position as king of the Ring Modulators, with his obvious respect for the villains shining through one again as he delivers the best Cybervoices since Tomb of the Cybermen.

So was I the only person who couldn't understand a word they were saying, then? It was a major frustration of mine over both episodes.

And can anyone explain to me why the power station blew up?

By Pook
May 22, 2006 @ 10:48 pm

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>It was a very funny joke of misdirection, and top marks to Cappsy.

I know, I was being rude.

>It's as sudden as any other handy skill that's only ever mentioned when it's needed.

As is anything to do with Micky in general.

>And can anyone explain to me why the power station blew up?

Exploding Cybermen near furnaces? It looked pretty anyway.

By Spid
May 22, 2006 @ 11:04 pm

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We're getting rather obsessed with the star ratings here, I think (I'm as guilty of drawing attention to them as anyone else in my reviews, of course)... but you make a good point about how surprising it is that we've now come six episodes without "five-star class".

I would say I expect The Idiot's Lantern to change that... but we've been saying that for three weeks now!

By Seb Patrick
May 22, 2006 @ 11:30 pm

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I enjoyed what I saw of it but then I lost about ten minutes where I was trying to get a pizza delivery from a man who could only barely speak English. You know I live in 'Mount Annan Drive' and he was coming out with 'Mountain?' and then asking me to spell each letter with a five second gap in between. Awful. And then the horrible search for an extra £2.20 when the order was that amount over 20 quid and... I missed quite a lot.

What I did see seemed to be entirely reliant on action movie cliche. Though, well done Noel Clarke and well done bloke from Byker Grove, he was suprisingly good.

By Rad
May 23, 2006 @ 1:50 am

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> But, if the Doctor Confidential programmes are anything to go by, everyone is too busy getting sexually excited by how wonderful they all are to actually see a shit script when it’s staring them in the face.

This is true! To an extent, at least. I don't know what it is but it seems to me that less care has been taken with this season. Not on the effects or directing front, but there's much more of the whole 'it's the all-conquering new Doctor Who, who gives a shit, it's gonna succeed' slapdash element to the stories. The Girl In The Fireplace is the only REALLY good script so far IMO.

The Age of Steel did some things right and some things horribly wrong. Graeme Harper did a great job of making things work that probably felt impossible at the script stage. Namely the mental Bond-style rope ladder scene involving the Cyber Controller falling to his doom in a blaze of exploding power station. I actually think they went too far with that. You've got to stretch your imagination a lot more than usual to buy Lumic actually making it to the rope ladder in the first place. Not to mention all the crap with the computers and Rose's mobile that's already been mentioned. HOWEVER, the character stuff succeeded, particularly with Mickey getting a decent end and Pete Tyler basically telling Rose 'fuck off, I'm not you're dad'. This 2-parter has been quite cruel to Rose (and rightly so, she's become a smug bitch). I don't know where they're going with her character though. Does RTD even know?

By performingmonkey
May 23, 2006 @ 3:13 am

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Oh, and Tennant was excellent in this. And it's the first time I've really thought so. He's always better away from Rose for some reason.

By performingmonkey
May 23, 2006 @ 3:16 am

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Rose definitely seems to be the weakest link in this series, which is a shame given that her character started out so well last year. I'd just like them to give the whole 'relationship' aspect a break.. I don't want companions who fall in love with The Doctor and moon around all the time or get jealous when his attention is taken by someone else, I want them to be gutsy and up for adventure and interesting. They seem to have given Rose a personality transplant this year, and for this viewer at least it simply doesn't work. I'd rather he'd left her behind in the alternative universe and taken Mickey with him on Saturday!

By Pook
May 23, 2006 @ 8:56 am

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And can anyone explain to me why the power station blew up?

Yes, it was the same reason the school blew up in School Reunion.

By Andy M
May 23, 2006 @ 1:28 pm

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