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Doctor Who - Tomb Of The Cybermen DVD

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Tomb of the Cybermen brought the Doctor, Patrick Troughton, into conflict with his silver cyborg nemeses for a third time, following The Tenth Planet (1966) and The Moonbase (1967). The Doctor, Jamie (Frazer Hines) and Victoria (Deborah Watling) join an archaeological expedition on the planet Telos, where they encounter deathtraps, betrayal and a waiting army of frozen Cybermen. Scripted by Kit Pedlar and Gerry Davis, who would later write Doomwatch (1970-72), many of the essentials of the plot anticipate James Cameron's blockbusting Aliens (1986): the barren planet... with abandoned city, the tense wait for a rescue ship, the human traitors, the implacable, more powerful enemy. Unfortunately for a story so centred on logic the characters display a worrying lack of sense; the supposedly highly logical villains assume the Cybermen will just do what they tell them, and the Doctor locks the chief human traitor in a room without first checking it for ray guns! There's also an astonishingly crass racial stereotype with the one black character, Toberman (Roy Stewart) being a muscle-bound, slave-like henchman. Flaws aside this is a superior Doctor Who adventure and a thoroughly entertaining piece of classic television. On the DVD: as ever the BBC have done a fabulous job bringing Doctor Who to DVD, with fully restored sound and picture making Tomb Of The Cybermen the best it has ever looked. A short feature on the disc notes there have been over 16,000 repairs to the image, and includes comparison footage with the unrestored prints. The black and white 4:3 picture is as good as low-budget 1960's television is ever going to look and the mono sound is excellent. The commentary by Frazer Hines and Deborah Watling is a little stilted and takes time to get going--often they just don't know what to say--but contains some interesting trivia for serious fans. Rather more information comes from the detailed production background subtitles, and from a 28-minute convention style panel filmed in 1992 with Hines, Watling and many of the production crew. Also included is 8 mm footage from the end of the previous story, the long lost Evil of the Daleks (1967), 3 minutes of alternative main title tests, a photo gallery, a short introduction by director Morris Barry and a two-minute clip from Late Night Line-up (1967) with Joan Bakewell profiling the BBC Visual Effects department, including unique footage of the Cybermats in colour.--Gary S Dalkin [show more]

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  • DVD Details
  • Reviews (2)
  • Price History
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Released
14 January 2002
Directors
Actors
Format
DVD 
Publisher
BBC 
Classification
Runtime
96 minutes 
Features
Black & White, PAL 
Barcode
5014503103224 
  • Average Rating for Doctor Who - Tomb Of The Cybermen [1967] - 3 out of 5


    (based on 2 user reviews)
  • Doctor Who - Tomb Of The Cybermen [1967]
    DanZzz

    Tomb of the Cybermen, to me, is one of the best Doctor Who episodes ever made. It contains the likes of Patrick Troughton, the Cybermen, a group of scientists with some planning to turn against the others. It sets itself up for a really great episode. The first two, although not containing many Cybermen, do not bore and entertain just as much as the action packed last 2 episodes. The Cybermen themselves are in great form, showing no emotion and give a real sense of fright about them (more than the Cybermen of the 70's and 80's did) .
    Also included on the disc is a documentary called TombWatch made in 1993 after the episode was found, another special feature tells of how the Restoration Team restored the episode, getting rid of scratches, glitches etc and provides it in a good amount of detail. Another good feature is "The Final End" which contains a Dalek battle from the previous story (Evil of the Daleks) and is the only known footage from Episode 7 of that story.
    Unfortuantly because this was released a few years back before 2entertain there aren't as many Special Features as newer DVDs, though that isn't a real problem considering how good the story itself is.

    I give Tomb of the Cybermen a 5 out of 5.

  • Doctor Who - Tomb Of The Cybermen [1967]
    john bunnage

    Don't try to compare this with the recent incarnations of Dr Who.
    Marvel not at the b/w low buget special effects and stilted one liner scripts- a classic being from an out of breath 'extra' 'we had to make it a big one' (sure to get killed off early on!)but just enjoy it for the plot, it's entertainment value and the fact it's part of something special in BBC history.
    Get if only to show your kids how far tv has evolved in approx. 40 years.

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