Doctor Who S12E9: Does Ascension of the Cybermen Actually Rise to the Occasion? – 25YearsLaterSite.com

Posted: February 27, 2020 at 2:19 am

Last we met, the Doctor gave the Lone Cyberman what he wanted and now she and the TARDIS fam have to save the world from destruction. Hows that for the beginning of a two-part finale, eh? Wellits not as straightforward as it would seem.

We open with an abandoned baby being found and adopted by a nice Irish couple. This backstory will weave in between the future story where the Doctor and her companions find themselves. But, as far as historical stories go, its compelling in its own right and leads to lots of questions as the episode unfolds. The baby grows up to be a boy named Brendan. He decides to be a police officer, but one day is shot pursuing a robber and falls off a cliffonly to survive. (Please tell me I wasnt the only one waiting for Bowie to start playing before Gene Hunt showed up in some ridiculous sports car. Is there life on Mars? Im happy, hope youre happy too)

Then theres the actual action part of the story. The Doc and her companions show up in the last days of the Cyber Wars. Theres very few humans left and those that are have pulled together a rickety ship with the goal of getting to The Boundary, where they may pass into another world and be safe from the Cybermens grasp. After the Doctors protective efforts are destroyed by Cybermen patrol, she and her companions are split up. Graham and Yaz end up with the few human survivors (Yedlarmi, Ravio and Bescot) and Ryan and Thirteen are left behind with one other human straggler named Ethan. The Doctor steals a Cybershuttle, which she and Ethan are able to hotwire quickly into warp drive.

Yaz and Graham stay hopeful and think about what the Doctor would do when the transport ship theyre on begins to fail. They use what burst of energy they have left to push them into the docking space of a Cybercarrier. Once aboard they try and get the ship up and running, its discovered there are thousands of dormant Cybermen still on deck. It doesnt help that the Lone Cyberman can sense where they are and makes his way to the Cybercarrier where he terrorizes a few of the Cybermen awake by drilling into them and making them feel (which technically, they shouldnt be able to do, but the Lone Cyberman wasnt finished so my guess is he wants others to experience what he does.)

Meanwhile, the Doctor, Ryan, and Ethan have found the Boundary, manned by one person by the name of Ko Sharmus (initially believed to be a place, not a person). He takes the travelers to the shore where the portal opens up to reveal Gallifrey. Yaz has also found a way to communicate with the Doctor across the comms channel and warns theyre on their way but everyones in great danger. And if that wasnt enough, the Master pops up at the last second, much to the Doctors dread.

Whew.

The problems that have plagued this whole season continue to persist. The episode has too much going on and its cluttered with characters we may or may not care about (truly, your mileage might vary here). Then theres the whole side story about Brendan. Is he a Cyberman? A time lord? A Cyberman time lord? And if that wasnt enough, throw in a portal to Gallifrey and the Master rattling on about the timeless child and how this is when everything changes. (Oi, quit stealing River Songs lines, dude.) Also, what about Captain Jack? Or Ruth!Doctor from Fugitive of the Judoon?

What has this season even been about? Over the course of the last nine episodes, weve seen Chibnall try for a so-called traditional season of Doctor Who, filled with aliens and long-time baddies. Some episodes have fared better than others (the Nicola Tesla and Mary Shelley historicals are at the top of my list, along with the yet-to-be explained unknown Doctor) but Chibnall has shown us time and again that he still hasnt quite figured out what to do with the Doctor just yet.

Looking back at Season 11, at least the themes feel consistent. Those ten episodes were a meditation on humanity and what it means to be human or have courage and hope. That approach was at least thoughtful. Throwing the Master and the Cybermen back into the mix so quickly this season seems to undo all the work that Steven Moffat did in Season 10 with Peter Capaldis Twelfth Doctor and Michelle Gomezs dazzling and operatic arc as Missy. Im still hoping this latest incarnation of the Master is from an earlier point in time (pre-John Simms would be fab, thanks) or an alternate dimension all together (which would explain Gallifrey popping up at the end of the episode as well as Ruth!Doctor). One things for certain, the Lone Cyberman is truly terrifying and he made my skin crawl as his drilled into other Cybermen. The overall costume design got to shine this episode, too, showing how incomplete the Lone Cybermans build is (while referencing numerous past Cyber designs).

Theres been so much potential with Thirteen and her companions. Ive desperately wanted more for her and the fam storywise, but Im not sure this is it. Still, theres one more (extended) episode to golets see how many loose ends we can tie up, eh? Weve got all the time in the world, it seems.

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Doctor Who S12E9: Does Ascension of the Cybermen Actually Rise to the Occasion? - 25YearsLaterSite.com

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