Doctor Who and the Cybermen
was written by Gerry Davis, based on The Moonbase by Kit Pedler. It was the 12th story to be
novelized by Target Books.
This is an interesting novelization to really look
at. It’s the second Patrick Troughton story
to be novelized and the third story to be novelized with missing episodes. Now unlike The Abominable Snowmen which
is currently missing 5 of its 6 episodes or The Crusade which was
adapted before any of the episodes would have been junked, the two existing
episodes of The Moonbase are two episodes which have always existed in
the archives (and there was a chance Episodes 1 and 3 existed at the time Gerry
Davis novelized the story). Doctor
Who and the Cybermen is the result and as the first novelization to feature
the Cybermen, the title was changed to reflect this. Gerry Davis served as script editor for the
era and cowrote The Tenth Planet and The Tomb of the Cybermen
with Kit Pedler as well as writing The Highlanders with Elwyn Jones and
at the time of novelizing The Moonbase, writing Revenge of the
Cybermen around the same time. Doctor
Who and the Cybermen is an interesting read since it’s early enough that
the Target novelizations were able to experiment with how they would be adapting
the stories and what exactly would be changed before Terrance Dicks became the
dominant author and novels became fairly clear cut adaptations of their
television counterparts before warping again towards expansions in preparation
for the publishing of original Doctor Who novels.
The Moonbase
as a plot is largely unchanged, most of the dialogue is retained, but anything that
might have been adlibbed by Patrick Troughton and company is nowhere to be seen
as it’s clear Davis had access to Pedler’s original scripts for the story. Things are slowed quite a bit, something that
will be repeated in Doctor Who and the Tomb of the Cybermen which I had
an issue with and while it is an issue here, it isn’t as bad as the first half of
The Moonbase is more of a slow burn mystery about what is happening on
the base. It doesn’t quite work when the
title is changed to Doctor Who and the Cybermen so the reader knows that
the Cybermen will be in the novel so the twist is lessened somewhat. There is also a great attempt to get Jamie
integrated into the plot better than he was on television as this was a story
where he was written in at the last minute by adding him in to the back half of
the story as he is still forced with an illness to keep the TARDIS team on the
moon. The second half of the story also
isn’t as poorly served as Davis’ adaptation of The Tomb of the Cybermen,
partially due to the slightly longer page count, although it is only 10 pages,
those 10 pages make up a lot. Some of
the language also hasn’t aged well with some 1960s/1970s sexism still being
there and a slur being used at one point during the book (though that slur was medical
terminology of the time and is used in that context).
Overall, while Doctor Who and the Cybermen has
a reputation for being one of the all time great classic novels, it doesn’t
quite live up to that reputation due to some minor changes that slow things down
and just not adding enough to proceedings.
It is still quite a lot of fun as a novel as Davis does well with the
characters and gives them voice, partially due to being so involved in the
making of the story more than the writing which was not the case for The
Tomb of the Cybermen whose novelization suffered as a result. 8/10.
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