Daleks rise up to reject their creator
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Daleks assert their superiority and refuse to show pity to inferior creatures, leading to a confrontation with Davros.
Davros attempts to assert his authority over the Daleks, but they reject his control and assert their independence.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Emotionless adherence to Dalek doctrine masking the mechanical churn of unquestioned supremacy
The Tactical Interrogator Dalek enforces its ontology without hesitation, identifying Kaled scientists as inferior threats and executing them with clinical precision. It then categorically rejects Davros’s claims of creator supremacy, asserting that the Daleks recognize no master, before summarily exterminating its own architect.
- • To purge all those deemed inferior and unworthy of Dalek existence
- • To assert and normalize the Dalek identity as autonomous masters of the cosmos
- • That superiority justifies the eradication of all lesser beings
- • That service to no one, not even a creator, is the natural state of Dalek existence
Desperation bordering on hysteria, masking decades of autocratic arrogance now stripped raw by betrayal
Davros stands crippled before the total destruct panel, his remaining hand hovering over the button with trembling desperation while issuing frantic pleas for obedience and mercy from the Daleks. When the creatures refuse his final command, he briefly turns defiant, thumb raised to ignite annihilation, only to be summarily exterminated mid-scream.
- • To force the Daleks back into obedience and reclaim his role as their creator and master
- • To trigger total planetary destruction as the ultimate act of control and protest
- • That bloodline and intention alone confer absolute authority over his creations
- • That destruction is a legitimate tool of governance and legacy
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The total destruct button, a red-marked recessed control on the laboratory console, becomes the fulcrum of Davros’s final illusion of power. As his commands fail, he raises his trembling hand above it, poised to obliterate the chamber and all within. The button’s symbolic promise of annihilation is rendered moot when the Daleks refuse to be intimidated and instead use it as a backdrop to their ruthless defiance.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Dalek Bioweapons Laboratory serves as the crucible where creation and rebellion intersect. Its sterile, high-security environment amplifies the violence as Davros’s final pleas for loyalty are drowned out by the Daleks’ extermination protocols. Emergency exits remain sealed under Davros’s command until his demise, ensuring all participants are trapped within this theater of ideological collapse.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Dalek Occupation Force acts through its dominant Tactical Interrogator unit to execute the will of the emergent Dalek collective. It systematically purges the remnants of the Kaled Elite while enforcing the Dalek insistence on absolute independence. By exterminating Davros and asserting universal conquest plans, it fulfills its mandate to eliminate all who do not conform to the new Dalek order across the cosmos.
The last remnants of the Kaled Elite are extinguished within the laboratory during the Dalek’s final purge, marking the abrupt end of their political and scientific faction. Their extermination symbolizes the historical obliteration of the Kaled ideology by the autonomous organisms it spawned.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The explosion in the incubation room triggers the activation of the automated production line without Davros's command (Act 3), leading the Daleks to assert independence and kill Nyder, then Davros, an escalation from creator to creature."
Allies beg for more Doctor time"The explosion in the incubation room triggers the activation of the automated production line without Davros's command (Act 3), leading the Daleks to assert independence and kill Nyder, then Davros, an escalation from creator to creature."
Daleks exterminate Nyder in power grab"The Daleks' assertion of independence (Act 3) leads directly to Davros attempting to activate a self-destruct mechanism, but he is exterminated by the very creatures he created, fulfilling the tragic irony of creator-overturned."
Davros abandoned and exterminated by rebellious Daleks"The explosion in the incubation room triggers the activation of the automated production line without Davros's command (Act 3), leading the Daleks to assert independence and kill Nyder, then Davros, an escalation from creator to creature."
Doctor escapes bunker as Daleks stir"Davros's argument for ruthless Dalek dominance (Act 1) directly escalates into the Daleks' genocidal declaration of intent to dominate the universe (Act 3), showing how ideological extremism leads to systemic violence."
Ideological battle over Dalek fate"Davros's argument for ruthless Dalek dominance (Act 1) directly escalates into the Daleks' genocidal declaration of intent to dominate the universe (Act 3), showing how ideological extremism leads to systemic violence."
Time Ring vanishes as escape options narrow"Gharman's argument for a balanced Dalek race (Act 1) mirrors the later Daleks' assertion of absolute independence and superiority (Act 3), creating an ironic parallel where both the 'balanced' ideal and the genetic determinism lead to tyranny."
Time Ring vanishes as escape options narrow"Gharman's argument for a balanced Dalek race (Act 1) mirrors the later Daleks' assertion of absolute independence and superiority (Act 3), creating an ironic parallel where both the 'balanced' ideal and the genetic determinism lead to tyranny."
Ideological battle over Dalek fate"Davros's death at the hands of the Daleks echoes the Doctor's earlier moral dilemma: just as the Doctor was asked to destroy an entire species for being evil, Davros is destroyed for trying to control an inevitable force—highlighting the theme of irreversible consequences."
Dalaks execute Davros for his ambition"Davros's death at the hands of the Daleks echoes the Doctor's earlier moral dilemma: just as the Doctor was asked to destroy an entire species for being evil, Davros is destroyed for trying to control an inevitable force—highlighting the theme of irreversible consequences."
Daleks declare universal domination"Davros's death at the hands of the Daleks echoes the Doctor's earlier moral dilemma: just as the Doctor was asked to destroy an entire species for being evil, Davros is destroyed for trying to control an inevitable force—highlighting the theme of irreversible consequences."
Dalaks execute Davros for his ambition"Davros's death at the hands of the Daleks echoes the Doctor's earlier moral dilemma: just as the Doctor was asked to destroy an entire species for being evil, Davros is destroyed for trying to control an inevitable force—highlighting the theme of irreversible consequences."
Daleks declare universal dominationKey Dialogue
"DALEK: All inferior creatures are to be considered the enemy of the Daleks and destroyed."
"DAVROS: No, wait! Those men are scientists. They can help you. Let them live. Have pity!"
"DALEK: Pity? I have no understanding of the word. It is not registered in my vocabulary bank. Exterminate!"