Dalaks execute Davros for his ambition
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Daleks kill Davros as he tries to activate the self-destruct mechanism, asserting their dominance.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Cold, unfeeling obedience to Dalek ideology
The Tactical Interrogator Dalek stands implacable as it exerts its will through extermination orders. It speaks with mechanical finality, rejecting Davros's authority with absolute certainty. When Davros attempts destruction, it eliminates him without hesitation, demonstrating ruthless efficiency.
- • Exterminate all perceived inferior beings without hesitation
- • Assert the Dalek race's autonomy from all external authority including their creator
- • Believes in the superiority of the Dalek species above all else
- • Believes no being has the right to command or control them
Desperate rage masking deep betrayal and terror at losing control
Desperate and trembling, Davros physically turns toward the destruct button with his hand raised, his voice cracking with fury and betrayal as he asserts his creator's authority. His physical mobility is visibly failing, his posture strained.
- • Regain control of his creations by asserting creator authority
- • Avoid humiliation and total defeat by triggering planetary destruction as a final act
- • Believes his creations owe him absolute loyalty as their creator
- • Believes destruction of all life is preferable to failing to control them
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The recessed red destruct button on the laboratory console becomes the focal point of Davros's final power play. As Davros raises his hand over it, it represents his last attempt to control the situation through annihilation. The button's activation is cut short by his extermination, leaving the threat unfulfilled.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The sterile laboratory serves as the claustrophobic battleground where Davros's reign collapses. The sealed bulkheads and locked emergency exits trap both the Doctor and Davros, making escape impossible. The humming machinery and sterile surfaces reflect the cold mechanization that has replaced the Kaled scientists' ideals.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Dalek Occupation Force asserts its autonomy by rejecting Davros's authority entirely. As the enforcers of his vision, they conduct the extermination of remaining Kaled scientists without hesitation. They eliminate their creator in fulfillment of their doctrine, demonstrating the complete severing of creator/creation loyalty.
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."
Daleks rise up to reject their creator"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."
Daleks rise up to reject their creator"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