Jano orders Steven and Dodo captured
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Jano realizes the transfer's implications—the ability to exploit other time travelers—and orders Captain Edal to capture Steven and Dodo, seeing them as potential energy sources.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
None (unconscious), but his state evokes horror and urgency in the audience—he is both victim and unwitting key to the Elders' escalation.
The Doctor is reduced to a 'hollow shell' in 'good condition,' his body slumped in the extraction chamber as his life force is siphoned away. He is unresponsive, his vitality fluctuating on the screens as Tech 1 and Senta adjust the controls. His physical state—pale, still, and eerily compliant—contrasts sharply with his usual vitality, underscoring the dehumanizing efficiency of the Elders' system. Though absent from dialogue, his presence looms over the scene as the catalyst for Jano's revelation and the Elders' shift in strategy.
- • None (unconscious).
- • Implicitly, his recovery could disrupt the Elders' plans if he regains his faculties and resists.
- • None (unconscious).
- • Implicitly, his belief in the value of life and resistance to oppression would clash with the Elders' system if he were aware.
None (off-screen), but the audience experiences dread on his behalf—he is the unwitting next victim in the Elders' escalation.
Steven is not physically present but is the implicit target of Jano's order to Captain Edal. His name is invoked as part of a pair—'the two young people who arrived with the Doctor'—marking him as the next prize in the Elders' hunt. His absence in the scene heightens the tension; he and Dodo are unaware of the shift in strategy, making them vulnerable to capture. The dialogue frames them as both a threat ('they are a danger to us') and a resource ('they could be of great value'), elevating their status from fugitives to high-priority targets.
- • None (unaware).
- • Implicitly, his goal would be to evade capture and rescue the Doctor.
- • None (unaware).
- • Implicitly, he believes in protecting the Doctor and Dodo, which would directly conflict with the Elders' plans.
None (off-screen), but the audience feels protective urgency—she is the most vulnerable of the trio, making her capture a high-stakes threat.
Like Steven, Dodo is not physically present but is named alongside him as a target for capture. Her inclusion in Jano's order—'the two young people who arrived with the Doctor'—frames her as both a companion to be exploited and a potential disruptor of the Elders' plans. Her absence in the scene underscores the urgency of the TARDIS crew's situation; she and Steven are now actively hunted, their freedom hanging by a thread. The dialogue treats her as a renewable resource, but her role in the larger narrative as a compassionate and curious ally makes her capture a narrative tipping point.
- • None (unaware).
- • Implicitly, her goal would be to stay hidden and aid Steven in rescuing the Doctor.
- • None (unaware).
- • Implicitly, she believes in the Doctor's goodness and the importance of standing against oppression.
Triumphant anticipation—exhilarated by the discovery of a limitless energy source, but calculating the next steps with cold precision.
Jano strides into the Control Room with the air of a man who has just been handed a strategic advantage. His congratulatory tone is laced with triumph as he realizes the implications of the Doctor's successful extraction: if one time traveler can be repeatedly harvested, so can the others. He seizes the moment, pivoting from passive containment to active acquisition with a single order to Captain Edal. His posture is commanding, his voice smooth but edged with urgency. The Doctor is no longer just a captive—he is a prototype for a new phase of exploitation, and Steven and Dodo are the next targets in a escalating hunt.
- • Secure Steven and Dodo as additional infinite energy sources to sustain the Elders' civilization.
- • Expand the Elders' operational capacity by leveraging the Doctor's recoverability as a model for future captures.
- • Time travelers are not people but infinite energy reserves to be exploited without ethical constraint.
- • The Elders' survival and dominance justify any means of resource acquisition, including predation.
Apathetic—fulfilling his role without question or remorse, a product of the Elders' dehumanizing environment.
Tech 1 is a faceless technician in the Control Room, reciting energy transfer metrics in a monotone voice. His role is purely functional—adjusting resistance pressure and reporting readings under Senta's direction. He embodies the dehumanized efficiency of the Elders' system, a cog in the machine with no agency or emotional investment in the process. His presence underscores the impersonal, industrial scale of the life-force extraction.
- • Maintain stable energy transfer readings to avoid operational failures.
- • Follow Senta's instructions without deviation to ensure the process runs smoothly.
- • His role is to serve the Elders' system without questioning its ethics.
- • The Doctor and other captives are resources, not people, and their suffering is incidental to the greater good.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Senta's Energy Transfer Control Panel is the nerve center of the life-force extraction process, its glowing screens and dials tracking the Doctor's vitality in real time. Tech 1 adjusts the 'resistance pressure' under Senta's direction, while she monitors the 'cutout mechanism' to prevent over-extraction. The panel's readings—'Five point one. Zero. Five point six. Zero'—are recited like a litany, reducing the Doctor's suffering to cold, clinical data. When Jano arrives, the panel becomes the physical manifestation of his revelation: the Doctor's energy is not just extractable, but repeatedly extractable, making him—and by extension, Steven and Dodo—targets of a predatory system. The panel's beeps and hums are the soundtrack of dehumanization, turning life into a commodity.
The Resistance Pressure Controls are a critical subsystem of the energy transfer process, allowing Tech 1 and Senta to modulate the flow of the Doctor's life force. When Senta orders Tech 1 to 'adjust resistance pressure,' she is fine-tuning the balance between extraction and recovery, ensuring the Doctor does not become permanently damaged. The controls are a microcosm of the Elders' philosophy: precision over ethics, efficiency over empathy. Their adjustment is a silent negotiation between exploitation and sustainability, with the Doctor's body as the battleground. The moment Jano realizes the Doctor can be repeatedly harvested, these controls take on a new, sinister significance—they are the key to unlocking an infinite energy source, and thus the tool for hunting Steven and Dodo.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Elders' Control Room is a sterile, high-tech hub of exploitation, its humming instruments and flickering screens casting a clinical glow over the life-force extraction process. The air is thick with tension—Senta's cautious warnings, Jano's triumphant orders, and the mechanical recitation of energy metrics by Tech 1. This is the nerve center of the Elders' civilization, where morality is subsumed by operational efficiency. The sliding doors, glowing consoles, and alert tones create an atmosphere of relentless surveillance and control, reinforcing the Elders' dominance. For the Doctor, it is a prison; for Jano, a throne room; for Senta, a workplace where ethical boundaries blur. The room's design—cold, functional, and impersonal—mirrors the Elders' treatment of their victims: as resources, not people.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Elders' organization is the unseen hand guiding every action in this scene, its influence manifesting through Senta's technical precision, Jano's strategic pivot, and the Control Room's impersonal efficiency. The successful extraction of the Doctor's life force is not just a scientific achievement but a validation of the Elders' predatory worldview: that outsiders—whether Savages or time travelers—exist to serve their civilization. Jano's order to capture Steven and Dodo is the organizational response to this revelation, escalating the Elders' strategy from passive containment to active acquisition. The scene underscores the Elders' hierarchy—Senta follows orders, Jano makes decisions, and Captain Edal enforces them—while revealing the organization's ruthless adaptability. What begins as exploitation becomes something far more sinister: a hunt for infinite energy sources.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Jano congratulates Senta on the successful energy transfer. This leads to Jano realizing the transfer's implications—the ability to exploit other time travelers—and ordering Edal to capture Steven and Dodo."
Senta reveals the Doctor’s renewable energy value"Jano congratulates Senta on the successful energy transfer. This leads to Jano realizing the transfer's implications—the ability to exploit other time travelers—and ordering Edal to capture Steven and Dodo."
Senta reveals the Doctor’s renewable energy value"Jano orders the capture of Steven and Dodo, leading to patrols specifically searching for them, as confirmed by Tor."
Steven challenges the Savages' fear"Jano orders the capture of Steven and Dodo, leading to patrols specifically searching for them, as confirmed by Tor."
Tor reveals the Elders' hunt and the Doctor's fate"Jano orders the capture of Steven and Dodo, leading to patrols specifically searching for them, as confirmed by Tor."
Chal’s Warning of the Doctor’s FateThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"SENTA: 'It's a perfect transfer.'"
"JANO: 'Remarkable. How is the Doctor?'"
"SENTA: 'Reduced nervous tension of course, but in good condition. Given time he will recover, and like the others, we'll be able to use him again.'"
"JANO: 'You realise what this means, Senta. If we are able to achieve this transfer successfully, we will be able to do the same with the other time travellers.'"
"JANO: 'As it is, they are a danger to us, but as a source of energy they could be of great value. Captain Edal. Send out patrols. The two young people who arrived with the Doctor must be brought in.'"