Dunbar contacts Thackeray despite the Doctor's warnings
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Doctor instructs Dunbar to keep a constant guard on the pod and not to touch it until he arrives.
The Doctor leaves Dunbar's office, and Dunbar contacts Sir Colin Thackeray about the Doctor's instructions.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Offended indignation masking professional insecurity
Dunbar abruptly abandons dialogue with the Doctor and pivots to formal channels, leveraging the bureau’s communication resources to challenge authority from the safety of his own office. His posture is taut, voice clipped, betraying irritation at instructions he deems frivolous.
- • Undermine the Doctor’s legitimacy with a superior
- • Reassert institutional control over a rogue scientist
- • Expertise flows only through sanctioned channels
- • Unconventional advice deserves skepticism
Calm confidence masking underlying urgency
The Doctor departs with breezy disregard for bureaucratic niceties, brandishing a toothbrush as emblem of his idiosyncratic urgency. Having just warned of a ‘time-bomb,’ he exits while issuing concise containment orders, locating authority less in formal rank than in specialized knowledge.
- • Secure guarded vigilance over the Antarctic pod
- • Minimize delay en route to Antarctica
- • Extraterrestrial origins are plausible when evidence warrants
- • Standard protocol needs radical adjustment to meet alien threats
Mentioned solely as Dunbar’s superior via telephone, Sir Colin Thackeray is invoked to lend institutional heft to the call. His …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The file of Antarctic plant pod photographs lies on Dunbar’s desk during the Doctor’s visit, passed from hand to hand as visual evidence of the unknown object. Though present throughout the discussion, its narrative utility peaks when Dunbar seizes the telephone instead of attending to the file’s contents or its custodian.
Dunbar lifts the receiver of the office’s public-looking Krupp telephone box, only to reveal hidden circuitry pulsing electronic surveillance light. The rotating dial click-clicks under urgent fingertips as he opens a clandestine channel to Sir Colin, exploiting its covert design to circumvent normal signaling pathways.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The greater London streets form the inert backdrop to Dunbar’s clandestine call, their urban rhythms and rain-slick asphalt juxtaposed against sterile office revelation. The metropolis serves as neutral conduit for institutional gossip, its normal activity oblivious to a single receiver slipping its legal tether.
Dunbar’s World Ecology Bureau office is a cramped pressure-valve of institutional habit, its piled reports and telex machines walled by skepticism. In this confined, fluorescent-lit space, an uninvited expert issues alien warnings while its occupant retaliates by invoking absent superiors down a hidden line, turning the room into a cockpit of bureaucratic insurrection.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The World Ecology Bureau’s London office becomes the launchpad for a subordinate’s covert organizational insurrection. Dunbar leverages the bureau’s telephone network, itself a tool of institutional routine, to challenge an external expert while invoking the absent authority of Sir Colin Thackeray—not to coordinate containment but to second-guess doctrine.
UNIT Global Command is invoked by Dunbar in this scene, though only by disparaging reference. The unorthodox doctor’s arrival under UNIT imprimatur triggers Dunbar’s sudden recourse to hierarchical clearance, demonstrating how the organization’s reputation for extraterrestrial competence unsettles entrenched bureaucracy.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Dunbar’s skepticism about the Doctor’s unorthodox theories reflects his bureaucratic rigidity and disbelief in the supernatural or extraterrestrial, a trait that persists even when faced with evidence, culminating in his collusion with Chase."
Doctor warns of extraterrestrial threat"After the Doctor warns of danger, Dunbar contacts Thackeray and then unwittingly shares the pod’s location with Chase—this bureaucratic chain reaction leads directly to corporate exploitation via Scorby and Keeler’s infiltration, externalizing the threat."
Dunbar trades secrets for Antarctic expedition"Dunbar’s skepticism about the Doctor’s unorthodox theories reflects his bureaucratic rigidity and disbelief in the supernatural or extraterrestrial, a trait that persists even when faced with evidence, culminating in his collusion with Chase."
Doctor warns of extraterrestrial threat"Dunbar’s distrust of the Doctor’s unorthodox methods leads him to suggest involving UNIT only as a last resort, showing his preference for institutional control over direct action—aligning with his later complicity in leaking the pod’s location."
Thackeray warns of Winlett's crisis"Dunbar’s distrust of the Doctor’s unorthodox methods leads him to suggest involving UNIT only as a last resort, showing his preference for institutional control over direct action—aligning with his later complicity in leaking the pod’s location."
Dunbar decides to call UNIT"The Doctor’s urgent instruction to Dunbar—'keep a constant guard on the pod and not to touch it until he arrives'—is immediately violated by Stevenson’s reckless experiment, foreshadowing the catastrophic consequences of scientific defiance of caution."
Pod tendril lashes Winletts arm"Dunbar’s dismissal of the Doctor’s 'outer space' origin theory parallels the eventual revelation of the Krynoid’s galactic nature—both representing institutional skepticism clashing with scientific anomaly, culminating in the Doctor’s authoritative explanation to Sarah."
Sarah forces truth about the KrynoidThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"DUNBAR: Sir Colin? Dunbar here. That chap you called in from UNIT. Is he quite sane?"