Klieg’s sadistic weapon test proposal
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
As Kaftan urges Klieg to focus on dealing with the immediate threat, Klieg reveals his intention to test the Cybergun on the Doctor and his companions, seeing it as a 'pleasure'.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A rapid descent from fearful hesitation to sadistic arrogance. His emotional state is unstable, oscillating between vulnerability and delusions of grandeur, with Kaftan’s words acting as a catalyst for his transformation.
Klieg begins this event with visible hesitation, his grip on the Cybergun tentative as he test-fires it at the metal wall, the molten residue a stark reminder of its power. His initial fear of the Cybermen is palpable, his voice trembling as he admits he ‘completely underestimated their power.’ However, Kaftan’s manipulation swiftly transforms his demeanor: his posture straightens, his voice grows steely, and his language shifts from fear to arrogance. By the event’s end, he declares himself ‘invulnerable’ and fantasizes about using the gun on the Doctor and his companions as a ‘pleasure,’ his sadism now unchecked. The Cybergun becomes an extension of his warped logic, a tool to assert dominance over both the Cybermen and his human rivals.
- • Use the Cybergun to assert dominance over the Cybermen and seal them in their tomb
- • Inflict the weapon’s power on the Doctor and his companions as a personal ‘pleasure’
- • The Cybergun grants him invincibility, allowing him to control the Cybermen and eliminate his enemies.
- • The Doctor and his companions are ‘of no consequence’—expendable targets for his sadistic experiments.
Calculating and persuasive, masking her own ambition behind a facade of logical partnership. Her urgency betrays a underlying tension—she knows the Cybermen’s power and seeks to control it before it controls her.
Kaftan stands beside Klieg in the Testing Room, her posture calculated and her tone persuasive as she reframes the Cybergun as a tool for controlling the Cybermen. She dismisses Klieg’s fear of the Cybermen, urging him to embrace the weapon’s power and strategize their domination. Her dialogue is sharp and directive, steering Klieg away from personal vendettas toward a shared goal: sealing the Cybermen in their tomb. However, her pragmatic focus masks her own ruthlessness—she is willing to manipulate Klieg’s ambitions to serve her ends, even as she downplays the Doctor’s threat.
- • Convince Klieg to use the Cybergun to control the Cybermen, not indulge in personal vendettas
- • Prevent Klieg’s fear from paralyzing their shared plan to dominate the Cybermen
- • The Cybermen can be controlled or contained through the Cybergun and the opening device.
- • Klieg’s personal grudge against the Doctor is a distraction from their larger objective.
Not directly observable, but their presence is felt as a latent threat. Klieg’s fear and Kaftan’s strategic focus on controlling them imply they are a force of dread, their potential for violence hanging over the scene.
The Cybermen are not physically present in this event but are the indirect subject of Klieg and Kaftan’s dialogue. Klieg’s fear of them is evident in his admission that he ‘completely underestimated their power,’ while Kaftan reframes them as a force to be controlled through the Cybergun. The Cybermen’s absence creates a looming threat—their potential for destruction is acknowledged, but Klieg and Kaftan’s focus on the weapon suggests a dangerous underestimation of their true capabilities. The Cybergun, a tool of Cyberman design, becomes a symbol of human hubris in this moment, as Klieg believes he can turn their own technology against them.
- • Serve as a catalyst for Klieg’s fear and subsequent arrogance (through their implied power)
- • Represent the ultimate prize in Klieg and Kaftan’s power struggle (control over the Cybermen)
- • Klieg believes the Cybermen can be sealed away or controlled through the Cybergun and the opening device.
- • Kaftan believes the Cybermen’s power can be harnessed or neutralized, making them a tool rather than a threat.
The Doctor is not physically present in this event but is indirectly referenced as Klieg’s primary target for the Cybergun’s …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Cybergun Storage Dummy serves as a passive container for the Cybergun before Klieg removes it. Its role in the event is functional—holding the weapon in place until Klieg seizes it, marking the transition from dormancy to active threat. The dummy’s presence in the Testing Room, a space designed for Cyberman experiments, suggests it was part of a larger testing protocol, now repurposed for Klieg’s ambitions. Its involvement is brief but critical, as the act of removing the gun from it symbolizes Klieg’s first step toward wielding power over the Cybermen.
The Cybergun is the central object of this event, serving as both a physical weapon and a symbolic catalyst for Klieg’s transformation. Initially dormant on a testing dummy, it is seized by Klieg, who test-fires it at a metal wall, melting the surface and demonstrating its destructive potential. Kaftan immediately reframes the gun as a tool for controlling the Cybermen, while Klieg’s fantasies about using it on the Doctor reveal its role as an instrument of sadism. The weapon’s design—originating from the Cybermen—adds irony to the scene, as Klieg believes he can turn their own technology against them. Its presence in the Testing Room, a space designed for Cyberman experiments, underscores the dangerous irony of humans wielding Cyberman weapons.
The Testing Room Metal Wall Target is the first victim of the Cybergun’s destructive power in this event. Klieg fires the weapon at it, melting the metal and leaving a scorched, deformed surface. This act serves as a visceral demonstration of the gun’s capabilities, shocking Klieg out of his hesitation and emboldening him to embrace its potential. The wall’s destruction is not just a test of the weapon’s power but a metaphor for Klieg’s own moral collapse—what was once solid (his fear, his logic) is now melted away, leaving only arrogance and sadism in its place. The acrid scent of burned metal lingers, a sensory reminder of the violence to come.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Testing Room is a claustrophobic, high-stakes battleground for Klieg and Kaftan’s power struggle in this event. Its confined space amplifies the tension, the air thick with the acrid scent of melted metal after Klieg test-fires the Cybergun. The room’s purpose—as a testing ground for Cyberman weapons—adds a layer of irony, as Klieg now wields one of their own tools against them. The single door suggests containment, but the real imprisonment is psychological: Klieg’s fear of the Cybermen and his subsequent arrogance are both born and nurtured within these walls. The room’s functional role shifts from a space of scientific experimentation to a chamber of moral corruption, where logic gives way to sadism.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Cybermen, though not physically present in this event, are the indirect subject of Klieg and Kaftan’s dialogue and the central focus of their power struggle. Their looming threat—implied through Klieg’s fear and Kaftan’s strategic focus—drives the entire scene. The Cybergun, a weapon of Cyberman design, becomes a tool for human ambition, as Klieg and Kaftan seek to control the Cybermen using their own technology. This inversion of power dynamics is a direct challenge to the Cybermen’s dominance, though their true capabilities remain underestimated. The organization’s influence is felt through the weapon itself, which serves as both a physical threat and a symbol of the larger conflict to come.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Klieg and Kaftan find a Cybergun which motivates Klieg to test its power and declare that he will take command, marking the beginning of his power grab."
Klieg claims the Cybergun for power"Kaftan persuades Klieg that the Cybergun makes him invulnerable. Klieg reveals his intention to test the Cybergun by killing the Doctor because he sees it as a pleasure."
Klieg's fragile authority and Cybermen fear"The Cyber Controller and Kaftan both try to influence others to act in certain ways on the promise of obtaining power. The Controller says the Humans could become powerful Cybermen. While after discovering the Cybergun, Kaftan persuades Klieg to take the power and control the Cybermen."
Doctor stalls Cyber Controller’s plan"The Cyber Controller and Kaftan both try to influence others to act in certain ways on the promise of obtaining power. The Controller says the Humans could become powerful Cybermen. While after discovering the Cybergun, Kaftan persuades Klieg to take the power and control the Cybermen."
Cybermen capture Doctor and companions"Kaftan persuades Klieg that the Cybergun makes him invulnerable. Klieg reveals his intention to test the Cybergun by killing the Doctor because he sees it as a pleasure."
Klieg's fragile authority and Cybermen fearThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"KLIEG: Excellent. A small X-Ray laser."
"KAFTAN: What are you going to do now? KLIEG: Take command, of course. What do you think? With this I shall be able to deal with those people in there."
"KAFTAN: Never mind about them. The important thing for us is to control the Cybermen. KLIEG: Yes, I know but... KAFTAN: Isn't it, Eric? KLIEG: You haven't been down there. You haven't seen those vile things. KAFTAN: You're not scared, are you? KLIEG: I have completely underestimated their power. KAFTAN: But this time we have the power, at least you do. The gun, Eric, the gun. You have the Cybermen's own weapon, this laser to turn against them. Now they will have to obey. If they refuse, we shall destroy the opening device and seal them up in their tomb forever. Now do you understand? KLIEG: Yes. Yes, you're right. I am invulnerable with this. I shall be master."
"KLIEG: But hardly work, more a pleasure. KAFTAN: What? KLIEG: The pleasure to test this on that Doctor and his companions. The others are of no consequence, but he will make a most precise target."