Fabula
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction

Susan’s violent breakdown and Barbara’s confrontation

Ian attempts to care for Susan after she awakens disoriented, but her paranoia erupts violently when she grabs scissors and attacks him, stabbing the recliner in a frenzied outburst before collapsing. Meanwhile, Barbara presses the Doctor for answers about their location, exposing his evasiveness and deepening the group’s distrust. The Doctor deflects with vague assurances, but Barbara’s insistence—‘You don’t know, do you?’—reveals his uncertainty and the crew’s growing instability. Susan’s attack and the Doctor’s evasion escalate the TARDIS’s looming threat, as the ship’s malfunction now manifests in physical violence and fractured leadership.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Ian attempts to provide Susan with water, but she doesn't recognize him and grabs a pair of scissors. She attacks Ian with the scissors before collapsing, adding to the mystery of their condition.

caring to alarm

Barbara questions the Doctor's knowledge of their location, highlighting his uncertainty and increasing the tension among the group. The Doctor deflects and seems evasive.

confusion to suspicion

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

Righteously indignant, her patience worn thin by the Doctor’s evasion. She channels her fear for the crew’s safety into direct challenges, refusing to accept vague assurances. Her tone is accusatory, reflecting her role as the group’s moral compass.

Barbara aggressively confronts the Doctor, demanding answers about their location. Her frustration boils over as she accuses him of guessing, exposing his evasiveness and the crew’s growing distrust. She stands as a voice of reason and accountability, challenging the Doctor’s authority in the face of crisis.

Goals in this moment
  • To force the Doctor to take responsibility for their predicament.
  • To uncover the truth about their location, which she sees as critical to survival.
Active beliefs
  • The Doctor is withholding information, which endangers the crew.
  • Direct confrontation is the only way to break through his evasiveness.
Character traits
Confrontational Protective (of the group’s well-being) Skeptical Assertive Frustrated
Follow Barbara Wright's journey

A volatile mix of terror and confusion, her paranoia overriding rational thought. Post-collapse, she exhibits exhaustion and emotional depletion, her body and mind overwhelmed by the TARDIS’s instability.

Susan awakens disoriented and immediately grabs scissors, her paranoia manifesting in violent aggression. She lunges at Ian, stabbing the recliner repeatedly before collapsing in exhaustion. Her actions symbolize the TARDIS’s malfunctioning influence on the crew’s mental state, with her physical violence mirroring the ship’s erratic behavior.

Goals in this moment
  • To defend herself from perceived threats (Ian, the environment)
  • To regain control over her disoriented state through violent outbursts
Active beliefs
  • She is being targeted or infiltrated by unknown forces (Ian, the Doctor, or the TARDIS itself).
  • Her survival depends on aggressive action, as trust in her companions has collapsed.
Character traits
Paranoid Aggressive Disoriented Frenzied Vulnerable (post-collapse)
Follow Susan Foreman's journey

Initially concerned and nurturing, shifting to alarm as Susan’s violence escalates. His physical redirection of her attack (toward the recliner) is a calculated move to de-escalate, but his emotional state is one of growing helplessness.

Ian attempts to care for Susan by wetting his handkerchief and approaching her, but her paranoia erupts violently. He reacts defensively, redirecting her scissor attack toward the recliner to avoid injury. His actions reflect his protective instinct, though his inability to calm Susan highlights the crew’s helplessness amid the TARDIS’s malfunction.

Goals in this moment
  • To calm Susan and provide care, despite her disorientation.
  • To avoid physical harm to himself or Susan, using redirection as a tactic.
Active beliefs
  • Susan’s outburst is a result of the TARDIS’s malfunction, not personal malice.
  • His role is to mediate and protect, even in chaotic circumstances.
Character traits
Protective Reactive Concerned Defensive Resourceful (redirecting the attack)
Follow The First …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

6
Ian's Comfort Handkerchief

Ian’s handkerchief, wetted in a failed attempt to comfort Susan, becomes a futile gesture amid her paranoia. The cloth, a symbol of human care, is rendered useless by the TARDIS’s malfunction, highlighting the crew’s inability to mitigate their crisis through conventional means. Its dampness contrasts with the dry, tense atmosphere of the room, underscoring the emotional and physical deprivation.

Before: Dry, in Ian’s possession, ready for use.
After: Wetted but unused; Susan’s aggression renders it irrelevant.
Before: Dry, in Ian’s possession, ready for use.
After: Wetted but unused; Susan’s aggression renders it irrelevant.
S-Shaped Recliner

The S-shaped recliner, initially a piece of furniture for rest, becomes an improvised battleground as Susan redirects her scissor attack toward it. The recliner’s fabric is slashed repeatedly, its cushions shredded—a physical manifestation of the crew’s emotional and psychological unraveling. The recliner’s destruction symbolizes the TARDIS’s malfunction eroding even the most basic comforts, leaving the crew with no safe haven.

Before: Intact, attached to the wall, used to seat …
After: Shredded by scissors, fabric torn, cushions damaged.
Before: Intact, attached to the wall, used to seat Susan.
After: Shredded by scissors, fabric torn, cushions damaged.
Susan's Scissors (Paranoia Incident)

The scissors, initially a mundane household tool, become a weapon of Susan’s paranoid frenzy. She grabs them upon awakening, lunging at Ian before redirecting her aggression toward the recliner. The scissors symbolize the TARDIS’s malfunction transforming ordinary objects into instruments of chaos, reflecting the crew’s unraveling trust and the ship’s erratic behavior. Their final resting place on the table underscores the violence’s abrupt end and the lingering tension.

Before: On a surface in the TARDIS room, accessible …
After: Discarded on the table after Susan’s attack, blades …
Before: On a surface in the TARDIS room, accessible and unused.
After: Discarded on the table after Susan’s attack, blades glinting as a silent reminder of the violence.
TARDIS Console Room Medical and Hydration Dispenser

The TARDIS water dispenser fails as a critical resource, its emptiness forcing Ian to improvise care for Susan. This malfunction mirrors the ship’s broader breakdown, depriving the crew of even basic comforts. The empty sachet Ian retrieves becomes a symbol of the TARDIS’s inability to sustain its occupants, amplifying the group’s vulnerability and the Doctor’s leadership crisis.

Before: Functional but depleted; Ian retrieves an empty sachet.
After: Explicitly confirmed as empty, reinforcing the TARDIS’s resource …
Before: Functional but depleted; Ian retrieves an empty sachet.
After: Explicitly confirmed as empty, reinforcing the TARDIS’s resource failure.
TARDIS Control Room Bench

The TARDIS control room bench serves as a physical and symbolic barrier, where the Doctor sits apart from the escalating chaos. His detached posture on the bench contrasts with the crew’s active conflict, reinforcing his emotional distance. The bench’s role as seating for the Doctor—who is both a leader and an outsider in this moment—highlights his failure to engage with the crisis, leaving the crew to grapple with it alone.

Before: Unoccupied, part of the TARDIS’s functional furniture.
After: Occupied by the Doctor, who remains seated as …
Before: Unoccupied, part of the TARDIS’s functional furniture.
After: Occupied by the Doctor, who remains seated as the conflict unfolds.
TARDIS Room Table

The TARDIS room table becomes a neutral surface where the scissors land after Susan’s attack, marking the end of her violence. Its role is passive but significant: it holds the discarded weapon, a silent witness to the crew’s fracture. The table’s plainness contrasts with the intensity of the moment, grounding the chaos in the mundane, as if to remind the crew (and audience) that even catastrophic events unfold in ordinary spaces.

Before: Clear surface in the TARDIS room, holding scissors.
After: Scissors discarded on it, now a repository for …
Before: Clear surface in the TARDIS room, holding scissors.
After: Scissors discarded on it, now a repository for the aftermath of violence.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
TARDIS Rest Room (Private Chamber)

The TARDIS rest room, a compact and confined space, becomes a pressure cooker for the crew’s escalating tensions. Its close walls trap Susan’s violent outburst, Ian’s defensive redirection, and Barbara’s confrontation with the Doctor, amplifying the emotional intensity. The room’s functionality—bench, table, dispenser—is undermined by the TARDIS’s malfunction, turning it from a sanctuary into a battleground. The confined space mirrors the crew’s trapped state, both physically and psychologically.

Atmosphere Tense, claustrophobic, and electrically charged with paranoia and frustration. The air is thick with unspoken …
Function A contained battleground where the crew’s conflicts are forced into close quarters, with no escape …
Symbolism Represents the TARDIS as both a home and a prison. The crew’s inability to leave …
Access None (the crew is trapped within the TARDIS, with no means of exit).
The hum of the malfunctioning TARDIS, a constant reminder of their predicament. The glint of scissors on the table, a silent threat. The shredded recliner, its fabric torn and cushions exposed. The empty water dispenser, a symbol of deprivation.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 3

"Susan's unconscious state leads to Ian's attempt to help her, but she responds violently, grabbing scissors and attacking him, showing the escalating effect of the TARDIS malfunction."

TARDIS Malfunction and Susan’s Collapse
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction

"Susan's unconscious state leads to Ian's attempt to help her, but she responds violently, grabbing scissors and attacking him, showing the escalating effect of the TARDIS malfunction."

TARDIS doors malfunction as Susan collapses
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction

"Susan's unconscious state leads to Ian's attempt to help her, but she responds violently, grabbing scissors and attacking him, showing the escalating effect of the TARDIS malfunction."

Doctor mirrors Susan’s collapse
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction
What this causes 4

"The Doctor deflects Barbara's questions about their location, which flows into Barbara suggesting external causes for their distress. The Doctor then deflects again, showing his avoidance of the problem."

Barbara challenges the Doctor’s logic
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction

"Susan's erratic behavior and attack on Ian foreshadow her later paranoia and fear that something is hiding in one of them. These are two distinct, but related, episodes of suspicion and growing threat."

Susan’s Paranoia Escalates into Violence
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction

"Susan's erratic behavior and attack on Ian foreshadow her later paranoia and fear that something is hiding in one of them. These are two distinct, but related, episodes of suspicion and growing threat."

Susan’s Paranoia and the Scanner Threat
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction

"Susan's erratic behavior and attack on Ian foreshadow her later paranoia and fear that something is hiding in one of them. These are two distinct, but related, episodes of suspicion and growing threat."

Susan’s Paranoia and the Scanner Threat
S1E12 · The Edge of Destruction

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"IAN: What are you doing? SUSAN: No. Who are you?"
"BARBARA: But where? Where are we? DOCTOR: Oh, all these questions, Miss Wright. Please. BARBARA: You don’t know, do you? You’re just guessing, aren’t you?"