Liz challenges the Brigadier’s faith
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Liz expresses disbelief in the Brigadier's acceptance of a man with the power to regenerate and travel through time in a police box. The Brigadier admits he's unsure if it's the same person from previous encounters.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Defensively uncertain, masking his vulnerability behind a facade of military composure. His frustration with Liz’s skepticism is tempered by a deeper unease about the Doctor’s identity and the implications of extraterrestrial threats.
The Brigadier stands in the cramped UNIT laboratory, attempting to maintain professional courtesy as Liz Shaw confronts his skepticism. He leans slightly forward, hands clasped behind his back, his posture rigid but his voice betraying a mix of defensiveness and uncertainty. His dialogue reveals a tension between his military pragmatism and his lingering faith in the Doctor’s claims, culminating in his admission of doubt: 'I'm not sure yet. It may not be the same man.'
- • To defend his belief in the Doctor’s legitimacy without fully committing to the idea of time travel or regeneration.
- • To maintain his authority as UNIT’s leader while acknowledging the possibility of the unknown.
- • The Doctor’s past actions (saving the world twice) suggest he is trustworthy, but his current state is unsettling.
- • Extraterrestrial phenomena are real, but they must be approached with caution and evidence.
Righteously indignant, driven by her commitment to empirical evidence. Her frustration with the Brigadier’s unquestioning acceptance of the Doctor’s claims is palpable, but she channels it into a focused, almost combative scientific inquiry.
Liz Shaw is hunched over the chemical equipment, her hands deftly manipulating the pipes and beaker as she tests the meteorite fragment. Her tone is sharp and confrontational, her body language tense as she challenges the Brigadier’s assumptions. She places the shard in the beaker with deliberate precision, her actions underscoring her scientific rigor. Her dialogue is laced with skepticism, directly mocking the Brigadier’s belief in the Doctor’s extraordinary claims.
- • To prove the meteorite fragment is manufactured, not natural, thereby dismantling the Brigadier’s assumptions.
- • To challenge the Brigadier’s blind faith in the Doctor’s claims, forcing him to confront the lack of evidence.
- • Science must be based on verifiable facts, not speculative ideas like time travel or regeneration.
- • The Brigadier’s loyalty to the Doctor is misplaced without concrete proof of his identity or claims.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The plastic meteorite fragment is the focal point of Liz Shaw’s chemical test, serving as tangible evidence to challenge the Brigadier’s assumptions. She places it in a beaker of solution, where it reacts vigorously, confirming its manufactured origin. The fragment’s unnatural composition—lightweight, synthetic, and bearing traces of heat fusion—becomes a symbol of the alien threat, forcing the Brigadier to question his skepticism. Its role in the scene is both functional (providing data) and narrative (exposing the tension between science and belief).
The laboratory pipes are rigged by Liz Shaw to connect the chemical equipment to the beaker, enabling the flow of the solution during the test. Their role is purely functional—they facilitate the transfer of the reactive solution—but they also symbolize the improvisational nature of UNIT’s response to the crisis. The pipes’ makeshift connection highlights the urgency and resourcefulness of the team, as they work with limited tools to uncover the truth about the meteorite fragment.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The UNIT laboratory is a cramped, makeshift space hastily assembled to analyze the meteorite fragment. Its cluttered benches, basic equipment, and harsh lighting create an atmosphere of urgency and improvisation, reflecting the team’s reactive response to the alien threat. The lab’s confined quarters force Liz and the Brigadier into close proximity, amplifying their verbal clash and the tension between their opposing worldviews. The TARDIS looms nearby, a silent but ominous presence, symbolizing the Doctor’s absence and the uncertainty surrounding his identity.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT is represented in this event through the Brigadier’s authority and Liz Shaw’s role as its lead scientist. The organization’s institutional protocols are challenged as Liz’s skepticism clashes with the Brigadier’s lingering faith in the Doctor. UNIT’s makeshift laboratory reflects its reactive approach to the alien threat, where improvisation and urgency override standard procedures. The tension between Liz and the Brigadier mirrors broader internal conflicts within UNIT—between empirical evidence and institutional loyalty—highlighting the organization’s struggle to adapt to the unknown.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Liz's skepticism is consistent as she does not understand the nature of The Doctor in the lab and when The Doctor arrives at HQ."
Doctor Proves Identity Through Memory"Liz's skepticism is consistent as she does not understand the nature of The Doctor in the lab and when The Doctor arrives at HQ."
Doctor meets Liz Shaw at UNIT"Liz's skepticism is consistent as she does not understand the nature of The Doctor in the lab and when The Doctor arrives at HQ."
Doctor Identifies Meteorite Hoax"Both Liz analyzing the meteorite and the Doctor confirming its properties contribute to understanding the alien threat."
Doctor Proves Identity Through Memory"Both Liz analyzing the meteorite and the Doctor confirming its properties contribute to understanding the alien threat."
Doctor meets Liz Shaw at UNIT"Both Liz analyzing the meteorite and the Doctor confirming its properties contribute to understanding the alien threat."
Doctor Identifies Meteorite HoaxKey Dialogue
"BRIGADIER: 'Miss Shaw, I'm not a fool. I don't chase shadows. What you don't understand is that there might, there is a remote possibility that outside your cosy little world other things could exist.'"
"LIZ: 'An alien who travels through time and space in a police box?'"
"BRIGADIER: 'I'm not sure yet. It may not be the same man.'"