Doctor faces Brigadier’s antimatter reckoning
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Brigadier questions Doctor 2 about his changed appearance and the disappearance of Jo, while Doctor 2 tries to explain the complex temporal situation.
Doctor 2 and the Brigadier discuss the antimatter entity and its implications, with the Brigadier demanding control and Jo's safe return.
The Brigadier instructs Doctor 2 to consult his superiors for advice, but Doctor 2 expresses doubt about their current power.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Deeply angry and distrustful, perceiving the Doctor’s altered appearance and evasions as evidence of reckless experimentation endangering his team and mission
The Brigadier strides into the corridor with rigid posture, his military bearing rigidified by outrage and disbelief. He fixes the Doctor with a glare that mixes personal betrayal with institutional fury, repeatedly demanding concrete answers to impossible questions—about the Doctor’s identity across timelines, the vanished Jo Grant, and the source of the antimatter chaos. His accusations escalate from skepticism to outright blame, dismissing the Doctor’s vagueness as deception. His voice hardens into institutional authority, rejecting temporal excuses in favor of operational control.
- • Secure immediate control over the antimatter threat through clear, actionable directives
- • Recover Jo Grant and restore institutional order despite temporal anomalies
- • Military protocols prevent existential chaos regardless of scientific explanations
- • The Doctor’s temporal identity instability is a breach of operational security
Superficially composed and wry, subtly anxious beneath the facade as institutional authority constricts his usual latitude for experimentation
The Second Doctor stands before the Brigadier in a visibly altered form, attempting to deflect suspicion with vague reassurances and feigned nonchalance. He speaks cryptically about temporal anomalies and omits crucial details about the antimatter entity and Jo Grant’s fate, his calm demeanor masking underlying strain. His playful deflection—'How fascinating'—persists even as the Brigadier’s accusations grow more hostile, revealing his vulnerability in reconciling past incarnations with institutional skepticism.
- • Defuse the Brigadier’s accusations by minimizing immediate threat to maintain operational access to the antimatter crisis
- • Buy time to locate Jo Grant and understand the antimatter entity’s true role without revealing full knowledge
- • Scientific inquiry justified despite institutional opposition
- • Temporal identity fluidity is a necessary risk in crises
Concerned and conflicted, torn between enforcing chain of command and acknowledging the Doctor’s value and uncertainty
Sergeant Benton follows closely behind the Brigadier, his presence a buffer between institutional force and scientific improvisation. His initial attempt to clarify the situation—'It's the first one.'—calms neither the Brigadier’s rising ire nor the Doctor’s evasiveness. Benton’s caution and repeated urging for careful handling reflect his struggle to reconcile duty with concern for the Doctor’s well-being and uncertain motives. He faces downward pressure from both hierarchical and moral constraints, caught between loyalty to command and growing empathy for the Doctor’s predicament.
- • Prevent immediate physical confrontation between the Brigadier and the Doctor
- • Clarify facts to the Brigadier while protecting the Doctor from unnecessary official condemnation
- • Hierarchical obedience is essential but must accommodate extraordinary circumstances
- • The Doctor usually acts with good intent, even when methods are opaque
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The antimatter entity is referenced indirectly through the Doctor’s claim that it 'hasn’t done anything dangerous,' implying its unstable nature threatens the lab environment and personnel. Though not physically present in the corridor, its influence is felt through the crisis context—the Brigadier’s outburst and Benton’s caution are reactions to potential antimatter disruption. The entity’s absence underscores the Doctor’s assertion of temporal anomaly, framing institutional distrust around an invisible, barely contained force.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The antimatter temporal displacement zone briefly frames the event indirectly through the Doctor’s evasive dialogue about recent events. It is where the TARDIS materialized with altered occupants, suggesting instant dislocation and exposure to antimatter-infused temporal turbulence. Though distant, its chaotic energy lingers in the conversation, contaminating credibility and trust. The Doctor’s mention of 'two sets of footprints' in the displaced ground alludes to unnatural travel and vanished presence, reinforcing his anomalous identity.
The UNIT laboratory exterior corridor serves as the immediate stage for a high-stakes confrontation, its sterile militarism contrasting with temporal chaos. Its compact geometry amplifies voices and tensions, compressing authority and dissent into a corridor barely wide enough for a clash of wills. Fluorescent lighting flickers in response to antimatter interference, casting unstable crimson streaks that underscore the location’s vulnerability to forces beyond institutional control.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT asserts institutional command through the Brigadier’s presence and demands, treating the antimatter crisis as a security breach requiring containment and accountability. The organization’s procedures clash visibly with the Doctor’s temporal anomalies, exposing a fracture between mandatory protocol and scientific necessity. Benton represents UNIT’s internal conflict—caught between duty to chain of command and latent sympathy for anomalous solutions.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Brigadier's ongoing skepticism about the Doctor's explanations (first about antimatter's implications, later about Jo's and Doctor 1's disappearance) runs across acts and scenes, revealing his rigid institutional mindset—he demands control and clarity, unable to reconcile supernatural or scientific anomalies."
Doctor and Brigadier decode antimatter threat"The Brigadier's ongoing skepticism about the Doctor's explanations (first about antimatter's implications, later about Jo's and Doctor 1's disappearance) runs across acts and scenes, revealing his rigid institutional mindset—he demands control and clarity, unable to reconcile supernatural or scientific anomalies."
Benton alerts to the Brigadier's strainThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"DOCTOR 2ND: It's no use your asking me about all this, Brigadier. As far as I'm concerned, it hasn't happened yet. Don't you see? I'm just a temporal anomaly."
"BRIGADIER: It's quite obvious to me what's happened. You've been mucking around with that infernal machine of yours."
"DOCTOR 2ND: Well, I'll do my best, but I can't make any promises."