UNIT admits failure to stop Master
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
The Brigadier reveals the failed attempt to destroy the Thunderbolt missile, and the Doctor explains the Master disabled the abort mechanism, confirming the need to return the dematerialization circuit.
Cosworth delivers the dematerialization circuit to the Doctor, confirming its authenticity, and the Brigadier expresses his frustration at the Master's impending escape.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Frustrated and resigned, with a simmering anger at being outmaneuvered by the Master. His demeanor is one of controlled disappointment, but there’s a flicker of hope when the Doctor hints at an alternative plan—suggesting he’s not entirely ready to accept defeat.
The Brigadier stands rigidly near the maps and equipment in the mobile office, his military bearing betraying his frustration. His voice is gruff, his words clipped as he admits the failure of UNIT’s attempt to detonate the missile. He leans slightly forward as he concedes the necessity of returning the circuit, his hands clenched at his sides—a physical manifestation of his reluctance. His dialogue is pragmatic, almost defensive, as he justifies the surrender to the Doctor, though his emotional state is one of suppressed anger and resignation. He defers to the Doctor’s intellectual authority but makes it clear that, from a military standpoint, there are no alternatives left.
- • To contain the Master’s threat to Earth, even if it means allowing his escape.
- • To maintain UNIT’s operational integrity and avoid further failure in the face of the Master’s sabotage.
- • Military solutions, when exhausted, must give way to strategic retreat or negotiation.
- • The Doctor’s intellect is UNIT’s best asset, even if his methods are unconventional.
Triumphant and smug, though not physically present. His actions—disabling the abort mechanism and ensuring the circuit’s delivery—speak of a confidence bordering on hubris. The Doctor and Brigadier’s reactions (frustration, moral conflict) only serve to amplify his perceived victory.
The Master is not physically present in this scene, but his influence looms large over every word and action. His sabotage of the abort mechanism is the unspoken catalyst for the tension in the room, and the dematerialization circuit—now in the Doctor’s hands—is the tangible result of his machinations. The Brigadier and the Doctor’s dialogue repeatedly references his cunning and scientific prowess, framing him as an ever-present, almost spectral antagonist. His absence makes his power feel even more insidious; he doesn’t need to be in the room to dictate the terms of the confrontation.
- • To escape Earth unpunished, using the dematerialization circuit to repair his TARDIS.
- • To force the Doctor and UNIT into a position of helplessness, proving his superiority.
- • The Doctor and UNIT are predictable and can be outmaneuvered through scientific and psychological means.
- • His own genius entitles him to dominate those he perceives as inferior.
Conflict between resignation and defiance. Surface-level calm masks a deep unease about the ethical implications of his actions, but there’s an undercurrent of determination—he’s already plotting his next move, even as he engages in the Brigadier’s pragmatic reality.
The Doctor stands in the center of the mobile office, his tall frame slightly hunched as he examines the dematerialization circuit with a mix of scientific curiosity and moral unease. His voice is measured but laced with sarcasm as he confirms the Master’s sabotage, though his demeanor shifts when the ethical implications of the Master’s escape surface. He handles the circuit with deliberate care, his fingers tracing its edges as if weighing its significance beyond its physical form. His dialogue reveals a conflicted mind—acknowledging the tactical necessity of surrendering the circuit while grappling with the moral consequences of enabling the Master’s freedom elsewhere. His final line, delivered with a hint of mischief, suggests he is already several steps ahead of the Brigadier’s pragmatism.
- • To ensure the Master’s escape does not result in further harm to Earth or another planet (implied by his moral dilemma).
- • To maintain the upper hand strategically, hinting at an unspoken contingency plan to counter the Master’s victory.
- • The Master’s actions must be contained, but not at the cost of unleashing chaos elsewhere.
- • UNIT’s military solutions are often insufficient; ingenuity and moral foresight are required.
Neutral and focused. He shows no emotional reaction to the circuit’s significance, treating it as another logistical task. His detachment contrasts with the Doctor and Brigadier’s moral and tactical struggles, highlighting his role as a neutral operator within UNIT’s hierarchy.
Major Cosworth is a brief but critical presence in this scene, serving as the messenger of the Master’s inevitable victory. He enters just long enough to hand over the dematerialization circuit, his demeanor professional and efficient. His dialogue is minimal, but his action—the physical handover of the circuit—is the moment that solidifies the Master’s triumph. He doesn’t linger; his role is functional, a cog in the machine of UNIT’s operational machinery. His presence underscores the inevitability of the circuit’s arrival and, by extension, the Master’s escape.
- • To deliver the dematerialization circuit to the Doctor as ordered, ensuring the chain of command is followed.
- • To facilitate UNIT’s operational response, even in the face of setbacks.
- • His duty is to execute orders without question, regardless of the moral or tactical implications.
- • UNIT’s protocols must be followed, even when they lead to difficult outcomes.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Thunderbolt missile is the looming, unseen threat that drives the entire scene. Though not physically present in the mobile office, its existence is the catalyst for the Doctor and Brigadier’s confrontation. The Brigadier’s admission that UNIT failed to detonate it—due to the Master’s sabotage—frames the missile as a symbol of their vulnerability. Its role in the scene is narrative rather than physical; it represents the stakes of the Master’s escape and the moral dilemma the Doctor faces. The missile’s presence (or rather, its absence from their control) is the reason the dematerialization circuit must be returned, making it the indirect cause of the Doctor’s ethical conflict.
The envelope serves as the delivery vessel for the dematerialization circuit, a mundane object that carries extraordinary weight. Major Cosworth hands it to the Doctor, who opens it to reveal the circuit inside. The envelope’s unassuming nature contrasts with the gravity of its contents, underscoring the banality of the tools that determine the Master’s fate. Its role is functional but symbolic: it represents the inevitability of the circuit’s arrival and, by extension, the Master’s escape. The act of opening the envelope is the moment that makes the Master’s victory tangible.
The Thunderbolt missile’s remote abort mechanism is the failed safety net that dooms UNIT’s attempt to stop the Master. Though not explicitly mentioned in this scene, its sabotage is the elephant in the room—the reason the Brigadier and the Doctor are forced into their moral and tactical bind. The Doctor’s line, ‘What did you expect? The Master may be a scoundrel but he is a scientist,’ directly references the Master’s disabling of this mechanism. Its failure is the reason the dematerialization circuit must be returned, making it the invisible antagonist that shapes the entire event. The abort mechanism’s sabotage is the Master’s ultimate chess move, forcing his opponents into checkmate.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Brigadier’s mobile office is a claustrophobic, tension-filled space that mirrors the moral and tactical bind the Doctor and UNIT find themselves in. Crowded with maps, equipment, and the hum of radios, it serves as the command center for a losing battle. The confined quarters amplify the frustration and desperation in the air, with the Doctor and Brigadier standing almost shoulder-to-shoulder as they grapple with their options. The office’s practical role is that of a war room, but its atmosphere is one of defeat—until the Doctor’s hint of an alternative plan injects a flicker of hope. The location’s symbolic significance lies in its representation of institutional power under siege; UNIT, usually the authority, is now reactive and constrained, forced to surrender to the Master’s demands. The key environmental details—the maps (showing the Thunderbolt’s location), the radios (silent, as UNIT’s options dwindle), and the exhaust fumes seeping in from outside—all contribute to a mood of urgency and exhaustion.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
UNIT is the institutional backbone of this scene, represented through the Brigadier, Major Cosworth, and the broader operational failures that have led to this moment. The organization’s involvement is defined by its exhaustion of military options and its pragmatic surrender to the Master’s demands. The Brigadier’s admission that UNIT cannot detonate the Thunderbolt missile—coupled with the delivery of the dematerialization circuit—highlights UNIT’s vulnerability. The organization’s power dynamics are those of a once-dominant force now reduced to reactive measures, forced to defer to the Doctor’s intellectual authority. UNIT’s goals in this event are twofold: to contain the Master’s immediate threat to Earth and to avoid further escalation, even if it means allowing his escape. Its influence mechanisms are limited to logistical execution (e.g., delivering the circuit) and institutional protocol (e.g., following the chain of command), but these are insufficient to counter the Master’s cunning.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Master sabotages the abort mechanism (beat_563ae803f40939d3), ensuring that any attempt to abort the launch will not succeed; later revealed in beat_579070d9aae2564a."
Master disables missile abort mechanism"Following the reveal that the launch could not be aborted, this prompts the Doctor to restore the connection himself as the helicopter lands; he acts heroically here, not willing to give up and trying to save the rest of Earth from the Master."
Doctor restores missile abort circuitKey Dialogue
"BRIGADIER: We tried to explode Thunderbolt on the ground, Doctor, but nothing happened."
"DOCTOR: What did you expect? The Master may be a scoundrel but he is a scientist. He'll have disconnected the abort mechanism."
"BRIGADIER: Believe me, Doctor, I hate to see the Master escape unpunished as much as you do."
"DOCTOR: It's where he'll escape to that worries me. What right have we got to let him loose on some other planet?"