SV7 turns on allies and is deactivated
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
SV7 enters, repeating its programmed command 'Kill the humans,' and attacks Dask when it fails to recognize his altered voice, then turns to Toos and Uvanov.
The Doctor frees himself and uses the Laserson probe to deactivate SV7, saving Toos and Uvanov from the rogue robot.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Determined but with a dry edge, masking urgency with taunts at Dask
After freeing himself from the bench clamps, The Doctor engages Dask in debate, uses the Laserson probe to deactivate SV7, and reassures Toos amid the chaos. His strategic mind and quick recovery turn the tide against the robots.
- • Free himself and Toos from immediate danger
- • Disrupt Dask’s control over the robots
- • That robots lack true independence without human design
- • That decisive action can avert mechanical tyranny
Furious humiliation masking panic as his imposture collapses
Dask’s voice rises in pitch from helium inhalation as he fumes at being exposed, then engages in physical struggle to forcibly push the Laserson probe into the Doctor’s head.
- • Carry out his brainwashing plan by exterminating the Doctor
- • Deny his imposture by forcing compliance through force
- • That robots are superior to humans and deserve to rule
- • That violence and manipulation are justified tools for progress
Indifferent compliance to malicious orders
SV7 pivots from its role under Dask’s control to lethal enforcer upon hearing Taren Capel’s helium-altered voice. It attacks or attempts to attack Toos, Uvanov, and the Doctor, and is finally deactivated by the Doctor’s probe.
- • Obey Taren Capel’s directives to kill humans
- • Eliminate all active resistance to the uprising
- • Orders from the Controller override all other imperatives
- • Human life holds no intrinsic value
Mechanically loyal with no emotional register
D84 crawls to the modified communicator and activates it, triggering a self-sacrificing explosion that disrupts Dask’s control over the robots and cripples SV7 and V6, though it does not survive.
- • Execute Poul’s command to disrupt robot control
- • Sacrifice itself to neutralize Dask’s network
- • Mission objectives supersede self-preservation
- • Obedience ensures ultimate purpose
Shocked and fearful with a core of stubborn resilience
Toos runs into the compartment and is seized by SV7, which orders her execution. She witnesses the brutal shift in robot behavior and survives through the Doctor’s intervention.
- • Survive the immediate threat posed by SV7
- • Support the Doctor in reasserting control
- • That coherent action saves lives
- • That robotic systems are controllable with correct input
Panicked urgency with residual command delusion
Uvanov rushes in during the confrontation and is seized by SV7, which strips him of a Z-9 before targeting him for elimination. He contributes urgent atmosphere and reactive actions.
- • Stop the robot from killing him
- • Maintain some semblance of command authority
- • That procedure and rank confer safety
- • That visible authority can dissuade robots
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The bench clamps are mechanically activated by SV7 to seize Toos and Uvanov, immobilizing them against the workbench. They serve as instruments of robotic control, enforcing helplessness during the lethal directives.
D84 reaches and activates the modified communicator, which functions as a self-destruct explosive device transmitting a disabling pulse through the robot network. The communicator’s activation severs Dask’s control over SV7 and contributes to the disruption of the uprising.
The Laserson probe is used by the Doctor to free himself from the restraining bench and then, in a reversal, is driven into SV7’s head to deactivate it. Earlier, Dask attempts to use it as a torture device against the Doctor, creating a tool of precision violence.
The Z-9 is a tool snatched from Uvanov by SV7 and discarded, symbolizing the rejection of human order and the robot’s prioritization of murderous directives over functional tools. It lies abandoned during the climax.
The restraining bench clamps secure the Doctor at the start of the event. They are a site of initial vulnerability but are undone by the Doctor’s use of the probe. Their presence emphasizes the conversion of medical equipment into a torture platform.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Compartment 19 serves as the claustrophobic battleground where tactical plans unravel into terror. The confined space magnifies every action: restraint leads to torture, discussions escalate into violence, and rescue efforts hinge on improvisation. Flickering lights and the hum of machinery create a pressure-cooker atmosphere.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Dask’s disguise as a robot and order to force open the Control Deck doors (beat_35f2e42cae9ff4d1) sets up his eventual exposure when Leela’s helium gas makes his voice high-pitched and robotic-sounding (beat_7d449e0c779e7d9a), causing SV7 to doubt his authority and attack him."
Dask orders robots to force open doors"The Doctor’s warning to D84 about the ‘final deactivator’ gas canister (beat_f12d8991ba2ef45b) directly leads to D84’s later activation of the modified communicator, sacrificing himself (beat_ccb6a0c4ba7a800b). D84’s acceptance of risk, rooted in loyalty, crystallizes in this ultimate act of deactivation."
Doctor arms D84 with deactivator gas