Flooding Forces Survival Priorities
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Sean and Jacko, carrying the wounded Thous, realize the flooding of Atlantis has begun, attributing it to the Doctor's actions. Thous laments the destruction of Atlantis and his dream. Sean urges them to forget the past, prioritize survival, and seek higher ground.
Damon arrives, lamenting the destruction of his operating room. Thous encourages Damon, stating they can start again. Sean interrupts and reiterates the need to reach high ground before they drown, forcing Damon to accept the urgency of the situation and offer to help.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Distraught and reluctant at first, quickly shifting to determined as he recognizes the immediate threat and the need for collective action. His grief is palpable, but his training and survival instinct override it.
Damon arrives distraught over the destruction of his operating room, initially fixated on his personal loss ('A life's work, washed away'). His emotional state stalls the group’s progress until Sean’s urgency snaps him into action. His pivot to helping the group evacuate ('I'll help. We've got a long way to go yet') marks a turning point, symbolizing the broader shift from grief to survival. Physically, he is disheveled and visibly affected, but his medical training kicks in as he tends to Thous emotionally and practically.
- • To process the loss of his operating room and lifetime of work without being paralyzed by it.
- • To contribute to the group’s survival by leveraging his medical skills and practical knowledge of Atlantis’ layout.
- • The destruction of his operating room represents the end of the old Atlantis, but his skills may still be valuable in whatever comes next.
- • Sean’s urgency is justified, and the group’s survival depends on immediate action.
Highly focused and slightly impatient, masking deeper concern for the group’s survival beneath a veneer of dark humor and no-nonsense directives.
Sean leads the group’s evacuation with urgent pragmatism, carrying Thous on the stretcher alongside Jacko and barking orders to prioritize survival over emotional attachments. His dialogue is sharp and direct ('We're going to be turned into fish food'), cutting through Damon’s grief and Thous’ nostalgia to refocus the group on the immediate threat. Physically, he is the driving force behind the stretcher, his movements hurried and purposeful as he navigates the flooding tunnel.
- • To ensure the group reaches higher ground before the flooding tunnels become impassable, using his leadership to override emotional distractions.
- • To reframe the group’s mindset from lamentation to action, as seen in his insistence that they 'look to the future.'
- • Emotional attachments to the past will get them killed if they don’t act immediately.
- • Damon and Thous, despite their grief, can be motivated to survive if given a clear, urgent purpose.
Mournful yet cautiously optimistic, oscillating between grief over the loss of Atlantis and Lolem and a tentative belief in renewal, as embodied in his exchange with Damon.
Thous lies wounded on a stretcher carried by Sean and Jacko, physically and emotionally weakened by the destruction of Atlantis and the death of Lolem. His dialogue reflects a mix of resignation ('To raise Atlantis from the sea was only the dream of a madman after all') and fragile hope ('We can start again, Damon'), positioning him as a passive but symbolically central figure in the group’s transition from the old Atlantis to a potential future.
- • To process the emotional weight of Atlantis’ destruction and Lolem’s death without succumbing to despair.
- • To symbolize the group’s potential for a new beginning, as seen in his plea to Damon to 'start again.'
- • The old Atlantis, with its traditions and leaders like Lolem, is irrevocably lost, but a new path forward may still exist.
- • Damon, as a fellow survivor and innovator, could be a key figure in rebuilding what has been destroyed.
Not applicable (off-screen), but inferred as resolute and focused on the larger goal of stopping Zaroff, even at the cost of Atlantis’ destruction.
The Doctor is indirectly referenced as the catalyst for the flooding, his actions driving the group’s urgent evacuation. Though not physically present, his influence is omnipresent—Sean attributes the flooding to him ('It's the Doctor, of course'), and the group’s entire focus shifts in response to his gambit. The Doctor’s absence highlights his role as an external force reshaping the group’s priorities and the fate of Atlantis.
- • To flood Atlantis and drown Zaroff’s reactor, prioritizing the global threat over the city’s survival.
- • To force the group to abandon emotional ties to the past and focus on survival, indirectly shaping their actions through the flooding.
- • The destruction of Atlantis is a necessary sacrifice to prevent a greater catastrophe.
- • The group’s survival depends on their ability to adapt quickly to his plan, even if it means losing what they hold dear.
Concerned but composed, prioritizing the group’s survival over personal expression. Her silence suggests a deep understanding of the urgency of the situation.
Ara follows Sean and Jacko, offering minimal dialogue ('Rest. Don't speak.') to Thous but otherwise remaining a silent, supportive presence. Her role is largely observational, though her presence underscores the group’s collective effort. She does not challenge Sean’s leadership or contribute to the emotional exchanges, instead focusing on the practical task of evacuation.
- • To ensure Thous is cared for during the evacuation, even if only through minimal verbal reassurance.
- • To contribute to the group’s survival by remaining focused and avoiding distractions.
- • Sean’s leadership is the most effective way to navigate the crisis.
- • Emotional discussions, while natural, are a secondary concern to immediate survival.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The stretcher serves as a critical lifeline for Thous, carried by Sean and Jacko through the flooding tunnel. It is both a practical tool—enabling the group to transport a wounded leader—and a symbolic object, representing the fragile transition from the old Atlantis to an uncertain future. The stretcher’s stability is constantly threatened by the rising water, forcing the group to move quickly and carefully, while its presence also serves as a reminder of the physical and emotional toll of the evacuation.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
This specific tunnel, where the group is carrying Thous on the stretcher, is a narrow and increasingly submerged corridor that serves as the group’s escape route. The tunnel’s confined space amplifies the tension, as the rising water forces the group to move quickly while also making it difficult to maneuver the stretcher. Damon’s arrival here is pivotal, as his initial grief over the operating room’s destruction is met with Sean’s urgency, marking the group’s shift from emotional paralysis to action. The tunnel’s role is both practical and symbolic, representing the narrow path forward in a collapsing world.
The flooding lower levels of Atlantis serve as the primary setting for this event, where the Doctor’s gambit to drown the city unfolds in real time. The tunnels, once a symbol of Atlantis’ infrastructure and power, are now a deadly maze of rising water, forcing the group to navigate quickly or risk drowning. The location’s atmosphere is one of urgent chaos, with the sound of rushing water and the physical strain of carrying Thous’ stretcher amplifying the stakes. Symbolically, the lower levels represent the collapse of the old Atlantis, both literally and metaphorically, as the group is forced to abandon the past in favor of survival.
High ground above water level is the group’s ultimate destination in this event, representing safety and survival amid the chaos. Though not yet reached, it is the driving force behind Sean’s urgency and the group’s collective effort. The idea of high ground serves as a metaphor for the group’s hope for a future beyond the destruction of Atlantis, even as the flooding tunnels threaten to cut off their path. The location is not yet physically present in this moment, but its promise looms large, shaping the group’s actions and dialogue.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Atlantis (Old Order) is the collapsing institutional and cultural framework that defines the group’s past and the world they are being forced to leave behind. The flooding of the lower levels and the destruction of key locations like Damon’s operating room symbolize the irreversible end of this order. The organization’s influence is felt in the group’s emotional reactions—Thous’ grief over Lolem and Atlantis, Damon’s loss of his life’s work—but its power is waning as the Doctor’s flooding gambit dismantles it. The group’s shift from lamentation to survival reflects the old order’s final collapse and the necessity of moving forward.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor's plan to disrupt Zaroff's operations with a power surge results in the flooding of Atlantis, leading Sean and Jacko to realize that the flooding of Atlantis has begun, attributing it to the Doctor's actions."
Doctor and Ben sabotage the generatorThemes This Exemplifies
Thematic resonance and meaning
Key Dialogue
"SEAN: Will you listen to that. JACKO: What is it? SEAN: How would I know, but it certainly isn't closing time at Betty Murphy's pub. It can be only one thing. It's the Doctor, of course. He's started to flood Atlantis. The sea's breaking in."
"THOUS: To raise Atlantis from the sea was only the dream of a madman after all. ARA: Rest. Don't speak. SEAN: And you best forget about all that now and look to the future. That is, if we're going to have any future."
"SEAN: Well, personally speaking, not being a terribly good swimmer myself, I think I'll just start to make a move. DAMON: My operating room. A life's work, washed away. THOUS: Damon. DAMON: Thous. THOUS: We can start again, Damon. SEAN: Look, if we don't hurry and get onto high ground above water level, we're going to be turned into fish food. DAMON: Yes, you're right. Quite so. I'll help. We've got a long way to go yet."