Ben resists Sunna’s indoctrination
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Sunna offers to help Ben, who is waiting for the Pilot, but Ben refuses, indicating a sense of unease and distrust. This refusal suggests a deeper conflict within Ben, highlighting his struggle with the colony's influence.
Ben reveals he's experiencing disturbing 'voices' in his head, indicating the colony's mind control is affecting him, blurring the line between reality and illusion. Sunna's response attempts to normalize the voices, framing them as friendly and helpful.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Calm and reassuring on the surface, but her role as an enforcer reveals a deeper emotional detachment—she is a cog in the machine, unaware of its cruelty.
Sunna is the colony’s unwitting enforcer, her calm demeanor masking the depth of her indoctrination. She offers hollow reassurances ('A willing friend makes the task lighter.') and dismisses Ben’s distress as normal, framing the voices as 'friends'—a direct contradiction to Ben’s experience. Her dialogue is scripted, her movements likely practiced, as she bridges the gap between the Pilot’s authority and the colonists’ compliance. She doesn’t engage with Ben’s emotional state; she enforces the colony’s narrative.
- • Reassure Ben and redirect his distress to align with the colony’s narrative.
- • Maintain the illusion of harmony and productivity in the Pilot’s absence.
- • The voices are benevolent and necessary for the colony’s functioning.
- • Dissent is a sign of weakness or illness, not oppression.
Conflict-torn, oscillating between fear of the voices and defiance of the colony’s narrative, with a desperate undercurrent of loyalty to his friends.
Ben stands rigid in the Pilot’s office, his body language betraying his internal turmoil. He physically recoils from Sunna’s attempts to assist, crossing his arms or stepping back as if her words are a threat. His voice wavers between defiance ('No.') and vulnerability ('I've got these voices in my head'), and his final line—'What about my friends?'—is laced with desperation, a plea for connection amid the colony’s isolation tactics. His distress is visceral, a man caught between the Doctor’s influence and the colony’s insidious control.
- • Resist the colony’s mind control by rejecting Sunna’s reassurances.
- • Hold onto his loyalty to the Doctor, Polly, and Jamie as a counterweight to the voices.
- • The voices in his head are not benign—they are a tool of control.
- • His friends (the Doctor, Polly, Jamie) represent his last tie to autonomy and truth.
Not applicable (off-screen), but his expected return instills dread in Ben and reinforces the colony’s hierarchical control.
The Pilot is physically absent from this scene but looms as an authority figure whose expected presence shapes the interaction. Ben’s insistence on waiting for the Pilot ('I'll wait for the Pilot, if I'm going to tell anybody.') reveals the Pilot’s role as the colony’s enforcer of control, and his absence creates a power vacuum that Sunna attempts to fill. The Pilot’s indirect influence is palpable—his directives are the reason Ben is in this office, and his potential return hangs over the scene like a threat.
- • Maintain psychological dominance over Ben through the Pilot’s office as a site of interrogation.
- • Ensure Ben’s compliance with the colony’s narrative, either through coercion or manipulation.
- • Dissent must be crushed through institutional control.
- • The voices are a necessary tool for maintaining order.
The Doctor is referenced indirectly through Ben’s internal conflict ('What about my friends?'), serving as a symbolic counterpoint to the …
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Pilot’s office is a claustrophobic, institutional space designed to enforce control and extract compliance. Its sterile, oppressive atmosphere—likely characterized by cold lighting, rigid furniture, and the hum of intercoms—mirrors the colony’s psychological tactics. The office is a site of interrogation and indoctrination, where Ben is isolated and vulnerable. Sunna’s presence here, attempting to 'help' in the Pilot’s absence, underscores the office’s role as a hub of surveillance and manipulation. The absence of the Pilot himself creates a tension: the room feels like a trap, a place where Ben’s resistance is being tested.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Colony’s influence permeates this scene through Sunna’s indoctrinated dialogue and the looming threat of the Pilot’s return. The organization’s goal here is twofold: to reinforce Ben’s compliance through psychological manipulation (via the voices and Sunna’s reassurances) and to isolate him from his companions (the Doctor, Polly, and Jamie). The Colony’s power dynamics are on full display—it operates through proxy (Sunna) and absent authority (the Pilot), ensuring that Ben feels surrounded even when alone. The scene is a microcosm of the Colony’s control mechanisms: propaganda ('the voices are our friends'), isolation, and the erasure of individual autonomy.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Ben, tasked by the Pilot to spy, is later found waiting for the Pilot, highlighting his continued struggle and sense of unease."
Pilot Condemns Doctor to Gas Pits"Ben, tasked by the Pilot to spy, is later found waiting for the Pilot, highlighting his continued struggle and sense of unease."
Pilot Receives Memory Erasure Orders"Ben, tasked by the Pilot to spy, is later found waiting for the Pilot, highlighting his continued struggle and sense of unease."
Ben Ordered to Spy on Friends"Ben is challenged by the Doctor regarding subservience to the colony, which later leads Ben to question the affect on his friends."
Doctor manipulates mine assignment"Ben is challenged by the Doctor regarding subservience to the colony, which later leads Ben to question the affect on his friends."
Medok Reveals the Danger Gang’s Truth"Ben is challenged by the Doctor regarding subservience to the colony, which later leads Ben to question the affect on his friends."
Doctor manipulates shift leadership"Ben is challenged by the Doctor regarding subservience to the colony, which later leads Ben to question the affect on his friends."
Doctor Confronts Ben’s Mind Control"As the companions venture into the old shaft, Ben is struggling with the colony’s mind control, foreshadowing his role in not reporting Jamie's actions that led to this escape."
Jamie steals keys amid gas mine chaos"As the companions venture into the old shaft, Ben is struggling with the colony’s mind control, foreshadowing his role in not reporting Jamie's actions that led to this escape."
Jamie unlocks the forbidden shaft"As the companions venture into the old shaft, Ben is struggling with the colony’s mind control, foreshadowing his role in not reporting Jamie's actions that led to this escape."
Medok’s reckless pursuit triggers alarmKey Dialogue
"SUNNA: Oh, the Pilot's not here. Let me help you."
"BEN: No."
"SUNNA: Always lend a helping hand. A willing friend makes the task lighter."
"BEN: I'll wait for the Pilot, if I'm going to tell anybody."
"SUNNA: You are, aren't you?"
"BEN: I don't know what I'm going to do. I've got these voices in my head. Sometimes I just think I'm having a bad dream."
"SUNNA: But the voices are here to help us. They are our friends."
"BEN: That's it. What about my friends?"