Mrs. Farrel reveals the doll's movement
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Mrs. Farrel recounts a disturbing detail about the doll moving from the radiator to under the curtains after her husband's death, as if trying to escape.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Alert and professionally engaged, with a subtle undercurrent of unease at the doll’s implications.
Jo receives the doll from Mrs. Farrel and immediately recognizes its threat, her UNIT training kicking in as she processes its uncanny behavior. She listens intently to Mrs. Farrel’s account of the doll’s movement, her alertness underscoring the gravity of the discovery. Jo’s role as the Doctor’s companion and UNIT’s civilian aide is evident in her ability to bridge the gap between scientific inquiry and human testimony.
- • Validate the doll as a Nestene artifact to support the Doctor’s investigation.
- • Support Mrs. Farrel emotionally while extracting critical details about the doll’s behavior.
- • The doll’s movement is a clear sign of Auton activity, confirming the Nestene Consciousness’s presence.
- • Mrs. Farrel’s testimony, though distressing, is reliable and essential to the case.
Grief-stricken yet resolute, her distress giving way to a cooperative urgency as she realizes the doll’s significance.
Mrs. Farrel, still grappling with her husband’s death, reluctantly shares details about the doll, her grief making her initially hesitant. She retrieves the doll from the sideboard and recounts its eerie movement—from the radiator to beneath the curtains—with a mix of confusion and dread. Her testimony, though fragmented, becomes the linchpin of the investigation, revealing the doll’s Auton nature and the Master’s infiltration. Her emotional vulnerability contrasts with her cooperative resolve to expose the truth.
- • Share what she knows to help the Doctor and Jo uncover the truth about her husband’s death.
- • Process her grief while contributing to the investigation, seeking closure through action.
- • The doll’s movement is unnatural and tied to her husband’s death, though she doesn’t yet understand how.
- • The Doctor and Jo are her best chance at uncovering what really happened to John.
Focused intensity with underlying urgency, tempered by compassion for Mrs. Farrel’s grief.
The Doctor presses Mrs. Farrel with methodical persistence, his sharp intellect dissecting her grief-stricken responses to uncover the Master’s influence. He seizes on the doll as a critical clue, examining it with Jo and probing its eerie behavior—from the radiator to the curtains—as a tangible link to the Nestene Consciousness. His demeanor is focused yet patient, balancing urgency with empathy to extract the truth from Mrs. Farrel’s fragmented memories.
- • Uncover the Master’s connection to John Farrel’s death and the doll’s origins.
- • Confirm the doll as a Nestene artifact to pivot the investigation toward the Auton threat.
- • The doll’s movement is not coincidental but evidence of Auton animation.
- • Mrs. Farrel’s testimony, though fragmented, holds the key to the Master’s infiltration.
Not directly observable, but his influence is felt as a sinister, calculating force behind the doll’s animation and John Farrel’s death.
The Master is referenced indirectly through his alias, Colonel Masters, as the Doctor probes Mrs. Farrel about her husband’s associations. His influence looms over the scene, embodied by the doll—a Nestene artifact—whose eerie behavior confirms his role in John Farrel’s death and the Auton infiltration. Though physically absent, his presence is palpable, driving the investigation’s pivot toward the plastic-based threat he and the Nestene Consciousness represent.
- • Use the doll and Auton infiltration to advance the Nestene Consciousness’s invasion of Earth.
- • Manipulate human agents (like John Farrel) to facilitate the Auton takeover.
- • The doll’s discovery will lead the Doctor closer to uncovering his plans, but he remains confident in his ability to outmaneuver his rival.
- • Human grief and distraction make them vulnerable to Nestene control.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The curtains in the Farrel home become a symbolic hiding place for the doll after its movement from the radiator. Mrs. Farrel’s discovery of the doll beneath the curtains—after her husband’s death—hints at its attempt to conceal itself, reinforcing its Auton nature. The curtains, a mundane household feature, take on a sinister role as they frame the doll’s uncanny behavior, a harbinger of the Nestene Consciousness’s presence.
The radiator serves as a key reference point in Mrs. Farrel’s account of the doll’s movement. Initially, the doll rests on the radiator, a seemingly innocuous location in the Farrel home. After John Farrel’s death, however, the doll’s shift from the radiator to beneath the curtains suggests its Auton animation, as if it were attempting to escape or hide. This movement is pivotal in confirming the doll’s Nestene origins and the Master’s infiltration.
The sideboard in the Farrel home serves as the storage place for the grotesque novelty doll, a seemingly innocuous location that belies its sinister contents. Mrs. Farrel retrieves the doll from the sideboard, handing it to Jo, which triggers the revelation of its Auton nature. The sideboard, a symbol of domestic normalcy, contrasts sharply with the doll’s uncanny origins, highlighting the Nestene Consciousness’s ability to infiltrate even the most ordinary spaces.
The grotesque novelty doll, initially dismissed as a harmless factory sample, becomes the critical clue that pivots the investigation. Mrs. Farrel retrieves it from the sideboard and hands it to Jo, whose immediate recognition of its threat underscores its Nestene origins. The doll’s eerie movement—from the radiator to beneath the curtains after John Farrel’s death—reveals its Auton nature, transforming it from a mundane object into a sinister artifact. Its uncanny behavior confirms the Master’s infiltration and escalates the stakes of the Auton threat.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Farrel home, a space heavy with grief and loss, becomes the stage for the discovery of the grotesque novelty doll and its eerie behavior. The living room, with its sideboard, radiator, and curtains, frames the doll’s movement as a harbinger of the Nestene threat. The home’s domestic normalcy contrasts sharply with the sinister implications of the doll, creating a tension-filled atmosphere where everyday objects take on uncanny significance. This setting underscores the Auton invasion’s ability to infiltrate even the most private and personal spaces.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Nestene Consciousness’s influence is felt through the grotesque novelty doll, a tangible artifact of its plastic-based invasion. Though not directly present, its presence is confirmed by the doll’s eerie movement and Auton nature, which the Doctor and Jo recognize as a clear sign of Nestene infiltration. The organization’s goal of replacing human life with plastic Autons is hinted at through the doll’s attempt to ‘escape’ or hide, suggesting a broader strategy to infiltrate and control Earth.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"The Doctor seeks information around 'Colonel Masters' and then is pushed to focus on more tangible evidence. The Master's presence casts a shadow, driving their investigation."
Mrs. Farrel reveals her husband’s suicide"The Doctor seeks information around 'Colonel Masters' and then is pushed to focus on more tangible evidence. The Master's presence casts a shadow, driving their investigation."
Mrs. Farrel reveals the Master’s influence"Mrs. Farrel describes the doll moving by itself after her husband's death, foreshadowing its animated and deadly nature."
Mrs. Farrel reveals the moving doll"Mrs. Farrel describes the doll moving by itself after her husband's death, foreshadowing its animated and deadly nature."
Mrs. Farrel reveals the moving dollKey Dialogue
"MRS FARREL: Well, when I went out of the room, that thing was on the radiator by the door. But after they'd taken John away, I found it under the curtains. It was as if it was trying to get out."
"DOCTOR: Could we see it, Mrs Farrel?"
"JO: Yes, I see what you mean."