The Cost of Preparedness
UNIT’s operational efficiency is both its strength and Achilles’ heel, as rigid protocols falter against the supernatural. Yates’ forgotten duty to contact the Brigadier, Benton’s unaccounted absence, and the Brigadier’s initial dismissal of Hawthorne’s warnings reveal how systemic reliance on process can obscure emergent threats. This theme is exacerbated by the Doctor’s unconventional methods (e.g., ignoring orders to clear the roadblock), suggesting that true preparedness demands flexibility. The villagers’ abandonment of Devil’s End underscores how institutions—whether military or rural—can collapse when facing forces beyond their framing.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
In a tense, high-pressure sequence at UNIT HQ, Yates and Benton frantically work the phones, leveraging every available channel—official protocols, veiled threats, and personal urgency—to locate the Brigadier and trace …
In the tense, high-stakes atmosphere of UNIT HQ, Yates and Benton frantically attempt to contact the Brigadier and locate the Doctor and Jo after a BBC broadcast from Devil's End …
In the tense aftermath of Benton’s departure to investigate demonic tracks outside the Cloven Hoof, Yates and Jo briefly reassure each other about the Doctor’s condition—still unconscious but stable. The …
The Brigadier investigates a fiery roadblock reported by a panicked delivery man, whose van inexplicably burst into flames after an earthquake. Using his swagger stick, the Brigadier tests the scorched …