Resistance Against Mechanized Oppression
The struggle for autonomy against the Cybermen’s mechanical tyranny unfolds through acts of both overt rebellion and quiet defiance. Ben and Polly’s ambush using the 'Polly cocktail' represents the triumph of improvised agency over systemic control, while Jamie—initially a passive victim—regains purpose as a defender. Hobson’s emotional journey from anguish to strategic leadership reflects the human capacity to resist, even when outmatched. At the same time, the Cybermen’s infiltration tactics—using converted humans as Trojan horses—force characters to question: is resistance a moral imperative or a dangerous gamble? The Doctor’s sabotage of communications and Benoit’s moral protests operate not on the battlefield, but in the realm of ideology, proving that the will to resist can persist even under sonic mind-control.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
In the tense aftermath of the Cybermen’s initial invasion of Sickbay, Ben voices his visceral discomfort with their clinical term ‘converted’—a word that sanitizes the brutal erasure of human identity. …
The Doctor subtly manipulates the R/T unit’s volume while observing the Cybermen, exploiting a potential vulnerability in their systems. This covert action occurs as the Cybermen assert control over the …
In the moonbase control room, the Doctor disrupts the Cybermen’s sonic control over their human puppets by adjusting the R/T unit’s volume and pitch, causing the converted crewmen to lose …
In the Control Room, Ben, Jamie, and Polly execute a high-risk ambush on the Cybermen, spraying their chest units with a solvent mixture (the 'Polly cocktail') that instantly dissolves the …
In the immediate aftermath of the companions' successful sabotage of the Cybermen—where Ben, Jamie, and Polly use the acetone-based 'Polly cocktail' to dissolve the Cybermen's chest units and free the …