The Tyranny of the Unseen
In this installment, the true nature of the threat is deliberately obscured—hidden in plain sight behind the veneer of mundane objects and bureaucratic facades. The Autons, plastic dolls, and even the plastics factory all masquerade as harmless commodities, masking the Nestene Consciousness’s genocidal intentions. Characters like Mrs. Farrel and the Brigadier struggle against this deception, their attempts to uncover the truth repeatedly frustrated by the oppressive ambiguity of the enemy. The Doctor’s acute awareness of the unseen, combined with his frustration at being dismissed by UNIT, underscores the theme: wisdom without direct evidence is easily dismissed, and seemingly innocent objects can harbor existential terror.
Events Exemplifying This Theme
The Doctor and Jo barely escape their crashed car after an Auton ambush, taking cover as the synthetic creatures hunt them. The Brigadier and Yates arrive with a soldier, but …
The Doctor probes Mrs. Farrel about her late husband’s suspicious dealings with 'Colonel Masters' (the Master), but the focus abruptly shifts when she retrieves a grotesque novelty doll—a clear Nestene …
In the UNIT laboratory, the Doctor interrogates Jo and Yates about the doll’s violent activation, piecing together that heat—specifically Yates’s cocoa preparation using the Doctor’s bunsen burner—triggered the mechanism. The …
The Doctor dismisses the Brigadier, Yates, and Jo after deducing that the Auton doll’s heat activation triggered Farrel’s death, linking it to the Nestene Consciousness. As the lab clears, the …