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THE
MYSTERON MENACE
Geoff Willmetts looks at one of the great issues raised by the
Captain Scarlet TV series ... just how Mysteronised was Captain
Black?
‘This is the voice of the Mysterons.
We know that you can hear us, earthmen...’
The actions of the Mysterons in the TV series
‘Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons’ can be viewed with a measure
of justification in their action against the inhabitants of Earth.
Representatives of our species made the wrong decision with dire
consequences. The 2068 Mars survey mission investigating radio signals
from the red planet discover the Mysteron complex.
The
Mysterons in turn focused their scanners on the Martian Exploration
Vehicle impressed that the humans had come so far. The crew decide
the alien city was mounting an attack and launch a preemptive strike
destroying most of the complex. To their amazement, concealed machinery
restores the complex to its original state and the Mysterons committed
themselves to retaliate against the rather trigger-happy aggressive
humans.
Rather than an all-out assault, they declare a
war of nerves in a series of terrorist actions to intimidate and
bring down the arrogant primitive humans for their unwarranted violence.
Based on the actions depicted in the series, the
Mysterons probably had a serious point to make. Whenever there is
an emergency, Spectrum’s commanding officer, Colonel White, sends
in armed aircraft often to back up his officers who drive into action
in speedy tanks with almost complete autonomy as to what actions
they should take.
The other armed forces are no better, especially
when as in the episode ‘Avalanche’, General Frost threatens to fire
his missiles at Mars without a Presidential order. This Earth’s
reality is clearly far too aggressive compared to our own.
There has been much debate as to whether there
were actually ‘Mysterons’ on Mars or their computers in an abandoned
base operating under limited protocols. There is much to favour
the latter in terms of their lack of further communication, limited
options and unrelenting determination to succeed.
The placement of the Mysteron base has many similarities
to the Monolith in ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ waiting for sentient
life to develop sufficiently to meet them. This being the case,
then the Mysterons are not only not native to Mars but also extra-solar
aliens. They were also expecting peaceful visitors as the base was
obviously unarmed.
Whichever, it was an unforeseen development that
the Mysterons’ initial actions were so badly misinterpreted by the
MSV’s investigation officer, Spectrum agent Conrad Turner aka Captain
Black, that created the crisis. He had been selected for the team
solely for the need of a military advisor to assess the radio signals.
As a potential ambassador to an alien race, Captain
Black was a poor choice in view of his actions.
The initial action the Mysterons undertook was
to dominate and control the MSV crew, specifically Captain Black
himself. There was no attempt made to destroy and recreate either
the MSV or crew either on Mars or on the return to Earth. With their
ability to manipulate machinery such an action was well within their
abilities or even to destroy it but neither action was considered.
Considering the Mysteron base in Crater 101 on
the Moon also appeared weaponless and defenseless, the Mysterons
themselves may well have been pacifist in nature. There is also
some speculation that the Mysterons had to consider their actions
carefully once they decided upon their war of nerves or terrorist
acts suggesting they had only limited capabilities for such purposes.
The latter re-enforces the belief that this is
a war led by sentient computers than whatever the real Mysterons
were or are. Likewise, there is no information to suggest if the
Mysterons would have acted any differently to their computers. As
such, the term ‘Mysterons’ will be used for either computer or alien
in this article.
The examination of the crew no doubt displayed
they had one amongst them totally familiar with Earth security procedures
and potential targets, Captain Black himself. Considering that the
likes of the World President and military targets were selected,
it would stand to reason the information was sourced from Black
than direct observation.
Until the MSV encountered the Mysteron city, they
had obviously not examined mankind in detail or else would have
realised the human aggressive potential. There have been no reported
instances of or the whereabouts of the rest of the MSV crew. It
is possible that the Mysterons have hidden them away as potential
replacements for Captain Black should he ever be killed beyond resurrection.
There is sufficient information to indicate Captain
Black was mentally dominated than ‘mysteronised’ - the alternative
name for the retro-metabolism technique used to resurrect living
beings and inanimate objects. Black’s pallor and demeanor suggests
that he was not a willing victim and fighting his control. All other
mysteronised agents looked quite normal in comparison.
The rather more conclusive evidence is given in
the episode ‘Man Hunt’ where Captain Black was photographed breaking
into a nuclear plant. Later evidence in the episode ‘Flight 104’,
indicates that ‘mysteronised’ humans silhouette when photographed
with a regular camera. If the Mysterons were aware of this property,
it would have made sense for them to have an agent who could pass
such a security check with impunity. On the many occasions when
it appeared Captain Black could be captured, the Mysterons teleported
him to safety than risk him being captured or killed.
There are a number of times where Captain Black’s
actions appear humane and even against his orders. Again, in the
episode ‘Man Hunt’, his release of Symphony Angel could be seen
not only as a means to hide Black’s own escape but resisting his
own control in letting an ex-colleague live than mindlessly kill
her. Considering how easily Captain Black murdered other people
to reach his masters’ aims this would seem out of character.
It would have been a simple matter to murder Symphony
and let a mysteronised copy lead the other Spectrum officers away
from the nuclear plant. There might have been an additional ulterior
motive here. There is also a possibility that the proximity to a
radioactive fuel source might have hindered a total regeneration
in some way that might also have reconsidered the standard option.
In any event, rather than compromise Captain Black’s mind control
further, he was invariably teleported to safety in future.
There seems to be some conflict with the novels
and comicbook strips depicting Captain Black as being mysteronised
agent. This writer suspects this was done to provide Captain Scarlet
with an equal adversary and therefore endowed him with similar abilities.
In light of the evidence above, such material can hardly be regarded
as canon to the TV reality.
Captain Black is never seen recovering from injuries
to indicate his body has been mysteronised. All other Mysteron agents
look exactly as they were before their deaths and regeneration.
In comparison, Captain Black resembles a walking zombie with his
haunted look. To regenerate him in that state would not have been
wise.
The Mysterons had nearly total control of him anyway
so why would there be a need to re-create him as well? A mysteronised
human is post-hypnotically ordered to carry out a specific set of
instructions. If Captain Scarlet is anything to go by, after completing
the instructions or after 24 hours, a controlled mysteronised human
is capable of returning to nomad. Neither option is suitable for
Captain Black who also appears to have limited autonomy in carrying
out his masters’ orders.
For the present, let’s examine the regeneration/retro-metabolism
process. Within the original Mysteron use, it was probably a restoration
tool for these aliens and their machinery in case of accident. Whether
they developed this technology because they were extremely fragile
or accident-prone is hard to say.
What is important is that once they’ve been regenerated,
the retro-metabolism feature ensures perpetual life except when
suffering a high voltage discharge. Although this same electricity
is also capable of killing a human, it is possible to survive if
suitably earthed. A mysteronised being has no such chance. This
again gives some clue as to the nature of the process.
A speculation on this author’s part is that a mysteronised
organism might be unable to reproduce itself and could be inherently
sterile. This would no doubt prevent a mysteronised regeneration
as a career option for all seeking immortality. Certainly the indications
are that further physical growth is impossible as anyone mysteronised
will remain that way forever. Colonel White once commented, albeit
in Symphony Angel’s dream, in the episode ‘Attack On Cloudbase’
that Captain Scarlet’s hair is slightly longer than regulation.
No doubt he was going to have a haircut prior to
the Mysterons killing him but is an indication that the mysteronisation
process maintains a body’s status quo. The duplicate has properties
unlike the original. Whereas an injured human will scar when healed,
a mysteronised human will be restored with no such imperfections.
Whether this also reduces the amount of pain received
is debatable.
The first two subjects of the mysteronising treatment
were Spectrum Captains Brown and Scarlet. This process required
the deaths of the original officers. Presumably, this is a protocol
logged into the Mysteron computers to prevent unnecessary duplicates
wandering around. In the episode ‘Triple Cross’, the original of
a mysteronised subject, Major Gravener, was revived with no ill
effect on either body.
There is no transfer of anything resembling a ‘soul’
to a new body and supports the hypothesis that the personality is
nothing more than a series of memories that can be reproduced. Even
more importantly in that particular case was that neither the Mysterons
nor Captain Black appeared certain as to whether this was one of
their own suggesting a fallibility in their cognitive recognition
or they are incapable of continual observation.
This could also have been a blind as the mission
was seemingly aborted while in progress. The Mysterons may simply
have continued the mission to further assess how far the humans
would investigate or provide a blind alley on their own motives
or vulnerabilities.
A slight digression but it also emphasizes an
alternative point. Having the original and a mysteronised version
alive at the same time creates confusion with the Mysteron computers
especially if they cross each other’s paths as each would believe
himself as the original.
There is nothing to say that coexisting duplicates
could then develop along different paths of thought or opinion and
see the other as a potential threat to itself.
Returning to Scarlet and Brown, the Mysterons
made little attempt to conceal the crash or perhaps underestimated
humans discovering the bodies so soon. Again, this was early in
their war of nerves and were still adjusting to their own rules
of engagement. In their original use, the Mysterons may have seen
their original bodies as empty shells to be forgotten when regenerated
or their machines removing at a later date.
Isolated with the President, Captain Brown smolders
and then violently explodes. He made no threat during the process.
This gives some clue to the process of retro-metabolism. The regenerated
body does not draw mass from the original body suggesting that it
draws matter continually from an alternative source.
Should the absorption rate exceed the body requirements
then combustion is possible in the equivalent of a sub-atomic fart
and explodes. The Mysterons first experiment with a mysteronised
body as a living bomb was a complete success although the action
failed to kill anyone. This was rarely repeated although other cases
would certainly have been more effective had they kept to this strategy.
Even in the episode ‘Point 783’, an exploding mysteronised
human was only used as a maneuver to separate Captain Scarlet from
acting as a bodyguard to the main threat. It may simply have been
a means to gauge how far they should go in the regeneration process.
It is extremely rare that a mysteronised human regenerates let alone
recovers after they’ve completed their mission suggesting the Mysterons
have two versions of regenerated copies.
In that respect, Captain Brown could have been
considered an inferior made or short-term copy. Captain Scarlet,
on the other hand, was the first fully long-term mysteronised resurrection.
His programming was later modified to abduct rather than kill the
President. This author suggests that at this time in the game, that
Captain Black was also fighting his own mind control rather than
let the assassination continue and turned it into a preferred kidnapping.
After Captain Blue ‘killed’ Captain Scarlet, as
indicated in the episode ‘Winged Assassin’, he regenerated with
his original personality intact and no recollection since the car
crash. This supports the theory of a full Mysteron regeneration
and their first major mistake. Not only had they revealed their
main ability, they left someone in the opposition’s hands capable
of tackling other mysteronised agents. As commented previously,
the instructions may only have worked for 24 hours before the original
personality can assert itself.
The statistics from these apparent ‘mistakes’
allowed the Mysterons to determine the level of regeneration so
none of their later agents survived their missions. All mysteronised
people in future were purely short-term regeneration and had their
programming initiated by Captain Black. It is significant that he
says the same words to each, ‘You know what you have to do?’, rather
than detail their mission.
The short-term limit can be inferred simply because
none of them appear to resurrect from their fatal injuries even
when shot with a regulation Spectrum pistol. The Mysterons did not
want a repeat of their previous failure and provide more mysteronised
bodies to their enemy.
The only real knowledge we have of living long-term
mysteronised bodies can only be discovered from Captain Scarlet.
Despite fatal injuries on a number of occasions, he has restored
to life with no apparent memory loss other than the time when he
was under direct Mysteron control on his first resurrection.
He also suffers apparent dizziness in the presence
of other mysteronised humans and equipment. This might well be an
effect they all have from sharing a similar matter source and there
is a limit to how much each body can receive at a time. Of significant
note on both visits to the Moon, Captain Scarlet was in the presence
of mysteronised humans with no ill-effect. However, as Crater 101
was a Mysteron base, one could well believe being closer to one
of their generators or there was an adequate supply of material
for them all.
If Captain Scarlet is such a threat to the Mysterons,
why can’t they simply cut off his ability to draw on matter? If,
as believed, these are actually Mysteron computers, such an action
would not be allowed in their programming. They can only resurrect
after a person or object is destroyed. There is little in that line
to suggest that the same applies to a mysteronised being If, as
suggested, there are long and short term levels of mysteronisation,
then Scarlet clearly falls into the first category.
The Mysterons might well have been considering
Scarlet as a potential second-in-command to Captain Black. A military
officer with total retro-metabolism properties would have done much
of the physical work. By their own mistake, the Mysterons are frustrated
with creating their own nemesis and resort to short-term mysteronised
agents instead. This doesn’t mean that they cannot send other mysteronised
agents to do such a deed just unable to do so by a direct approach.
The matter used for retro-metabolism does not
come from the original body although death does not prevent the
Mysterons scanning it with twin white halo lights prior to and after
regeneration. Considering that all the necessary ingredients - principally
carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and many minor elements - are available
for reconstruction from the surrounding atmosphere that might not
be a problem.
If anything, it is the speed of recreation that
can best be described as incredible. As mentioned above, two or
more mysteronised humans or machinery together drawing upon the
same free elements to maintain their own body integrity can cause
momentarily dizziness before some form of homeostasis is achieved.
It is also significant that high voltage can disrupt the internal
body matrix permanently suggesting the whatever makes it function
is part of the mysteronised body.
No doubt the original Mysterons are aware of this
problem and probably ensure there is sufficient free molecules to
provide for all mysteronised bodies prior to regeneration. The fact
that this continues suggests a certain instability with maintaining
the form.
The use of regeneration and retro-metabolism from
the Mysterons equipment has made their computers extremely formidable
in a low order way without replying on anything else from their
potential arsenal. What has been discovered from an examination
from their Crater 101 complex on the Moon indicates a power source
based on a single crystal.
When Captain Scarlet removed the crystal from its
conduit, the complex didn’t automatically close down suggesting
a reserve or battery-like source keeping the machinery active. It
might also have been part of a complex ruse by the Mysteron computers
especially as it was later used in an attempt to destroy Cloudbase
in the following episode ‘Dangerous Rendezvous’.
The only device that the Mysteron computers use
freely is that of teleportation in order to rescue Captain Black
from possible capture or death. Used in an aggressive way, such
a device could remove any assassination victim in their war of nerves
with the humans. The same could also be said for the ease they have
for taking control of airplanes and land vehicles.
With the latter, there must be some obvious limitation
or there wouldn’t be any need for mysteronisation. As so much of
their technology can be disrupted by high voltage to overuse such
control could reveal a potential weakness to the humans.
The final results of this war was never revealed
in the TV series and any comment on it can only be regarded as speculation.
The Spectrum speculation, albeit a dream by Symphony Angel, in the
episode ‘Attack On Cloudbase’ that the Mysterons would launch a
physical attack by flying saucers against Cloudbase would be extremely
questionable.
It is well within the military training of a Spectrum
pilot but such actions are probably beyond the Mysteron computers
programming. The entire point of their ‘war of nerves’ is to teach
the upstart humans the folly of their mistakes. When such a punishment
is deemed completed, the Mysterons will probably stop of their own
volition. Whether they will talk to the humans or even want to hear
what our species have to say for themselves only time will tell.
There is always a possibility that the ‘real’ Mysterons
might return to settle things and then there would be a real quandary
as to whether they would agree with their computers’ actions.
The lessons for our reality out of all of this
is that whatever the original reason for aggressive action against
an opponent is, it’s too easy to let such offenses carry on definitely
with no attempt made for some sort of peaceful settlement or compromise.
This does not belittle the original reason for the start of any
war but there is a time when both parties have to move on from what
caused the first confrontation.
However, when it comes from misunderstanding rather
than an outright aggressive desire for domination of another territory,
then both sides need to act adult and admit they both made mistakes,
end hostilities and reach a peace. To carry on a war ad infintium
shows a preference to be at war than peace. I doubt if this was
ever the intention of ‘Captain Scarlet And The Mysterons’ but to
impressionable youngsters who enjoy the show, an awareness of the
futility of such struggles compared to our own reality can’t really
be avoided.
The series was unique in that it was the humans
who started off as the aggressor. One can only hope that should
an alien encounter happen in our reality, that we might start by
giving the benefit of the doubt before opening fire.
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