Like
Harry, Benton doesn’t always get his due as a companion. He’s very soft-spoken, so it’s easy for him
to fade into the background, and it’s true that his contribution to a lot of
adventures involves getting knocked out by the bad guys. But Benton is braver and has more mettle than
he’s always given credit for, so today, I’m looking at my favorite moments of
his (spoilers.)
Joining the Assault (Series 8, Episode 9 – “The
Mind of Evil: Episode 5”)
Benton
makes a rough start of it in “The Mind of Evil” – he loses track of a suspect
he was supposed to be tailing due to a psychic attack, but since nobody
realizes that’s what it was at the time, the Brigadier reams him out for
“fainting” in the middle of an important mission. But Benton throws himself back into the thick
of things, and even after suffering a head injury later in the serial, he
doesn’t want to be counted out.
Discharging himself from the hospital, he presents himself to the
Brigadier and asks to be allowed “a chance to get at the blokes who did
it.” While this moment itself isn’t
heroic or action-y, it does demonstrate Benton’s determination (both to help in
any way he can and to prove he isn’t some liability) and nerve (in approaching
the Brigadier after getting thoroughly dressed down earlier in the adventure,)
and, since the scene ends with him inquiring after the captured Yates, his
desire to help a fellow soldier in a bad spot.
Aiding in the Ruse (Series 8, Episode 24 – “The
Dæmons: Episode 4”)
When the
Doctor is captured by a bunch of people who’ve been hypnotized by the Master,
“local witch” Miss Hawthorne plays on their superstitions to get him released,
with a little help from Benton. Claiming
that the Doctor is in fact a powerful wizard, Miss Hawthorne urges him to
shatter a nearby streetlamp as a sign of his power. At the Doctor’s command, Benton, sight
unseen, shoots the lamp, then repeats the same trick with a weathercock. It’s an effective bit of pageantry
well-executed by all, and Benton does a nice job following the Doctor’s
improvisations.
Tricking the Master (Series 9, Episode 22 –
“The Time Monster: Episode 2”)
Yes, the
Master gets one over on Benton in the end, but this is still a great
moment. Recognizing that the call from
“the Brigadier” ordering him to leave his post at TOMTIT is a fake (though the
Master’s imitation is impeccable, Benton knows the the Brigadier wouldn’t call
a sergeant “my dear fellow,”) he lets the Master think his plan has worked,
then doubles back and sneaks back in through the window he left open, ready to
apprehend the Master when he arrives.
Letting the Doctor Escape (Series 11, Episode 9
– “Invasion of the Dinosaurs: Episode
5”)
Members
of the Golden Age conspiracy have infiltrated UNIT and the Doctor knows about
it, so of course they’ve named him as
the traitor instead. Benton is tasked
with guarding the Doctor, and at first, he’s all business, giving orders to
subordinates about setting up a makeshift cell.
But as soon as they’re alone together, he asks the Doctor what’s what,
and although the news is unpleasant, Benton doesn’t doubt the truth of it. He says the Doctor “had better get on” with
“overpowering” him by way of the Doctor’s Venusian aikido, the classic alibi for
a prisoner’s convenient escape. I love
how matter-of-factly Benton decides this, mixed with how genuinely apprehensive
he looks as he braces himself to be incapacitated by the Doctor – he knows it’s
going to hurt, but he’s ready to do it anyway.
Bless him.
Offering to Test the Crystal (Series 11,
Episode 22 – “Planet of the Spiders:
Episode 2”)
The
Doctor has been testing the effects of the Metebelis crystal, and a low-level
psychic has just been killed by the crystal’s power. Because he’s the Doctor, he naturally decides
the best course of action is the look into the crystal himself, but not before
Benton speaks up. “Wouldn’t it be best
for me to have a go first?” he asks. “I
mean, I’m expendable and you’re not.” To
me, this moment is Benton all over – it’s quiet and understated, but brave and
selfless all the same. While the Doctor
turns down the offer, it doesn’t take away from Benton’s dedication to his
duties and his loyalty to the Doctor.
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