And now, I'm back, with a new B7 episode, Deliverance!!!
- A space station! Rotating! ...wait, if they have artificial gravity, why do they have a rotating station like '2001'?
For gyroscopic stabilization, I expect, so its axis doesn't drift. Or because it looks better onscreen.
- Now we're on a shuttle! The pilot informs us that since they're passing close to a certain planet, they're on the right path to their destination! I must say, navigating space is peculiar to the B7 universe.
Also, they're reusing the space pod from "Time Squad," which is way too tiny to support a 2-man crew for a journey of a week or more with no rest stops to pull into. I'm sure it was scripted to be bigger, but they couldn't afford to build a new set and miniature. I mean, it has two escape capsules, but the prop is about the same size as the escape pod from
Star Wars. (Note, however, that the escape capsules are called "survival modules," while the ones in "Mission to Destiny" were "life rockets." While the term "escape pod" had been previously used in aviation design circles, it was introduced to science fiction by
Star Wars less than a year before this, so the term hadn't caught on yet.)
- The Liberator just so happens to be in that area. It's amazing how small the Galaxy is in B7. I have neighbors I don't see for months, but our heroes are always in the right place at the right time!
Yes. On the one hand, I like it that Servalan has her own agendas that don't revolve around the
Liberator, but on the other, it requires a literally astronomical degree of coincidence to get our heroes involved in the story.
- Cally passes the time with some really cool VR headsets! Okay, that's a good techno-futuristic idea, considering the Walkman hadn't come out yet!
The device was introduced in the pilot episode; a computer operator was using it when Tel Varon and Maja came to dig into the records of Blake's alleged victims. It's weird that it's depicted as a music player, but only covers the eyes and not the ears.
- And on the spaceship they realized they were lost Jenna "But wasn't she with you?" "Not with you!!!" Jeez. I know these aren't professional soldiers, but they're pretty smart people. Didn't they learn anything from the time they lost Cally?!?!
The startling thing I discovered on my rewatch is that these people are amazingly bad at what they do.
- As the rest of the crew go to save Jenna, Blake and Cally check the dead man's wallet and discover that he's a surgeon, or rather... A SPACE SURGEON! Probably deals with space-colds, space-appendicitis and space-migraines. Did Star Trek TOS also put the prefix "space" everywhere???
Not nearly as much as B7. Just wait until Series B, where the crew visits Spaceland in the first episode and Space City in the second. In space!
- Well, the other survivor wakes up, mega info dump. Okay. The guy finds a gun from who knows where and Cally is taken hostage. In the same episode, both women become damsels in distress. The attitude towards women in this series is schizophrenic.
Yes. The inability of trained warrior Cally to break the hold of a weak, badly injured man is hard to justify, unless it’s
because he’s so weak that she can’t bring herself to hurt him. Even so, she should’ve known multiple ways to disarm him harmlessly.
- My favorite female villain with Travis! I love their exchanges. Servalan explains her evil plan, so evil it even shocks Travis. And it seems like a stupid plan, too. If they blow up the shuttle, don't they also risk losing the McGuffin?
No, because Ensor Jr. already told Servalan where Ensor Sr.'s lab was located, so she didn't need him anymore. The whole reason she blew up the Spacemaster (there it is again) was to keep Ensor Jr. from getting there in time to save Ensor Sr.'s life, so that Servalan could just swoop in after he was dead and take Orac. (Although this plan will be forgotten in part 2.)
- Now this woman kneels adoringly at Avon's feet as soon as she sees him, mistaking him for some god from a prophecy. And it won't be the first time. A woman throwing herself on her knees at the feet of a man she's never seen, promising him fidelity and utmost obedience. I must say, the scene makes me a little uncomfortable. Times have truly changed.
They didn't intend us to approve of her acting that way; it was meant to show how superstitious she was. And it was largely about showing that Avon kind of got off on being worshipped, because he's not a nice person.
- Aval and friends immediately know how to use all the controls in a sort of control room. How? HOW?!?!
Also, once he and the others power up the consoles, we hear mission control-type chatter from several voices, even though there isn’t anyone there. I guess it’s supposed to be computer voices, but it sounds too human.
I think the miniature footage of the rocket was recycled from
Doctor Who, but I'm not sure from where.
- We see the Neanderthal village. Is it just me or is there not even a single woman there?
Nor a married one...
You know, I was so prepared for the worst that I almost liked the episode in the end! Of course, there are some points I'm not clear on. Why did Servalan make this haphazard plan, not even knowing where Orac physically was?
Again, she
did know where Orac was. As she told Travis, "He wouldn't even reveal the location of the laboratory
until I'd agreed to all his terms."
And are these alien species we encounter really "alien"? Are they lost Earth colonies? Why else would Aval and the others speak their language perfectly and use their equipment?
English-speaking humanoid aliens were a staple of the sci-fi of the era. People didn't question it.
Star Trek didn't introduce the idea of the universal translator until season 2, and then only so they could speak to an energy-cloud alien.
Robert Holmes's "Killer" in Series B establishes that the series is set around 700 years after humanity achieved interstellar travel (so maybe 800-1000 years in our future, possibly more), which doesn't seem like enough time for colonies to be lost. Although a later Robert Holmes story in Series D will establish that a lot of humans don't believe humanity originated on Earth, which seems hard to reconcile. Then again, a lot of people today are ignorant of things that happened just a hundred years ago.
But I didn't mind the pacing, there wasn't too much padding, in short, an excellent episode for me!
Funny -- I didn't care for it because it was nothing
but exposition and padding, setting up the finale and then throwing in some complications to delay getting there. The hijacking subplot was especially pointless padding.