^Sure it is. It's been 20 years Just move the story along and have a new cast of characters in the same universe.
Exactly. The show managed fine continuing despite losing three of it's main cast by the end of season 2
^Sure it is. It's been 20 years Just move the story along and have a new cast of characters in the same universe.
Probably I'm just annoyed because this ruins my idea for a continuation series![]()
Continuations are crap, and seldom work. I'm glad it's a reimagining, so it can be removed from the original series if it doesn't work. Still, season one will only be six episodes, so you can put you head in the sand for six weeks while it's on.
There's a difference between reinventing an old story (let's face it Blakes 7 is just Robin Hood in space, and original BSG is about Moses) and retelling the same story without even inventing new characters, situations etc.
Even with the same premise and characters, it's not exactly the same story. Originality isn't in what playing pieces you use, it's in what you do with them. Just look at, say, The Dark Knight. All its major characters (except Rachel Dawes) are from the comics, and its basic situations (Joker terrorizes Gotham, Harvey Dent is horribly scarred and becomes a psychopath) are as well. But the resultant product is a very fresh, original, satisfying take on the material.
And just because the new B7 has the same basic premise and characters, how does that mean it won't devise new situations? It's not like it'll be retelling the exact same episodes. The series' premise was open-ended; there are any number of possible stories you could tell about those characters in that situation. Also, just because the characters have the same names and basic roles doesn't mean their personalities and relationships won't be developed in fresh ways; indeed, a lot of the characters didn't get that much development in the original show, so there's plenty of room for innovation. And you never know what new twists the writers might discover along the way, or what new possibilities the casting will bring about, for instance, if two of the new actors exhibit a chemistry that their counterparts in the original series never had. The same characters played by different people can turn out wildly differently.
(And Galactica was based on the Book of Mormon, not Moses.)
...yellowdingo emerges from Soolin flashback...What?Blake's 7...I sincerely hope the remake is just as good.
Sky have commissioned 2 scripts (If I remember correctly) with the possibility of going to series.What remake? I thought it was a Radioshow of the old Series.
...yellowdingo emerges from Soolin flashback...What?Blake's 7...I sincerely hope the remake is just as good.
What remake? I thought it was a Radioshow of the old Series.
^Sure it is. It's been 20 years Just move the story along and have a new cast of characters in the same universe.
Yeah Next Gen was shit wasn't it, and Dr Who is sooo unpopular.
Meanwhile reimaginings like The Bionic Woman, Kolshack, Knight Rider etc go from strength to strength.
^Sure it is. It's been 20 years Just move the story along and have a new cast of characters in the same universe.
[Dorian]30 years actually.[/Dorian]
And how do you move it along? Have yet another band of prisoners led by yet another former resistence leader called Blake and somehow managing to find yet another alien ship called the Liberator...?
Chris Boucher, the script editor on the original series and author of the last episode, had a vague idea in mind for the fifth season (despite the apparent finality of season four's ending, it was only meant as a season cliffhanger which could be a series conclusion)
Chris Boucher, the script editor on the original series and author of the last episode, had a vague idea in mind for the fifth season (despite the apparent finality of season four's ending, it was only meant as a season cliffhanger which could be a series conclusion)
...that really depends on who you speak to. Some stories I've heard say the production team knew absolutely there would not and never be a Series E, and so they wrote the wild west shoot out to end it for good (although I did hear how Series E may have functioned, partly set out of Gauda Prime).
They would also have to recast several people as I know Glynis Barber signed on for the one and only series, plus Michael Keating didn't like the development of Vila in Series D (mainly with the red wine stuff).
^Sure it is. It's been 20 years Just move the story along and have a new cast of characters in the same universe.
[Dorian]30 years actually.[/Dorian]
And how do you move it along? Have yet another band of prisoners led by yet another former resistence leader called Blake and somehow managing to find yet another alien ship called the Liberator...?
Those were the things that made it great. Repeating them again would only make it sound very contrieved and coincidental.
Which could be an interesting story line in itself, is he actually exceeding his programming, or doing exactly what they want, does he realise his programming and actively try to push past it, or seemingly do it even if he knows that's what they want him do to.Well a lot of stuff could be hinted atand obviously though a Federation creation, this Blake would exceed his programming.
Which could be an interesting story line in itself, is he actually exceeding his programming, or doing exactly what they want, does he realise his programming and actively try to push past it, or seemingly do it even if he knows that's what they want him do to.Well a lot of stuff could be hinted atand obviously though a Federation creation, this Blake would exceed his programming.
Chris Boucher, the script editor on the original series and author of the last episode, had a vague idea in mind for the fifth season (despite the apparent finality of season four's ending, it was only meant as a season cliffhanger which could be a series conclusion)
...that really depends on who you speak to. Some stories I've heard say the production team knew absolutely there would not and never be a Series E, and so they wrote the wild west shoot out to end it for good (although I did hear how Series E may have functioned, partly set out of Gauda Prime).
They would also have to recast several people as I know Glynis Barber signed on for the one and only series, plus Michael Keating didn't like the development of Vila in Series D (mainly with the red wine stuff).
I thought it sounded familiar when I said it.Which could be an interesting story line in itself, is he actually exceeding his programming, or doing exactly what they want, does he realise his programming and actively try to push past it, or seemingly do it even if he knows that's what they want him do to.Well a lot of stuff could be hinted atand obviously though a Federation creation, this Blake would exceed his programming.
We've already seen this in Weapon.
Servalan had the Clone Masters create a clone of Blake to use a decoy but it turned on them.
Which could be an interesting story line in itself, is he actually exceeding his programming, or doing exactly what they want, does he realise his programming and actively try to push past it, or seemingly do it even if he knows that's what they want him do to.Well a lot of stuff could be hinted atand obviously though a Federation creation, this Blake would exceed his programming.
We've already seen this in Weapon.
Servalan had the Clone Masters create a clone of Blake to use a decoy but it turned on them.
Chris Boucher, the script editor on the original series and author of the last episode, had a vague idea in mind for the fifth season (despite the apparent finality of season four's ending, it was only meant as a season cliffhanger which could be a series conclusion): it would open with a restaging of season one's first scene, except this time it's Avon who's the model citizen who's lured to an illegal meeting, and finds out that he was once a rebel leader until he was captured and brainwashed... and post-brainwashing, Avon thinks his name is Roj Blake.
Imagine that as the last line of the pre-credits for the fifth season opener: Avon intoduces himself with the words "Blake. My name is Roj Blake."
It's a riff on 1984 (lie much of Boucher's take on Blake), where the party has created a tame dissident movement as a way of controlling opposition: 'Blake' is a personality which the Federation implants into captured and brainwashed rebel leaders, knowing that new rebels will seek out this legendary resistance leader and therefore lay themselves open to capture (just as Control is used as a trap for rebels in Pressure Point). But last time round, the Gareth Thomas 'Blake' got out of control when he escaped onto this massively powerful alien spaceship.
Too late now to do it with Paul Darrow as Avon/Blake, but you can see how the idea could be adapted so that the new hero could be known as Blake. And Liberator, of course, was named by Jenna, and the new Blake's followers could name their ship Liberator in turn...
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