Incidentally, the final episode of the series aired on this day in 1981
Also, remember, that it was Margret Thatcher's England at the point in time these episodes were coming out. I'm pretty sure that had an influence on the writing.Jumping back a bit to the first three episodes - it occurred to me that, subconsciously, Terry Nation may have been thinking in terms of the Federation being like the British Empire and the prisoners being shipped off to Cygnus Alpha would be the same as prisoners being transported to Australia from England in the 1800s - hence the long voyage. Heck, we even get 'seaweed' in the fifth episode.
Probably a good thing for the BBC the internet didn’t exist back then.Incidentally, the final episode of the series aired on this day in 1981
Petition to decanonise the final episode and remake the entire season would’ve been online within the hour!Probably a good thing for the BBC the internet didn’t exist back then.
- Jenna has a new dress! With weird "things" on the shoulders. I'm not sure I like it.
- Cally, obviously under some alien influence sabotaged the ship, then hits poor Vila who wanted a comment on his outfit. Now, I'd like to make a small comment on the stunts and fights we've seen so far. They're bad. Really bad. There's never been a single punch that looked convincing. 1960s Kirk-Fu looks like a martial arts documentary by comparison. Considering there's no story reason for Cally to hit Vila, I don't understand why they did it at all.
- Cool! The first alien-aliens! (The Decima)! I have to say they look convincing even by modern standards.
- Here comes a truly WTF moment in the series and where I realize that the characters in the Blake-7 universe are not only not very intelligent, but borderline stupid. Blake orders Avon to prepare some super-batteries and bring them down, but never tells him that the planet is dangerous. And there is no reason why he doesn't. If this is the level of the indomitable leader of the rebellion, the latter is doomed.
- Blake and the Lost find Avon and take him back to their base. The Decima somehow take advantage of this to sneak in too. How? I have no idea. The only thing is that the door was left open. Did I mention that in the Blake-7 universe stupidity is a universal plague?
I'm so dumbfounded by this episode on so many levels that I don't even know where to begin.
First of all the plot: it's a low-key space horror that seems to have come out of Space: 1999 or Doctor Who. The problem is in the previous episodes the series has been presented to us as a heroic fight of some rebels against tyranny, not a kind of anthology with different types of stories. This episode and a part of the plot of the previous one seem completely out of place to me. I want to see tyranny being fought, not bizarre adventures with the new aliens of the week. I would understand if we were at the twentieth episode of the ninth season and therefore the ideas were starting to run out, but I don't think that's the case here.
The Web isn't a good episode.Finished episode 5, "Web". I feel spent. Totally spent.
I assure you that I am putting all the good will possible into it: "It was a different time" "You can't judge with modern eyes" etc. But other series of the time managed to have a pacing that was perfectly acceptable by modern standards. See for example Space 1999.
Now I cleanse the palate with an episode of Silo. I hope to recharge enough to then tackle B7 again. See you soon!
I assure you that I have absolutely no problem with the production value. In fact, they are better than I thought. Also, the new FX are nice.Something @Skipper should try to remember is that Blake's 7 was replacing a series called Softly Softly Task Force, which was a contemporary police procedural; yet the BBC only gave the producers of Blake's 7 the same budget as the show they were replacing.
Incidentally, the final episode of the series aired on this day in 1981
Me too. Oddly enough, I have no recollection of it being around Christmas time. But I very much remember the shock of THAT ending.Now you're making me feel old because I watched that live![]()
Also, I wish they'd stop spouting vague scenc-y terms to make people understand "This is SCIENCE FICTION!!!": they're irritating.
And. Then. The incredible. Padding. There is absolutely no budgetary reason to justify it. It's clear that in "Web" there was only enough story for a twenty minute episode and they didn't know how to fill the other 30.
Just watched episode 6 (Seek-Locate-Destroy) and it is EXCELLENT!!! (I'll post notes later). How is this the same writer as "Web"???
December does ring a bell, but I thought maybe a couple of weeks earlier.Me too. Oddly enough, I have no recollection of it being around Christmas time. But I very much remember the shock of THAT ending.
Edit to add - just out of curiosity, thought I'd look on wiki and there is a game available. I have the actual computer required (Oric 48k, but not a minidisk drive for it -Maybe check one of the emulators).
The Game
In this game you play the role of Roj Blake, a content citizen living in one of the many domed cities in Planet Earth, under the Terran Federation Government. From the beginning you’ll learn that something is not as it should be. You often have nightmares and start to worry about your family, who are supposed to live in an outer colony, while you work here for 10 years in exchange.
A friend of yours, Ravella, will introduce you to a much more cruel reality, which will make you reconsider who you are, your own past, and your future.
Interesting. For a computer called "Oric?" Missed it by that much.
Hmm...
Sounds like the game tells the story of "The Way Back" in more detail than "The Way Back" did. There was nothing in the episode about nightmares or working 10 years to pay for his family's relocation.
I always thought this was a rewritten script for the Doctor and companions showing up where not expected and solving a murder mystery...
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