As a side point, Blake's seat is still rotated four months in. Maybe he got disciplined again, without being executed (Leylan seems to be a decant man in a bad system, avoiding adding to it if he can).Well, that must explain why they have the exact same haircuts (and wardrobe) after the 4-month time jump mid-episode. They needed those items for personal grooming.
Speaking of which, the trip to Cygnus Alpha is supposed to be 8 months in all, and at the end of "Space Fall" we're only 4 months in, yet "Cygnus Alpha" picks up almost immediately in its aftermath, yet opens with the London only 48 minutes from its destination. I double-checked, and there's no story break at all between the "4 months" reference and the end of "Space Fall," so there's simply nowhere to insert those subsequent 4 months. Yet "Cygnus Alpha" reiterates that it's supposedly been an 8-month trip. It's as big a contradiction as Blake being famous without knowing it.
If there's one thing that Terry Nation writing the entire first series of B7 drove home to me, it's that Terry Nation wasn't that great a writer. His work was prone to major plot and logic holes, and I generally find Chris Boucher's episodes much better. Nation also wasn't much with character names. Tel Varon, Dev Tarrant, Del Grant, Del Tarrant, etc.
Speaking of character names, it's interesting that Vila is the only male regular in the show who's normally addressed by first name (Vila Restal) instead of by surname (Roj Blake, Kerr Avon, Olag Gan).
My suspicion is that Soolin is a tradename. Her name was maybe Sue-Lynne Something (Chris Boucher's widow is Lynne).It is interesting about Vila, I'm not sure if that reversal of the norm was supposed to signify something or just a quirk of the naming conventions. Even Servalan calls him Vila rather than Restal! The ladies either use their given name (Jenna, Dayna) or else we don't know, although both Cally and Soolin feel like given names. Servalan must be her surname.
I don't think Nation is a terrible writer, I do think he's at times a messy writer, and committing to writing all 13 episodes of Series A didn't help. Boucher is the show's best writer though, and given he was script editor who knows how many other decent episodes are good because of the polish he gave them?
Reminds me, I really must start reading my Series B production diary!
The politics of the Federation are interesting. Even in Trial Servalan is trying to navigate a course between the politicians and the military, it isn't until Star One that
she can stage a coup and put the military in complete control.
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