If there is hesitation there it's brief.
Yeah, but Paul Darrow makes the most of that moment. It's clear he's wrestling with it.
I actually don't have a major issue with Dr Plaxton, as Avon says, she's dead either way.
The problem is that it has no later relevance, so it feels gratuitously mean-spirited to write the story that way to begin with. Also that everyone is out of character. In Series C, despite Darrow becoming the top-billed character, it was crystal-clear that Avon was not in charge; the crew debated every decision and Avon was frequently outvoted. But "Stardrive" was written as if Avon were an absolute martinet and the others just meekly did what he told them even if they disagreed.
Plus it's got space bikers in clown makeup and gigantic mohawks. It's at
Lost in Space season 2 levels of camp.
That's one reading of Hostage, it might even be what the writer intended, but it's shaky logic.
It's not "one reading," it's explicitly stated in dialogue. I gave you a link to the transcript, but if you can't be bothered to read it yourself, here are the relevant parts:
AVON: Can you plot courses to keep out of the range of any known spaceship manned by the Federation?
ORAC: The battle and navigation computers can handle that perfectly adequately.
AVON: I asked if YOU could.
ORAC: Of course, should it be necessary.
AVON: Failing that, we are powerful enough to resist all but an attack by three Federation pursuit ships at once.
...
AVON: Therefore I do not need Blake, I do not need any of the others ...
ORAC: Is that a question?
AVON: ... I do not need anybody at all.
Then later:
AVON: How many pursuit ships in Flotilla Thirteen?
ZEN: Three pursuit ships.
[Avon laughs]
Even setting aside the fact that Liberator has tangled with three Pursuit Ships many times
With a crew. Avon's question is if Zen and Orac can do it
without a crew. That's the whole point, that he needs a crew to evade three ships.
, is the fact that those ships are several hours away. This isn't a drama where there's only one way into town, Liberator could head off in a million different directions and evade those ships. Admittedly only my head cannon, but I think the pursuit ships were the excuse he needed to stay.
Maybe, but you're still wrong to say he didn't want to be alone with Zen and Orac. That's your own speculation with zero basis in the actual dialogue.
Orac could have said "You and Vila weight approximately seventy kilos" he didn't, he identified Vila,
I assume you mean "
each weigh," because together they'd obviously mass at least twice that.
Vila is a bit shorter than Avon, though, so it stands to reason that he's closer to 70 kg than Avon is. Orac's answer can be sufficiently explained as simple computer literalism.
but then Orac's always had it in for Vila, see him drop him in the shit in Moloch for example!
Orac treats everyone with equal contempt, except Avon, perhaps.
Although I found it interesting how often in Series D Orac told the others that they should figure out a problem for themselves using the information available to them. Superficially, that could've been just his usual "Don't bother me with your petty problems, I have my own priorities" attitude, but sometimes it almost feels like a teacher challenging his pupils to exercise and improve their own mental skills.
You beat me to it.
I think there are some other moments that, if not explicit, can be implied. Tarrant's escape from Bucol 2 relies presumably on Scorpio being real fast, similarly they escape interceptors in Headhunter and, bit of a stretch I know, but Zukan says the raw materials that need to be brought from Betafarl degrade very quickly and Avon says that won't be a problem.
Minor issues. My point is that if "Stardrive" had never been made, the other episodes would've been pretty much unchanged with at most a couple of lines changed here and there.
As for the "Warlord" example, I've already mentioned that there are plenty of instances of supposedly slow Federation ships making journeys as fast as or faster than the Liberator. Like Servalan and Travis beating the
Liberator to Ensor's planet in "Orac" even though the
Liberator had a headstart. It's pointless to cite "evidence" about ships' relative speed in a universe where everything travels at the speed of plot.
Once they knew they were making Series D they had to contrive the crew getting back many of the advantages they'd had. Teleport was the most important, if only for ease of storytelling,
I'm not so sure about that, since
Scorpio could land on planets when the
Liberator couldn't. There are several instances throughout the season of the ship touching down instead of teleport being used. The main reason
Star Trek had the transporter was because it was deemed too expensive to shoot FX footage of the
Enterprise or a shuttlecraft landing on different planets. Obviously B7's early seasons would've had trouble with that too even if the
Liberator had been a landing-capable design. But Series D was a quantum leap in the quality of the miniature FX, and sequences of
Scorpio landing and taking off wouldn't have been much more difficult than the other impressive miniature sequences they shot.
Naturally some of the stories would've had to be written differently without teleporters, but that's what could've made it an interesting challenge both for the writers and the characters to learn to get by without the usual advantages of teleportation.
Although I don't mind the teleporter thing too much, really, because at least "Rescue" established that Dorian had a prior interest in the
Liberator crew and had specifically sought them out. So it made sense that he'd want to replicate their teleport capability. It would've been far more contrived if they'd just run into someone with a teleporter by sheer coincidence.
but if they had a rust-bucket it needed some kind of edge.
If you think about it, though,
Scorpio is basically the
Millennium Falcon with the proportions of a Star Destroyer. The
Falcon had certain advantages, but it didn't need a teleporter.
I don't see having a base as much of an advantage at all, quite the reverse as it pins them to a single location, and what use is having a base to run back to if you can't get there because you can't outrun the bad guys?
Everything has both advantages and disadvantages. The point is that they'd be
different advantages and disadvantages, which would allow for fresher storytelling. I'm looking at this from a writer's perspective, and a viewer's perspective. Trying something different would've been interesting. And to a writer, creating difficulties and problems for the characters is the whole point.
Of course, having a permanent base had obvious advantages to the production crew, because it meant they could do bottle episodes on the standing sets.
There's a big dollop of nostalgia involved but Stardrive's a bit of a guilty pleasure, terrible but with some wonderful bits. Camp is, after all, a big part of what makes Blakes 7, Blakes 7 after all, at least for those of us who've been fans a long time.
I'm surprised to hear that, because the impression I always had is that it was appreciated for being darker and more serious than its contemporaries. The campy episodes feel like a regression to the mean of the period's SFTV, falling short of what the series aspired to be.