Tuesday, 15 October 2019

Blake's 7 - Shadow

Shadow
"To have total control you must control totally."

While I’ve enjoyed Terry Nation’s Blake’s 7 scripts, I had been intrigued to see what someone else would do with the programme. I wasn’t sure how long I might have to wait so it was nice to get one so soon with Shadow. I’ve been seeing Chris Boucher’s name on the credits since Series A so knew we had at least got someone who knew the show well.

At the end of Redemption, Blake had announced his intention to take everyone back to Earth and take the Federation on. Although Blake’s 7 lacks traditional three-eyed, two-headed little green aliens, it does feature humanoid aliens and yet it seems Earth is the centre of the universe. How depressing. I thought this decision was a bit rash and dangerous, and blimey, Blake – aren’t you doing enough to risk everyone’s lives? I can only imagine Vila and Avon’s offscreen reactions. It was therefore a relief to discover they were heading to Space City to get some support ready for when they reached Earth.

You should see some of the sights I'm (not) seeing
Space City is described as an almost mythical place. Vila is almost drooling over the prospect of visiting, saying it is "also known as the Satellite of Sin " "By who?" queries Avon. "Me," is Vila's simple answer. He says to visit is “one of my all-time great ambitions” and Blake tries to soften the blow: “You’d probably be disappointed.” Vila is having none of it though, declaring that he'll "take that chance.”

I was gutted for Vila when Blake ordered him to remain on the Liberator! We aren’t informed exactly what these 'sins' include, so naturally my mind jumped to complete filth. Vila leaves it rather open, saying, “Pick a pleasure. Any pleasure,” but Jenna's brusque suggestion of, “Why don’t you take a cold shower or something?” tells me I'm on the right path. He also adds, “I’ve wanted to visit Space City since I was old enough to read the graffiti in the juvenile detention wards,” which is a nice little insight into Vila’s past, and far from surprising.


Once he’s snuck off later, we hear Vila over the radio and he is having a magnificent time, desperate to stay longer. He has an almost dreamy, far-away voice and between this and his dialogue, it's plain that he's in heaven. He tells Cally he's removed his teleport bracelet because he's “not going to be snatched away in the middle of... in the middle of anything." He adds that he is, "Sightseeing. And you should see some of the sights I’m seeing. No... perhaps you shouldn’t.”

Yet upon his return, Vila just appears to have gotten drunk and Blake isn’t happy. As a fellow occasional sufferer of hangovers, I’m much more sympathetic to Vila than any of the crew seem to be, especially when he mutters, “Never again... I’m dying.” It’s disappointing that we don’t get to see more of Space City's debauchery, yet as we are pre-watershed, I suppose Blake’s 7 is a tad limited. But in my imagination, this was an orgy of indulgence and for a very brief moment, Vila’s life peaked. It's clever that they manage to convey so much despite showing so little.

We don’t see much of Space City at all and encounter only Largo, the druggies and a few guards there. It’s a city! Where is everyone? As with Redemption, it is a struggle to try to give these places a sense of scale and I needed to see more of this society. Where are the drug dealers? Where are the prostitutes, the bartenders, the tour guides? Blake’s 7 needs a few more supporting artists wandering around these places.

Alphas and Deltas
One of Vila's conversations with Cally offers a few lines of dialogue that left my brain whirling. It starts when Vila dismissively says that Blake “thinks of himself as a hard man” but Vila thinks "he’s led a very sheltered life.” Cally scoffs at this and initially I did too. I've kept changing my mind about just how far I think Blake would go but I certainly wouldn't describe him as "soft" and yes, especially following his interactions with Travis, I think I would accept a description of him as "hard".

The "sheltered" part also conflicted with a lot of what we have seen and heard, but in fairness, there are a lot of blank spaces in Blake's history. Vila reveals that Blake was an "Alpha grade" and Alphas are “highly privileged” while the "Delta service grades” where he grew up seem to be the opposite.

I was so intrigued by the idea that the Federation's worlds had these grades that people were born into. It's an extreme-sounding take on the class system. Vila's wording made it sound as though these different grades lived in entirely separate places and that people like him were destined for lowly things. If the areas were like the domes that we saw on Earth in The Way Back, then they would be entirely cut off from one another, so Vila's comment about a "sheltered life" would be accurate.

Shadow
I was taken aback by the crew’s attitudes to Shadow at first. They have all seemed a liberal bunch and I didn’t think they would care about what a couple of daft young kids got up to in their spare time. The effects of Shadow are represented vaguely at first and to begin with, I just thought it was something that the Dreamheads' race needed to live. Yet from its representation as Shadow progresses, heroin is the drug I would most align it with, and the crew’s anti-drug attitudes seemed more justified.

Jenna tells us that when she was a smuggler, she refused to carry it as cargo. Avon elaborates for the audience, telling us that “possession carries a mandatory death sentence” to which Jenna tersely says, “That wasn’t the reason,” implying she had a moral objection to it. Gan also talks about Shadow disparagingly, though Avon and Blake's attitudes are more mixed, with neither committing either way entirely.

What kind of smuggler was Jenna exactly? I am increasingly disappointed that she isn’t the sort of ruthless pirate I originally imagined. Smugglers can’t pick and choose their smuggled cargo on a moral basis! Jenna is the nicest smuggler I have ever known and I found myself thinking back to her past form.

From her first scene, Jenna has been, well, decent - stopping Vila from robbing Blake’s watch. Back in Cygnus Alpha, the most sensible thing would have been to abandon Blake on that rock and have done a runner in the Liberator with Avon. But Jenna held off, waiting. She’s always shown loyalty to Blake and early on this probably wasn’t justified. For me, the cut-off point was Bounty. At the time, I was uncertain whether she really had betrayed everyone and this window into her past showed that she had been willing to deal with total scumbags. But she had nothing to gain except the crew’s lives and she still chose that. While I was satisfied with that outcome, showing Jenna in that situation destroyed any 'good bad guy' credentials she could have - she is just a good guy really and I have the feeling that she is too honest and fair deep down to have been a particularly successful smuggler. She doesn’t ever seem to prioritise selfish gains, even perfectly reasonable ones.

I was surprised by Gan in this episode, who was against visiting Space City at all because he thought it was wrong for them to do business with the Terra Nostra due to their nasty criminal reputation. This seems like the first time he’s developed any sort of personality. On the one hand it’s nice that he has, on the other it jars because we have never seen him stand up to Blake before. Later, Gan is unhappy with Blake's plan to blackmail the Terra Nostra.

Gan “The drug in return for their help? Blake, that would make us pushers!”
Blake “Well maybe we won’t keep our end of the bargain!"
Gan "That would make us cheats!"

I found this all so strange. First, I've no idea how common the term was in 1979 but Gan's use of "pushers" has momentarily transported us to an anti-drug play from a school Drama lesson. Next, "cheats" - who the bloody hell does Gan think he jumped on to this ship with? They're a bunch of cheats, liars and murderers! Even if we remain vague about the exact circumstances of Gan's crime, they have all been complicit in some pretty grim stuff together now. This is far too late to find some righteousness, especially to object against blackmailing people as scummy as the Terra Nostra. This is such a bizarre way to start building up Gan's character and makes no sense.

Avon
Avon has a fairly good episode, though his sarcasm felt almost overdone - it's clear Chris Boucher is having good fun writing for him! He never misses a chance to put Vila down in Shadow.

Not for the first time, Avon is shown to be both capable and enjoy himself in a fight. After taking out the two silver-suited guards on Zonda, he flashes a satisfied grin and says to himself, "Next please."

One moment I liked involved no lines at all. Having failed to negotiate a deal with Largo, Blake holds his hand out, forcing Avon to give back the jewels they had brought as payment. Avon's face, as he stuffs the bag into Blake's hand, is the perfect picture of pissed off.

For the most part, Avon sticks with his usual cynical, sometimes cruel outlook. When he and Gan are locked in a cell, Gan wonders what will happen to them. Avon very bluntly answers, “A pro keeps it simple. I imagine they’ll kill us. You can’t get much simpler than that.” I wouldn't fancy being stuck in a prison with him.

In the same scene, the two Dreamheads mock Gan and as one giggles, Avon walks over, bends slightly and glares down at her, asking, "Something amuses you?" I enjoyed the delivery of this line. Avon looked and sounded intimidating. It was so villain-esque and is one of numerous occasions when I have felt that should he be so inclined, Avon could switch sides incredibly easily.

The Dreamheads are siblings and when one is later killed, Avon is horribly dismissive, saying, “She was dying anyway.” Vila had earlier made a comment implying Avon wasn't very human and this line, delivered so heartlessly, is the perfect follow up. Maybe he really is very anti-drugs after all, but I found it unnecessarily callous for him. I'm not sure if him looking away from the brother as he says it makes it worse.

However, Avon's whole outlook has taken an even worse turn by the end of the episode.

Avon “Ironic, isn’t it? We were hoping to use the Terra Nostra to attack the Federation, only to discover that it is already being used to support it.”
Vila “Where are all the good guys?”
Blake “Could be looking at them.”
Avon “What a very depressing thought.”


It's marvellous that Avon doesn’t consider the Liberator crew to be the good guys. Perhaps that is the great difference between him and Blake - Blake does think they are the good guys, or at least wants them to be, while Avon has never particularly aspired to that. If Avon is some type of leader, I don't think he's the nurturing type - he would probably have let Vila go to the Satellite of Sin - and I still see him as being driven by the plain desire not to die.

Dancing in the red sun's light
Once again, Paul Darrow gets a cracking outfit for Avon but this one is much more stunning than last week's. A silver jumper over a black polo is paired with a silver-studded belt. He looks like he's ready to shamelessly rock some moves on a Space City dancefloor. It's a contrast to Blake, who is sticking with his green theme and looks like he's preparing to take on the Sheriff of Nottingham. I'll be curious to see whether this outfit of Avon's ever appears again though, as it did seem to flare against the studio lights at times. Meanwhile, if the trousers weren't enough in Redemption, Vila now has a full yellow outfit.

I liked the Liberator’s ‘desert’ outfits that Blake, Avon and Jenna all deploy for their visit to Zonda. This camouflage seemed a good idea. The lads have brown boots to go with theirs, though Jenna wins here as she sports some superb silver boots.


The guards on Zonda are dressed head to toe in a type of silver mesh. It has no camouflage advantage so maybe it reflects the sun's rays - we are told there are two of them. I don't think we ever saw more than two or three of these guards at once. I was slightly amused watching them because, well, it's apparent that none of Zonda's guards are the slimmest individuals, which is probably why they were so easily defeated.

What the plot?
My biggest problem with Shadow is the plot. On Twitter, Joseph Oldham suggested to me that Chris Boucher had been waiting so long to write an episode that he shoved in every plot idea he had. I'm inclined to take this seriously as it certainly looks like that's the case.

The story starts by being about the crew visiting Space City to negotiate with Largo for Terra Nostra support, where there are a couple of Shadow addicts trying to escape, then it becomes about threatening the supply of Shadow from Zonda, then also about Orac messing with the Liberator and controlling Cally, but it’s really something from another dimension, and actually we find out that it’s the Federation controlling Shadow and therefore the Terra Nostra, so at the same time as running a black market in Shadow, they are executing people for possessing it and there is no point in trying to negotiate any support on Earth from the Terra Nostra. Wow. This is several episodes’ worth of plotting and by the end Chris Boucher has tied us in knots, while there are several loose ends.

The last five minutes are bad. Nobody wants to conclude an exciting episode with exposition. If you need to explain this much about what has just happened, it’s too complicated, or at least too much – it’s clear we ran out of time to show things. Blake, Avon and Jenna have a fight with the silver-suited guards on Zonda, yet we only see the end of it as they are tossing men into a pool and it smacks of an overrunning script.

Back on the Liberator, Cally has to explain about the ‘thing’ from another dimension that has accessed her through Orac. The whole Shadow and Federation business is tied up, somehow, when Avon reveals he has a security pass from a Federation guard he killed. When did that happen? Earlier this episode? A previous adventure? It’s unclear. Suddenly some Federation pursuit ships turn up - because those bastards get everywhere - and oh, we have to end the episode. What?! You can't have the dullest ever few minutes at the end of the episode then deny us the chance for a space battle and burning planet!

Terra Nostra
Is Largo really part of the Terra Nostra? I think he is supposed to be. Largo is immediately a proper nasty villain and I'd have happily seen more of him. He taunts the Shadow addicts, gloating, “I own you, Dreamheads.” He forces them to beg, rubbing his power in: “We own you, boy.” It seems appropriate that he shares his name with a James Bond villain because he borders on that over-the-top-ness.

His underling is simply called an 'enforcer' and both he and Largo are dressed in red velvet suits with frilly shirts, reminding me of 1960s' Victorian hero Adam Adamant. The Enforcer doesn't seem all that nice either. For such an enjoyably vile baddie, it's a shame we don't get Largo throughout the whole episode. His off-screen death is a waste and the Enforcer's motivation appears to have only been thought up one scene before. He's far too small a character. Prior to that, they have had no real interaction and it would have been better if we could have had this rivalry, jealously, or untrustworthiness built up from the opening scenes. Largo is a horrible guy and establishing some sort of relationship between him and the Enforcer would have made the pay off when he kills him much better.


While this aspect of the Space City plot felt underwhelming, another is simply left open. They speak to the Chairman on a video screen. He's definitely a baddie because he's playing with a spider. After Largo has been killed, the Chairman tells the Enforcer that he can have Largo's place.  The Enforcer tells the Chairman that Largo has been adding something to his corrupted Shadow that makes it radioactive, so he can use special equipment to track the users. We see nothing else from Space City so this seems unresolved and I'm sure the Liberator still has some of the Dreamheads' Shadow on board.

Cally, are you still there?
One thing I am happy to commend this script on is remembering Cally’s telepathy. It isn’t the first time Cally has been possessed by something outside the ship, which may be why Chris Boucher only used it as a minor part of the plot. Yet it's a shame as it feels like such a sideshow, with us later cutting from Cally lying down to the action on Zonda, to the others on the bridge deck. The background of Cally's telepathy strength has to be explained by Gan. That both this and the conclusion need explaining isn't great - you could have done an entire episode around Cally becoming possessed.

It's Avon who has normally shown more concern for Cally but this time it's Blake. He is very snappy and rude with the others as they head for Zonda, which seems to be his go-to setting when he's worried. Avon, perhaps sympathising, offers a curt but clear observation: “There’s nothing you can do for Cally - even shouting at everybody else is not going to help her.”

We do get some cool effects to try to show what's going on. It reminded me of Doctor Who's Kinda. One effect has Cally surrounded by darkness but she is bathed in light. Another camera or editing trick of some sort enables us to see her rise out of her own body in a ghostly fashion.


Prior to being possessed by a being from another dimension, Cally gets the chance to be a bit brutal. She's livid with Vila for sneaking off to Space City, threatening to make a necklace from his teeth. More seriously, she is willing to blow up the controllers at Space City. In the end, she destroys an approaching gunship they have sent. She's entirely alone on the Liberator when undertaking this and, having been more of a student in Series A, it's wonderful that she has the confidence to pilot the ship and launch a defensive attack single-handedly.

Only a machine
Vila moans to Zen, “If you were a decent computer, you’d be able to operate the teleport system like Orac can.” Like Gan's line about the details of Cally's telepathy, it's a slightly clumsy way of shoving in some plot/worldbuilding. I wonder if this script or perhaps another originally planned to demonstrate Orac's teleport functioning ability but ran out of time or was rearranged.

Following Redemption, I had said that Orac would be better for the Liberator because unlike Zen he is separate from it and I felt the crew were more likely to retain control of the ship. Ah well, never mind! I like that we get the tiniest hint earlier on in the episode of what is about to happen as Vila threatens, “I'll switch you off and throw away the key,” Orac quietly replies, “Soon that will be no longer a problem.” Understandably, I’m no longer so sure about Orac. I thought he would be a positive and helpful thing for the crew, but it could turn out to be a more mixed fortune. I certainly didn't think it could get worse than Zen.

Total control
One more loose aspect is that, as Avon says, they found Shadow’s source far too easily. Why? Is the Federation happy for people to find it because they then know who will have it? Or is it because those pursuit ships can be deployed so quickly and can destroy anyone who finds Zonda? Or are they really supposed to be relying on the silver-suited guards? Is this something to play out over the rest of the series along with the Shadow that is presumably still on board the Liberator? I watched Shadow three times to attempt to follow everything because I kept feeling like I was missing things.

There are major issues with Shadow’s plotting with too much dragged in towards the end, but there were also plenty of positive elements. As explained above, I thought Largo was a good villain. Vila essentially has his own side plot with little bearing on any of Shadow’s plots, yet I thought he had a wonderful episode and he was my favourite character to watch this week. His scenes with Cally showed that his humour can work well, if differently, with someone other than Avon.

I managed to guess that the Federation would be involved with Shadow. Avon’s comments about them finding Zonda too easily instantly made me think that they were walking into a possible trap, even if it wasn’t one set down specifically for them. I was pleased and satisfied by the conclusion that the Federation operates a circle-like strategy with Shadow, both controlling its distribution and prosecuting its users. Blake’s line that, “It’s quite logical; to have total control you must control totally - both sides of the law,” was a perfect summary. This was so annoying, frustrating, and brilliant. It’s another part of the Blake's 7 universe that makes you feel the Federation are all-powerful. They increasingly seem like an invincible evil.

Saturday, 28 September 2019

Blake's 7 - Redemption

Redemption
"I think we just lost our ship."

Having resisted the temptation to simply plough on with more Blake's 7, I took a short break to let everything from series 1 sink in. What fun it had been! As I sat down with Redemption, it felt as though I was about to be reunited with old friends and I watched with an enormous grin on my face during the first scenes. I've become aware that the series tend to get referred to as A, B, C and D, so I'll stick with that from now on.

We pick up shortly after Orac with the crew still worrying about when the Liberator will get destroyed. Blake is doing some deep pondering, rewatching the clip Orac gave them - Blake's 7 itself is making damn good use of having to destroy that model. That the opening focuses on Blake and Avon shows that Terry Nation has realised who the fan's favourites are. Avon thinks he's figured out how the Liberator will be destroyed but has waited several hours to tell Blake, let alone any of the other crew, which I did think slightly cruel.

Complete control
It's a wonderfully exciting start as the Liberator comes under attack and Avon summons the crew to the flight deck with a cry of, "Battle stations!" There is lots of running around and chucking themselves about as the ship is fired on. They are clearly all used to this now as immediately know what they are doing and Blake barks out orders. Feeling safe again and ready to inspect the damage, everyone seems to have gathered bits of technical knowledge. Blake heads off to sort some auxiliary stuff and asks Cally to help Avon, something we have seen her do a few times during series A. Jenna has a lie-down and I forget what Vila went to do. He complains of a headache and the sudden attack has not blunted Avon, who advises, "Have you considered amputation?"

Seeing the crew lose control of the Liberator was worrying and my first thought was Servalan because after the events of Orac she must surely have immediately begun planning how to get Orac from them. Yet this was easily dismissed because I couldn't see how the Federation could remotely access the ship - if they could, they would have done so before now.

I started to give a shit about Blake again by the end of Series A, so was on his side as he hissed over the intercom to Avon while an electrical cable was poised over him. This literal 'live' cable was most bizarre and seemed more like something I would expect to see in Red Dwarf. I really struggled to believe it at first. I loved how it hovered and moved in a snake-like fashion, ready to strike at Blake.


I felt his panic when he found himself trapped and worried again when Avon had set the explosive but the ship trapped him in the room too. How powerful was that explosive going to be? On reflection, it makes sense that Avon wasn't going to blow a chunk out of the ship, but at the time I was just panicking that we would lose a few parts of him. Avon is clocking up serious brownie points and could have at least three "I saved Roj Blake" badges by now - I recall that Blake was nearly caught in Mission to Destiny and Avon again saved him by blowing up Travis's hand in Orac.

I love the idea that Liberator is a living ship and liked Avon's explanation of it having a nervous system of sorts. Vila's description of the crew as "germs" also seemed fitting. Both of these made me accept the idea of the cable attack much more. It's an interesting concept and one that has also been explored in Doctor Who with the TARDIS. It also helps support the fact that Blake counted Zen as one of the 7. I found it concerning that the crew head off at the end of the episode having regained control, as I now worry that the Liberator has a vulnerability that could be exploited again in the future. If the ship is alive, does it have its own 'brain' that could begin to act independently? Even if no one else was controlling it, maybe the ship could independently turn against its parasites.

Only a machine
Zen isn't much help, as usual, but Redemption makes it plain that it isn't his fault. Orac ultimately saves the day, acting on his own initiative. This isn't something we have ever seen Zen do. If he's done something without being asked, it's usually been at the inconvenience of the crew. I think Orac being separate from the ship and the fact that the crew know where he's come from are good advantages. I'm trying to bear in mind Avon's reminders that both Zen and Orac are machines. Yet as far as I am concerned, Orac has already shown some sort of loyalty to the crew - although saving the Liberator could have been merely self-preservation. Still, the Liberator has already got a couple of enthusiasts for that pursuit among the crew and one more is always welcome while Blake is around.

After all those risks last series and all that pondering, we actually see little of Orac in Redemption. I can't argue with this though as there can only be so much time spent watching the crew stand around arguing with a computer.

The aliens we meet this episode have some interesting costumes, by which I mean - crikey. They get a few extra bits of grey and plastic but their outfits are mainly just blue leotards. I recognised Harriet Philpin with her distinctive short blonde hair, having seen her in Doctor Who and The Sweeney. The revelation that these 'aliens' have been created by the system along with everything else makes sense. The pain-inducing punishment inflicted on Blake looks all the more brutal due to their lack of emotions and they are swift to hand it out too.


Series A seemed to show us lots of fantastic things that could be done with technology from judging trials to teleportation but Redemption runs on the theme of what could happen when these manmade machines turn against humans. While this scenario has been explored in fiction many times, I think it's particularly pertinent to Blake's 7's era. Computers were becoming a larger part of everyday life for more and more people and they had now started to enter the home as well, so while it was a time of exciting developments, these fears for the future would have resonated with 1979's the audience.

In a way, seeing where the Liberator and Zen came from was a bit of a letdown and I'd rather it had remained a mystery. I expected some great, powerful alien race. Instead, it comes across as a few random planets having squabbles until one of them built a decent computer, which has since run everything. We see very few people - I wanted tens of guards pushing on hundreds of slaves and obviously this isn't possible on a Blake's 7 budget. Avon's been desperate to meet Zen's creators and he doesn't even get to have it out with them. He has to sit in a cell and wait for Vila to spring him, then everyone legs it.

Location, location, location
We spent so much time on the Liberator in the first half of the episode that we are left with little time on the planet. I wouldn't have lost any of that first half so felt like the episode could have been slightly longer. I found the crew's escape a bit too easy and I did want to see more of where the Liberator and Zen had come from.

I did like the massive spaces within the complex on the planet. Blake's 7 now appears to make good use of quarries and industrial facilities, which is what I presume this steel and grey environment is in reality. I found it eerie that this huge place was so empty and when the crew attempt to make their escape, they seemed so exposed and vulnerable - until Gan knocks some guards together. Vila barely lets him put them down before he's telling him to hurry and as Gan turns to catch up, his cape flows majestically behind him.


A dandy fetish
A new series means new costumes and it's a mixed bag for the Liberator crew. I wasn't keen on the crew's costumes in Series A. Aside from the raincoats, I haven't looked at anything and fancied it myself, nor have I thought much looked that great on anyone else. Jenna and Cally had some nice, often very figure-hugging outfits, but the blokes really draw the short straws. Whatever century we are in, it just isn't to my tastes. But I still enjoy seeing this strange mix of costumes every week, trying to fathom what on earth is going through the mind of the wearers.


The first person we see is Blake, who favoured layers in Series A. He wore browns and black but also a lot of green, a palette that he seems to have stuck with. I wouldn't have put Blake down as a fashion-conscious man but I've decided to refer to this as his 'Regency Dandy' outfit. The sleeves are absolutely enormous. It's like someone inflated them. I can't decide if he should be a young member of the aristocracy or waving a cutlass alongside Long John Silver. Is that where we're going with this? Blake's already got a smuggler aboard so are they going to become Robin Hood-style pirates against the Federation? I just don't think those sleeves are practical.

I never got round to mentioning all the flares in Series A - oh the faith they had that this fashion trend would last down the centuries! I'm desperate to see an automatic door trap someone in Blake's 7 due to their flares. Avon's outfit in Redemption includes flared trousers, but that is the least important thing to comment on. Avon clearly spent a lot of Series A looking at Travis's all-black leather Federation uniform, thinking, "I like black and that's an exceedingly practical ensemble." With the Federation logo emblazoned across his chest and similarly-dressed guards by his side, Travis could pull this look off. However, in full black leather and silver studs, Avon is halfway between a motorcycle gang and a fetish club. I don't mind, it's just I had never imagined him swaying either way.


Vila never had many outfit changes in Series A and had a very long shirt of many colours, patches and garishness. His grey-ish top for Redemption is much quieter and balanced out by his yellow trousers, a colour which perfectly suits his personality. There is a moment after he has sprung Avon and Jenna when he has a quick look around a wall, before stepping back to let Avon have a proper look and making sure he's the last to go behind Jenna. It may well have been in the script's directions, but the way Michael Keating positions himself is a perfect reflection of Vila's personality.

I've little to say on Jenna's clothes - she just looks as glamorous as ever.

Cally has had a haircut that includes a perm for everything except her straight fringe. Her outfit seems to include a cream bodywarmer (surely destined to get ruined in a quarry within weeks) and the rest of it really emphasises how very slim she is.

Last series Gan's outfit included bits of netting, one of the most pointless layers possible, so I'm glad that seems to have gone. I like his new billowing cape-like waistcoat.


Total destruction
I was sure the crew were going to lose the Liberator. I didn't expect it to happen in Redemption because this seemed like an ongoing plot point that could easily be dragged out - every week the audience would be wondering whether this was the episode when the ship would get blown up. This made it a surprise when Avon spotted the same stars he'd seen in Orac's prediction and realised they were in the right location for the explosion. I was now certain that the ship was doomed that episode and kept expecting the crew to need to steal a ship while making their escape. I was disappointed when we did see the explosion and it was not really the Liberator. I'm still slightly sceptical that that is it. This feels like such a cop-out and one done far too soon.

Apart from this niggle, I enjoyed Redemption. It was a good episode to ease us back into things and we see enough of most of the crew for new viewers to start figuring them out. The opening scene immediately brings us up to speed with what's needed for this episode and it's pretty simple actually - Orac has predicted their ship will be destroyed. We don't need Travis or Servalan, the Federation, a load of arguing between Blake and Avon, or everyone's backstories - no, it can all come in the future. Redemption gets on with a fun story, setting up a mystery early on, the crew solving it, getting captured, running around an alien complex, and escaping with some action.



SPOILERS
I thought I'd clarify where I am in regards to spoilers. I haven't gone out of my way too much to avoid spoilers because I feel simply not googling "Blake's 7" etc. should be enough. It's also why I've repeatedly, perhaps annoyingly, mentioned on Twitter that this is my first time watching the programme - people like discussing things they love but I'm afraid I can't join in properly yet.

There are a couple of things I've stumbled across, which may or may not impact my viewing of Series B. I know that Blake departs the series at some point and I know we get some new crew members, with, I think, Jenna and Cally both leaving. That's it. I don't know what happens to any of them and am unsure whether they live or die.

There is one, arguably rather large, spoiler I neglected to mention before I began watching the series. This was originally because it slipped my mind when I wrote the first blog, then it became a case of - where do I put this so that it doesn't spoil it for anyone reading who hasn't seen everything? So now it is here at the very end of a post. I've always known that everyone dies. Who is everyone? No idea because those two words are literally all I know. I'm not sure where I got this knowledge from but it's possible it came from Doctor Who Magazine many years ago, as this was where I first came across references to Blake's 7. It feels a long way off at the moment so it isn't something I've thought about. It will be exceedingly interesting to see how we get to that point though.