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Blake's 7
The Complete Series One
So, my favorite show is finally on DVD. I'd say I can die happy, but I think
I'll wait until the release of the fourth season, and then I'll die happy
after rewatching the whole thing. The series in question is the much-missed and
often unfairly maligned Blake's 7
(1978-1981), a show which I didn't catch until it began airing in the States
circa 1985. I still, in fact, remember the first time I saw it - it replaced
Oklahoma PBS' Saturday night airings of Doctor
Who, and I was pissed. Somehow, though, that first episode gripped
me enough to break through that and I stuck with it for the remainder of the
series.
The first thing that one sees after the obligatory BBC copyright notice is a
beautifully rendered CGI scene of the Liberator flying by. In glancing through
some recent photos of the Blake's 7 cast reunion in March 2004 to celebrate this
DVD set's release, I was almost moved to tears to see what's left of the real
Liberator model - dilapidated, damaged, and all but falling apart. It's been
kept, but not kept up. To see the ship in this form mere days later
reminded me why the sight of a forlorn old BBC model got me that choked up -
I've got a lot of fond adolescent memories attached to that cathedralesque piece
of SF legend.
The first four discs of the five-DVD set each contain three episodes. This is a
rather unusual distribution of content, since dual layering means that one disc
could easily contain four episodes, with room left over for animated
menus and an easter egg or two. That, however, would've made this a four-disc
set - and therefore possibly something that wouldn't fetch a price nearing fifty
pounds in stores in the UK. The way the discs are authored also drops the dual
layer switch right in the middle of an episode, but while some viewers have
reported less than smooth transitions, my Apex multi-region player didn't even
blink. The fifth disc contains only one episode and the bulk of the bonus
features (some of the other discs are sprinkled with Easter eggs). The whole
set's packaged in something that's a cross between the DVD packaging of Star
Trek: The Next Generation and Babylon 5 - like the Trek discs, it's a fold-out
package (though at first I thought it was a booklet) and the interior package
borrows some of B5's best tricks, including an almost comic-strip-like,
season-spanning photomontage that stretches from one end of the foldout to the
other, and on the reverse side, an outstanding montage of the crew and the
Liberator under the transparent disc trays.
Three episodes carry commentaries: Space Fall gets the treatment from
producer David Maloney and actors Sally Knyvette (Jenna) and Michael Keating
(Vila). Seek-Locate-Destroy sees Keating sticking around to spar with
the villainous duo of Jacqueline Pearce (Servalan) and Stephen Grief (Travis),
both of whom return for Project Avalon with Knyvette. Space Fall
is the liveliest, with Keating and Knyvette singing the theme song over
the opening credits (when Sally repeats this gag with Stephen Grief on the
Project Avalon commentary, Jackie Pearce ruefully says "Don't give
up your day job, guys"). Maloney provides the richest source of real
information, mainly focusing on the legendary amount of money that Blake's 7
simply didn't have in its budget (it filled the timeslot of, and inherited the
exact same budget as, a modern-day police series). The actors spend most of
their time talking about fellow performers, directors, locations, anecdotes, and
that nagging sense of never quite knowing what it was all about. Even the
subject of accents and their attendant implications of social class structure is
brought up, so I guess the authors of Liberation really are on to
something. It's a lot of fun, though it seems that Jacqueline Pearce hasn't
held on to the details as well as her co-stars have - but she makes up for this
with a constant sense of surprise and a naughty wit to boot.
The other bonuses are so-so, with the Blue Peter feature on making your own
teleport bracelet out of handy household items being particularly amusing.
There are vignettes of scenes defining each character as well, as well as an
outtake or two. But - to my amazement - the best bonus feature is the Series
Two trailer, which packs the second season's main threads into a tightly edited
and quite honestly damned suspenseful movie-style preview, set to the
epic strains of some Mark Ayres Shakedown: Return Of The Sontarans
soundtrack music (a great fit, since Ayres was emulating the style of
Blake/Doctor Who composer Dudley Simpson on that project). Damned if I didn't
sit and watch this trailer five times in a row, it's that good, and if I
am to be totally honest, I have to admit that it makes the second season look
better than it really was. I want them to throw together a Series One trailer,
just for the hell of it, because after years of seeing Blake's 7 glossed over as
"camp sci-fi" (and those words are straight out of the BBC's own
mouth), I love watching someone go through the effort of making the show look so
good.
What's missing from this picture? Kevin Davies' eagerly anticipated
four-part documentary was nixed late in the game by B7 Enterprises, the company
formed to acquire and exploit the rights to Blake's 7. As the official story
from B7E goes, they didn't feel Davies' Making Of Blake's 7 was "a
fitting tribute" to series creator Terry Nation. That could mean a number
of things; I've loved previous Davies documentaries (More Than 30 Years In The
TARDIS, The Making of The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, Dalekmania and so
on), but in the back of my mind I can't help but wonder if the bone of
contention wasn't a continued focus on the campiness fator again. Whatever your
opinion is of either party, the documentary isn't part of this set, and I'm not
going to take points off of this set on account of a feature removed prior to
publication. We may never know who was in the right here.
So, with all the talk of Babylon 5 creator J. Michael Stracyznski having been
inspired by Blake's 7, among other celebrity endorsements, how does it all hold
up? That's a toughie. Antecedent of Babylon 5 that it may be, Blake's 7 is
hopelessly dated, what with the flared trousers and disco-era makeup and many
other elements of production and production value that scream 1970s at
the viewer. And yet it's so far ahead of its time with the morally ambiguous
storytelling move of making - and let's not kid ourselves or sugarcoat it here -
a terrorist cell out to be the good guys. This isn't a show that
could or would be made today, especially now (which makes one wonder why someone
would try to do so, especially after its biggest-name star has pulled out, but I
digress). I recommend it to you, but of course my recommendation is colored by
an undying fondness not only for the show, but for the time of life during which
I first became a fan. For my fellow fans, though, you'd be hard-pressed to do
better than this set, so four stars it is. Roll on Series Two!
Reviewed by Earl
Green theLogBook.com webmaster / editor-in-chief






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