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 Blake's 7 The Inside Story

Blake's 7 has always been shrouded in
mystery, and as with Star Trek, we no longer have access to the creator's mind
to find out what he was thinking - so the authors tracked down all of the
actors, many of the directors, and many of the other creative personnel
responsible for the show's memorable stories and occasionally less than
memorable special effects. Co-author Sheelagh Wells was Blake's 7's makeup
designer for the second, third and fourth years of its four-year run, and also
spent much of her off-screen time before and after the series with star Gareth
(Blake) Thomas, so she has many personal insights to the show's history.

This long-overdue look behind the scenes of my favorite science fiction
series was a must-buy item for me, and though the import price was a bit steep,
it was a very worthwhile purchase.
There are numerous photos throughout the book, though many of them have been
seen before, with the exception of some behind-the-scenes material and humorous
shots of the cast goofing off. More interesting are pre-production sketches and
a suspiciously Okudagram-esque diagram of the crew's fourth-season ship, Scorpio
- many years, of course, before Okudagrams came into existence. The designs of
the sets and ships are discussed, including an intriguing early Liberator
concept which seemed to resemble, more than anything else, the cathedralesque
U.S.S. Cygnus from the 1979 movie The
Black Hole. One coincidence of both this book and Creating
Babylon 5 is that both books mention modelmaker Ron Thornton
- the creator of Scorpio and of the Babylon 5 space station - and his work on
"that other series." Indeed, Babylon 5 fans who have never been able
to catch this series - often referred to as one of J. Michael Straczynski's
points of reference in creating his own saga - may wish to seek out this book,
the series itself, various Internet sites, and (heaven forbid!) tapes of the
series itself for comparison.
If the book lacks one thing, it is a focus on particular episodes. The very
different fourth season - featuring only three members of the original cast
aboard a smaller and less powerful ship than in the first three years - received
its own chapter, and naturally the controversial and mysterious final episode
got an entire chapter to itself. But with those two exceptions, this book
repeats Creating Babylon 5's omission of more specific information. Also
conspicuous by their absence are the show's writers. Understandably, the late
Terry Nation could not be contacted, but Chris Boucher - the show's script
editor for all four years and writer of several episodes, including the finale -
is only heard from a few times. None of the other writers appear in the book
either - which is a shame, since arguably the writing is a huge part of the
reason why, twenty years later, this show is still remembered so fondly. I
think a follow-up is in order!
I can't recommend this book enough for fellow Blake's 7 fanatics - and as any
other Blake fans will attest, there's not much competition in the "making
of Blake's 7" category of literature, so you might as well track this one
down.
Reviewed by Earl Green
theLogBook.com editor/webmaster

(This book is out of print.)

- Year: 1997
- Author: Joe Nazzaro & Sheelagh Wells
- Genre: Non-fiction - behind-the-scenes
- Length: 128 pages
- Publisher: Virgin
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