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1[[quoteright:299:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/63512cc05c2ff41a4c8d2bc2a033e4f4.jpg]]
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3In 1981 the dystopian BBC TV SpaceOpera ''Series/BlakesSeven'' ended with a bang. The fans wiped away a tear or two and withdrew to their rooms to write bitter fanfiction for the rest of their lives. Well, not quite...
4
5! BBC Radio: ''The Sevenfold Crown'' and ''The Syndeton Experiment''
6The first ''Blake's 7'' audio drama was broadcast in 1998 on BBC Radio 4. ''The Sevenfold Crown'' is one of those legendary works that few people have heard but most have heard of, mainly because it was so legendarily bad. Creator/BarryLetts had been responsible for some of ''Series/DoctorWho'''s most well-remembered episodes, but he was unfamiliar with ''Blake's 7'' - the play was a replacement for a ''Doctor Who'' story which fell through due to Creator/JonPertwee's death - and the result was a story that in tone, characterisation and plot bear little resemblance to the original. (His ''Doctor Who'' audio dramas have a poor reputation, too, though.) Nonetheless it seems to hold a special place in the hearts of many who have sat through it, perhaps because once you abandon any hope at canonicity the script has enough cheese for a small moon and enough ham to give Creator/BrianBlessed heartburn.
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8''The Syndeton Experiment'', also by Creator/BarryLetts, was broadcast the following year. Research happened at some point, resulting in better characterisations for everyone but Servalan, who was transfigured into a seductive housewife: Creator/JacquelinePearce hammed it up with joy. As in ''Sevenfold Crown'', all the Series 4 regulars were portrayed by the original cast save for Dayna and Soolin, who were replaced by new actors.
9
10! B7 Productions: A Rebellion Reborn
11In 2007, B7 Productions, who own the rights to ''Blake's 7'', announced three hour-long episodes to be broadcast on BBC Radio. Rather than wedge the stories into gaps in the canon timeline, as is common in {{expanded universe}}s, "Rebel", "Traitor" and "Liberator" would be an AlternateContinuity retelling of the first series with detailed world-building and a new cast. Despite the changes (Jenna is American! Shock!) they were well received, and were followed up by a series of eight half-hour prequels, "The Early Years".
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13The episodes star Derek Riddell as Blake, Creator/ColinSalmon as Avon, Carrie Dobro as Jenna, Daniella Nardini as Servalan and Craig Kelly as Travis; among the guest stars are Creator/JanChappell (Cally) and Creator/MichaelKeating (Vila) from the original series. The entire series [[http://www.bigfinish.com/releases/v/a-rebellion-reborn-926 is available from Big Finish]] as a box set and download, while individual episodes can be found on iTunes.
14
15! Creator/BigFinish: The ''Liberator Chronicles'', ''The Classic Audio Adventures'' and ''The Worlds of Blake's 7''
16All this excitement finally came to a head in 2011 when the much-loved Creator/BigFinish, producer of ''AudioPlay/BigFinishDoctorWho'' and many other audio adaptations, announced ''The Liberator Chronicles'', starring the original cast. A basic episode focuses on two characters, with e.g. Avon narrating and Vila joining in on the dialogue; however, several Chronicles have a cast of four or five.
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18Two years later, to much rejoicing, the cast was reunited in ''Warship'', a one-hour special set in the Intergalactic War between Seasons Two and Three. Effectively a pilot release, it proved so popular that Big Finish greenlit a series proper. Where the ''Liberator Chronicles'' are character-driven, ''The Classic Audio Adventures'' are longer and more dependent on plot. Five six-episode series were produced, the first taking place during Season B and the subesquent four taking place during Season C.
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20Not all cast members returned. Creator/DavidJackson (Gan) had passed away in 2005. Peter Tuddenham (Zen and Orac) had died in 2007, and his parts were played by Alistair Lock. Creator/JosetteSimon (Dayna) has distanced herself from ''Blake's 7'', as she felt that her character embodied an unpleasant "exotic warrior" sexual and racial stereotype; her absence was written into the S2 audios (set during Season C) as a plot point, before [[TheOtherDarrin Yasmin Bannerman]] took up the role. Creator/GlynisBarber (Soolin) [[https://twitter.com/search?q=msglynisbarber%20big%20finish&src=typd has said on Twitter]] that she would return if asked - it eventually came to light that rights reasons prevented Soolin's return, but Barber did indeed return in a new role. Creator/GarethThomas ''did'' return, but passed away in 2016 - all subsequent stories were set during Series C, when Thomas was no longer a regular cast member.
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22After the deaths of Creator/JacquelinePearce in 2018 and Creator/PaulDarrow in 2019, ''The Classic Audio Adventures'' was wound up, and replaced by ''The World's Of Blake's 7'', a new set of full-cast dramas taking place away from The Liberator, each featuring a few of the surviving original cast members (including a return from Creator/ColinBaker as the legendary guest character Bayban the Butcher) without recasting anyone other than Zen/Orac, who Alistair Lock continued to voice.
23
24!! List of Big Finish ''Blake's 7'' episodes
25%% I'll turn this into a proper recap eventually.
26[[folder: The Liberator Chronicles]]
27
28!! Volume 1
29Set during Season A.
30# "The Turing Test"
31# "Solitary"
32# "Counterfeit"
33
34!! Volume 2
35Set during Season B.
36# "The Magnificent Four"
37# "False Positive"
38# ""Wolf"
39
40!! Volume 3
41Set during Season C.
42# "The Armageddon Storm: Part 1"
43# "The Armageddon Storm: Part 2"
44# "The Armageddon Storm: Part 3"
45
46!! Volume 4
47Set during Season A.
48# "Promises"
49# "Epitaph"
50# "Kerr"
51
52!! Volume 5
53Set during Season B.
54# "Logic"
55# "Risk Management"
56# "Three"
57
58!! Volume 6
59Set during Season C.
60# "Incentive"
61# "Jenna's Story"
62# "Blake's Story"
63
64!! Volume 7
65Set during Season A.
66# "Spy"
67# "Disorder"
68# "The Hard Road"
69
70!! Volume 8
71Set during Season B.
72# "President"
73# "The Sea of Iron"
74# "Spoils"
75
76!! Volume 9
77Set during Season C.
78# "Defector"
79# "Planetfall"
80# "Secrets"
81
82!! Volume 10
83Set during Season A.
84# "Velandra"
85# "Retribution"
86# "Ministry of Peace"
87
88!! Volume 11
89Set during Season B.
90# "Brother"
91# "Poison"
92# "Escape from Destiny"
93# "Remnants"
94
95!! Volume 12
96Set during Season C.
97# "Corners of the Mind"
98# "Capital"
99# "Punishment"
100[[/folder]]
101
102[[folder: The Classic Audio Adventures]]
103Set between the last episode of Series 1 and the first of S2.
104* "Warship"
105!!Series One:
106Set during Season B, between "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS2E10VoiceFromThePast Voice From The Past]]" and "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS2E11Gambit Gambit]]"
107
108# "Fractures"
109# "Battleground"
110# "Drones"
111# "Mirror"
112# "Cold Fury"
113# "Caged"
114
115!!Series Two
116Set during Season C, after "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E8RumoursOfDeath Rumours of Death]]". Follows up on plot threads from some Liberator Chronicles stories.
117# "Scimitar"
118# "Fortuitas"
119# "Mindset"
120# "Ghost Ship"
121# "Devil's Advocate"
122# "Truth And Lies"
123
124!!Series Three - The Spoils of War
125Setduring Season C, after "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E2Powerplay Powerplay]]", [[AnachronicOrder meaning some happen before Dayna's S2 disappearance]]. Has an overarching title "The Spoils Of War".
126# "Liberation"
127# "Outpost"
128# "Close Enough"
129# "Solus"
130
131!!Series Four - Crossfire
132Series Four, a single StoryArc titled "Crossfire", set during Season C, between "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E12DeathWatch Death-Watch]]" and "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E13Terminal Terminal]]".
133## "Paradise Lost"
134## "True Believers"
135## "Resurgence"
136## "Fearless"
137## "Funeral On Kallion"
138## "Shock Troops"
139## "Erebus"
140## "The Scapegoat"
141## "Ministry Of Truth"
142## "Refuge"
143## "Kith And Kin"
144## "Death Of Empire"
145
146!!Series Five - Restoration
147Series Five, a single StoryArc titled "Restoration", set during Season C, immediately following on from "Crossfire", leading up to "[[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E13Terminal Terminal]]".
148##"Damage Control"
149##"The Hunted"
150##"Figurehead"
151##"Abandon Ship"
152##"The New Age"
153##"Happy Ever After"
154##"Siren"
155##"Hyperion"
156##"Parasite"
157##"Failsafe"
158##"Reunion"
159##"Imperium"
160[[/folder]]
161
162[[folder: The Worlds of Blake's 7]]
163!! Avalon Volume 01
164## "Terra Firma"
165## "Throwback"
166## "Black Water"
167
168!! Avalon Volume 02
169## "Bayban's Bounty"
170## "Mercenary"
171## "Heart of Ice"
172
173!! The Clone Masters
174## "Separation"
175## "The Rule of Life"
176## "The Conclave"
177
178!! Bayban the Butcher
179## "Conscience"
180## "The Butcher's Wife"
181## "Vengeance Games"
182
183!! The Terra Nostra
184## "Stimulus/Response"
185## "Entrapment"
186## "The Offer"
187
188!! Heroes and Villains
189## "The Amagon Queen"
190## "The Deal with Dorian"
191## "Everyone Talks to Shrinker"
192[[/folder]]
193
194At the moment much of the trope page is empty, so help add to it if you can.
195
196----
197!! Tropes found in the ''Blake's 7'' audio plays, split according to producer:
198
199[[foldercontrol]]
200
201[[folder:BBC Radio plays]]
202* BBCQuarry: "The Sevenfold Crown" contains a line where a disgusted sounding Tarrant complains that the planet they've just teleported down to "looks like a quarry".
203* DependingOnTheWriter: Or, in this case, Depending On Whether The Writer Has Watched The Show (he hasn't). The result is a severe case of character derailment for the entire cast, including a gluttonous Vila (an accidental substitute for his alcoholism?), a helpless Soolin, and an Avon who wants to take over the galaxy, apparently.
204* DismantledMacGuffin: The titular Sevenfold Crown (I think?)
205[[/folder]]
206
207[[folder:A Rebellion Reborn]]
208* AlternateContinuity: The first three episodes are a retelling of Series 1. While the basic outcomes and characterisation remain more or less the same (Blake is sent to Cygnus, then escapes on the ''Liberator''), there are major changes to the setting and science fiction elements. Chief among these is the elimination of the teleport, which is replaced by a shuttle as budget is no longer a restriction, and the placement of the series in the 2200s (''Series/BlakesSeven'' had 700-year-old pioneer ships, assuming Federation history is to be trusted).
209* LighterAndSofter: The Federation is pragmatically evil rather than cartoonishly evil in this continuity. For example rather than planting memories in children’s heads to frame Blake they use “computer generated puppets” to give evidence by video link in the court case.
210[[/folder]]
211
212[[folder:Big Finish Blake's 7]]
213* AcePilot: Jenna in "Warship".
214-->"You'd better know what you're doing with this smuggler's stunt, Blake."\
215"Don't worry, Avon. He knows someone who does."
216* AllCrimesAreEqual: The detainees sent to die on Battleground 9 include murderers, thieves, rebel dissidents, and a ''medical student who complained about unfair hiring practices''. It's less about punishment and more about getting new cannon fodder.
217* AndroidsArePeopleToo: Central to "The Turing Test". The researchers avoid moral dilemmas by refusing to see Fourteen as what she is - a young girl - while Avon, [[JustAMachine of all people]], begins to find similarities between Fourteen and himself, even resolving to leave the ''Liberator'' with her when he sees that Blake will use her in the rebellion.
218* ArmyOfThievesAndWhores: While the fake rebel forces on Battleground 9 do contain some genuine resistors as well as the odd political embarrassment, the major component is ordinary criminals.
219* AscendedExtra: Tom Chadbon's character Del Grant (brother of Avon's TheLostLenore Anna Grant) returns for a few episodes set during Series C and becomes a ''de facto'' member of the crew, after making just one appearance in the original series. This was partially to fill out the cast since Creator/JosetteSimon didn't return.
220* BavarianFireDrill: A serial case in "Counterfeit". Blake bluffs his way into a scientific work camp as a new prisoner. Above ground, Avon uses the power of sheer arrogance to impersonate Space Commander Travis (a man, let us remind you, with one eye and an artificial hand). Eventually, however, they're both unmasked and Supreme Commander Servalan herself arrives to take the prisoners off the Governor's hands. They recognise her at once of course - the way she dominates the room, the white dress, the hair. [[spoiler:It's Jenna.]]
221* ContinuityNod: At the end of "Warship", as Blake's life capsule drifts away from the ''Liberator'' he laughs and murmurs, as he did in [[Series/BlakesSeven another pilot episode many years ago]], "Oh no, I'm coming back."
222* CanonForeigner: Gustav Nyrron, a renowned Auron scientist, is introduced on the ''Liberator'' in "Solitude" and promptly dumped at Avon's insistence. He returns in "Wolf".
223* DivideAndConquer: The conflict in "Fractures" comes from the pre-existing weaknesses in the ''Liberator'' crew, with [[spoiler:a shapeshifting alien]] sabotaging the power system so they must split up to fix it and then slowly pushing each one into paranoia.
224* DrowningPit: combined with [[TrappedInASinkingCar Trapped In A Sinking Spaceship]] in "Drones".
225* EarthShatteringKaboom: The dwarf planet Megiddo is a bomb. All of it.
226* FirstPersonPerspective: The style of ''The Liberator Chronicles'', backed by a second character in a supporting role.
227* ImprobableAimingSkills: Blake shoots a mosquito-sized drone out of the air. Justified: the local fighters are implied to be using rounds, but Liberator guns are some sort of energy weapon and can presumably fry anything if they get close enough.
228* TheInquisitorGeneral: An interesting twist on this trope appears with the Battle Tracers in "Battleground", who seem to be picked from the lower social classes (Alexa is a Delta) but also hold no military rank, making them both impartial and immune to bullying from the upper-class commanders that they assess.
229* MultipleChoicePast: "Solitary" gives us snippets of Vila's backstory, including a book-loving grandmother who read him ''Robin Hood'', the fact that he used to sell amulets on the black market, and a childhood memory of Federation troops rounding up his schoolteachers and shooting them all. At the very end we learn that [[spoiler:"Vila" is a gestalt being that absorbs identities, and all those memories are other people's]]. Or are they?
230-->'''Vila''': To hangovers! Here's to getting merry! Here's to Roj Blake and his merry men!
231* OutrunTheFireball: In "Warship" the ''Liberator'' just barely gets ahead of the shockwave, but getting clipped by the outer edges was enough to bork up the remaining systems and require evacuation.
232* PersecutedIntellectuals: A flashback in "Solitary" where Federation troops march into a school, round up the students and the teachers and then execute the teachers for perverting the students against the Federation. The kids are sent off to "correction camps".
233* {{Pilot}}: "Warship" was the pilot for the full-cast audios.
234* PsychologicalThriller: "Fractures". The crew, split up as they try to repair a power failure, start getting disturbing and contradictory information over the comms. Blake ordered the power cut. Blake is trying to kill Vila. Vila is going mad. Jenna ordered the power cut. Cally is going mad. By the end of the episode, nobody trusts anybody, [[spoiler:which suits the hate-feeding alien in the comms system down to the ground]].
235* RealLifeWritesThePlot: Creator/JosetteSimon didn't want to return to the series, so Series 2 of the full-cast audios starts with Dayna's mysterious disappearance. Tom Chadbon's Del Grant joins the crew for the duration to bring the number to seven again.
236* SpaceIsNoisy: Averted in "Warship". The progress of the plasma explosion is given by Zen's countdown and by the sudden silencing of the Andromedan transmissions. (Played straight earlier, though, when we hear Megiddo explode.)
237* StoryArc: Big Finish episodes often have their own story arcs independent of the televised series. Series one had the "Federac" story and the machinations of the President.
238* TestedOnHumans: Battleground 9 is an entire planet devoted to wargames in which Federation trainees are sent against human targets. The sequel episode, set in the same place, features "biter" drones that inject people with artificial viruses and then ''hang around to record their deaths''.
239* TomatoInTheMirror: The narrator in [[spoiler:"Solitude", Vila,]] is actually a shapeshifting alien gestalt. It's handled rather cleverly, since the story is set to make the ''other'' character seem suspicious.
240* TuringTest: In "The Turing Test", unsurprisingly enough, but with a twist. Avon, masquerading as an android, is given the test with what he assumes is a human scientist at the far end. His opponent turns out to be a real, advanced android, which is why the scientists were so willing to accept Avon as one - but he's human. So what is she?
241* UngratefulBastard: Did you ''really'' think Servalan would not take advantage of a crippled ''Liberator''? That it was crippled holding the line against the Andromedan invasion is irrelevant.
242* UnreliableNarrator: In the ''Liberator Chronicles'' each story is told by one of the Seven(ish), who are not the most trustworthy people.
243* UnwantedRescue: Cally teleports Jenna out of a suicide run in "Warship" and gets shouted at for her trouble, because [[spoiler:Jenna had been planning a [[AcePilot slingshot orbit]] around the alien fleet]].
244* WesternUnionMan: In [[Recap/BlakesSevenS3E4DawnOfTheGods "Dawn of the Gods"]], as part of the episode's AnachronismStew, Groff dresses like a stereotypical western telegraph officer.
245* WhyAmITicking The end result of the artificial pyrokinetic virus in "Drones".
246* YouAreNumberSix: The android 14 in "The Turing Test". Avon wonders what happened to the earlier thirteen versions - turns out they were all sacrificed as distractions whenever the station was raided.
247[[/folder]]

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