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Sci-Fi Television United Kingdom Entertainment

Blake's 7 Actor Paul Darrow Dies At 78 (bbc.co.uk) 107

simpz writes: Actor Paul Darrow, who played the greatest antihero in Blake's 7, Kerr Avon, has passed away. Avon was one of the few (only) computer experts in sci-fi to not be portrayed as a stereotyped geek. He also appeared in Doctor Who.
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Blake's 7 Actor Paul Darrow Dies At 78

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  • Never heard of that movie or game

    • by Anonymous Coward

      British sci-fi programme on BBC in the late 70s. It has a cult following.

    • by MrKaos ( 858439 )
      Relinquish in your geek card immediately.
  • by Jarwulf ( 530523 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @06:49PM (#58703874)
    If the Federation was evil and the heroes were stupid and each had one highly specific skill that turned out to be useless in practice. Ie Blake is a leader who's terrible at leading and constantly gets people killed, They have a psychic who's power apparently seems to do nothing except attract demons to attack them, and a hulking bruiser who can't physically harm anyone because of an implant that will kill him. Oh and they fly around in a ship that looks like a triple dong.
    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @07:08PM (#58703988)

      So, like most British shows, its heroes are 'normal' people shoved into a situation, and not polished bronze gods and goddesses that can solve any problem at a moments notice? :)

      *That* was why Blakes Seven excelled - Blake was a terrible leader, Avon was someone you would have trouble trusting, Villa was a coward that had to be forced into things etc etc.

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @08:21PM (#58704310) Journal

        =That* was why Blakes Seven excelled

        I'll add this. The invention of the long story arc, that exists in many shows now, was invented in Blakes 7.

        This show is truly memorable and shows something that is lacking in all modern shows, resistance against state tyranny. Despite some of the corny scenes, crappy sets and B grade acting Blakes 7 is a masterpiece of story.

        For anyone who hasn't watched B7 try to engage your imagination for what you see (effects wise) and look at the story it is telling for you will never see B7 remade and there is nothing like it.

        • by Reziac ( 43301 ) *

          It's also a durn good example of how if you give the audience an interesting story and solid characters, they really won't care about special effects, or lack thereof. They won't care if the sets are made of cardboard, or whether the fight scenes are one token fake punch. It can look like complete crap, but if the story and characters compel -- it will find and keep its audience. Witness how enduring B7 fandom has been, and judge for yourself.

      • by Jarwulf ( 530523 )
        They pushed the dial a little too far imo when everybody except one character is completely useless, and he's plenty stupid at the most critical times too. Actually most are worse than useless as half the episodes revolve around getting attacked by yet another demon summoned by the psychic or the bruiser going berserk or almost dying yet again. Blake in particular is such a moron its hard to take him seriously. So its kinda hard to sympathize with the 'heroes'. Meanwhile the villains are like stupidly luck
      • by martinX ( 672498 )

        *That* was why Blakes Seven excelled - Blake was a terrible leader, Avon was someone you would have trouble trusting, Villa was a coward that had to be forced into things etc etc.

        And Servalan was hot.

        • by bungo ( 50628 )

          Jacqueline Pearce also passed away in September 2018.

          I saw her live at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe a number of years back, doing an autobiographical show. She was enthralling and quite funny. It's a shame she never had a bigger career.

          RIP Paul and Jacqueline.

    • by caviare ( 830421 )

      As you say, it isn't really like Star Trek at all. However there are obvious similarities with Firefly.

    • In a lot of ways, the background story for Blakes 7 was like that of Firefly. Otherwise very different programmes.
  • by ihaveamo ( 989662 ) on Monday June 03, 2019 @06:54PM (#58703898)
    Inspiration for shows such as FarScape . Criminals on the run in a fast spacecraft. ORAC the portable supercomputer was a great character, and was just a clear plastic box they lugged around. Sort of a laptop version of HAL 9000, with an attitude.
    • by martinX ( 672498 )

      ORAC was a bit like KITT on space ship.

    • Orac was a great character, despite being a plastic box with some Christmas lights in it. In one episode, the characters are trapped by pirates until they hand over Orac. Which Avon (Paul Darrow) the anti-hero does to the concern of his team mates. Then at the denouement, since Avon is also a good deal smarter than his heroic companions, he produces Orac. When asked what he gave to the pirates, he says 'Oh, just a box with some lights in it'. For the 70s, this was up there with Joss Whedan's best.
  • "I'm not expendable, I'm not stupid and I'm not going."

    Well, he's finally gone and the world is the poorer for it. RIP Paul Darrow.

    • "I'm not expendable, I'm not stupid and I'm not going."

      Well, he's finally gone and the world is the poorer for it. RIP Paul Darrow.

      True that!

      If you're a computer geek or nerd there is a lot to learn from Darrow's portrayal of Kerr Avon a ruthless and highly intelligent systems programmer offers a type of geek archetype that is only just emerging: Beneath that cold exterior beats a heart of pure stone. The talent is that he did it at the dawn of the computer age.

      Thank you Mr Darrow for your work. You gave me an alternative mode of being a technologist that was difficult for people to take advantage of.

      Kerr Avon: "I have never

      • by malkavian ( 9512 )

        Yep, he was one of my "role models" growing up.
        Quite possibly how I ended up as a "scientific skeptic". :)

  • I met both Paul Darrow and Gareth Thomas at Who's 7 in the mid 90s. Where Gareth was kind of difficult to have a conversation with, Paul and his wife Janet were friendly to all visitors and helpful where they could. I will miss him.
    • by malkavian ( 9512 )

      I never got to meet the man.. But he'll always be remembered here.. And good to know that extra bit straight from the horse's mouth, so to speak.

    • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

      I met both Paul Darrow and Gareth Thomas at Who's 7 in the mid 90s. Where Gareth was kind of difficult to have a conversation with, Paul and his wife Janet were friendly to all visitors and helpful where they could. I will miss him.

      I'll admit to being somewhat jealous. Darrow sounds like the kind of fellow you could have a pint with, though he'd probably like wine better.

      • Bordeaux in particular,m apparently.

        But I bet he'd still have a pint. Of something decently brown and not fizzy.

  • Avon (Paul Darrow) "We are outnumbered and I can't see how we are going to get out of this" Blake (With much heroic 70s sci-fi bombast) "Well you've not considered me being here" Avon (With casual sneer) "Unfortunately yes I have" And that sums up Blake's 7, and why Paul Darrow is remembered for playing Avon the 'side-kick' so well.
  • This is very sad. The final lingering fan fantasy of a B7 reboot I suppose is vanished as well. I never have been able to find a copy of A Terrible Aspect... Besides the immortal Avon, Paul was also great as the Avon-esque Kaston Iago, and as Thomas Doughty in Drake's Venture.
  • I won't spoil things by watching it again. I particularly remember the episode when the crew of the Liberator realise the galaxy is facing an invasion by an advanced race of aliens and contact the Federation, and Servalan takes the leap of faith to deploy all the Federation's ships to fight when others are warning it was a trick.

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