johnnybear
Member: Rank 6
Well in their first encounter upon Sinofar's planet, Travis easily defeats Blake and utters the immortal line of "Come on, Blake, you don't want to die on your back!"
JB
JB
That's because Giroc blinded Blake with psychedelic lights. She revelled in death unlike Sinofar who seemed to represent peace and diplomacy and realised Blake passed the test by stating he would have enjoyed killing Travis and therefore refrained from doing so. Travis just can't see this, his life is service to The Federation , he is actually a sad individual as is demonstrated by his actions at the end of series 2, but no more on that now.Well in their first encounter upon Sinofar's planet, Travis easily defeats Blake and utters the immortal line of "Come on, Blake, you don't want to die on your back!"
JB
Yeah, I know all of that, but I like to try and fit what actually is said or appears on screen into the on-going in-universe canon.The comments made by Travis at the beginning of the episode must obviously be a mistake especially once you see the finale to the second series, Star One! In that episode it is revealed just as it is in Star Trek TOS that the Federation occupies a small area of the Milky Way and the nearest galaxy to ours is the Andromeda galaxy which in both shows contains a hostile enemy force intent on invading our space! In the episode Horizon a planet close to the edge of the galaxy is mining an ore so that the Federation can send men into new galaxies So what Travis actually means to say is this space rather than galaxy! If there had been no second series then you could say that the Federation has conquered not only the Milky Way but Andromeda and maybe many other galaxies as well!
JB
It seems to have been a common issue among BBC sci-fi writers in that era. I don't think they were completely clear on the differences between galaxies, constellations, and solar systems. Remember in The Daleks Master Plan when the Daleks created an alliance of multiple galaxies to take on one single solar system?So what Travis actually means to say is this space rather than galaxy!
Well, as far as solar systems go, we do have a pretty overinflated opinion of ourselves.It seems to have been a common issue among BBC sci-fi writers in that era. I don't think they were completely clear on the differences between galaxies, constellations, and solar systems. Remember in The Daleks Master Plan when the Daleks created an alliance of multiple galaxies to take on one single solar system?
There are a few other couples like that.Strange isn't it how Julian Glover and his wife Isla Blair seem to turn up in television shows a few episodes apart or even in together? They appeared together in an episode of Dixon of Dock Green in 1975 but they were both in Space 1999s first series and Blakes 7 as well! Isla in Duel and Glover in Breakdown! Maybe they don't like to be too far from each other?
JB
Well it's a pretty ordinary human that can't drink a dalek under the table.The Daleks probably ran into a Human expedition at the pub on a Saturday night and afterwards thought: "Shit! We're going to need backup!"