Review BLAKE'S 7: THE WEB - Episode 05

Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
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Your thoughts on this episode......


Cally comes under the influence of an alien intelligence from her own peoples' legends, causing her to sabotage the Liberator. The ship goes off course and becomes ensnared by an organic web that surrounds a remote planet inhabited by a genetically-engineered race and their creators.






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https://www.imdforums.com/threads/seek-locate-destroy-episode-6.3345/



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https://www.imdforums.com/threads/time-squad-episode-4.3317/
 
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Doctor Omega

Member: Rank 10
I quite like this episode actually, but the opening shot of a man with his head in a fishtank is often singled out as something that the casual viewer may have to get past. If they do, and they really should, then it plays out as a particularly bleak episode.

Blake's 7, as always, to the discerning viewer, has so much to offer. The Blake/Avon relationship continues to develop. The women are not well served however, being the only ones to be taken over by the alien intelligence.

Blake makes his stand as the moral hero, while Avon is more pragmatic, although he doesn't really challenge Blake here.. Paul Darrow often quoted the fact that he wanted to dump Cally in this episode as a very real reaction, that enriched his character. We also see the first signs of flirting between Avon and Cally.

I am not sure if this is regarded as a great or poor episode of B7, but I really like it - and the design of the Decimas is fine by me. Like mini Zygons and sorta creepy. :emoji_alien:

7 out of 10
 
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michaellevenson

Member: Rank 8
I quite like this episode actually, but the opening shot of a man with his head in a fishtank is often singled out as something that the casual viewer may have to get past. If they do, and they really should, then it plays out as a particularly bleak episode.

Blake's 7, as always, to the discerning viewer, has so much to offer. The Blake/Avon relationship continues to develop. The women are not well served however, being the only ones to be taken over by the alien intelligence.

Blake makes his stand as the moral hero, while Avon is more pragmatic, although he doesn't really challenge Blake here.. Paul Darrow often quoted the fact that he wanted to dump Cally in this episode as a very real reaction, that enriched his character. We also see the first signs of flirting between Avon and Cally.

I am not sure if this is regarded as a great or poor episode of B7, but I really like it - and the design of the Decimas is fine by me. Like mini Zygons and sorta creepy. :emoji_alien:
Yes, me too, I like this episode, this is where we really get going. I think the FX is good, I like the zombie look of Geela and Novara, and apart from some dodgy lip syncing when The Lost take over Geela and Jenna it's all good stuff.
Initially Jenna was quite hostile toward Cally, and it surfaced again here, for the last time.
The Decimas make great tragic creatures.
8/10
 
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michaellevenson

Member: Rank 8
This Episode Cast List
Gareth Thomas......Blake
Paul Darrow......Avon
Sally Knyvette.....Jenna
Jan Chappell.....Cally
David Jackson.....Gan
Michael Keating....Vila
Peter Tuddenham....Zen
Richard Beale.....Saymon
Ania Marson.....Geela
Miles Fothergill.....Novara
Deep Roy, Gilda Cohen,Ismet Hassm, Marcus Powell, Molly Tweedley, Willie Sheara
..........Decimas

Writer....Terry Nation
Director...Michael E Briant
Transmitted 30 January 1978
 

chainsaw_metal1

Member: Rank 8
A fetus with an umbilical cord attached to its penis! Actors wearing cabbages! Candy floss and balloons! Won't someone think of the children?

This is a really good episode of the show, because it gives us a deeper look into Blake and Avon's personalities. Blake is fully convinced that the Decimas - like any life form - are worth saving, and that Saymon is a monster for wanting to destroy them. Avon disagrees, believing that any life is expendable. He even admonishes Blake at the end when the Decimas kill Geela and Novara, and destroy the lab, asking in disbelief "This is who you wanted to save?" We also get more sinister sounding talk from him, as when he tells Gan that Blake won't always be calling the shots. Also, I love how evil Avon looks when he smiles. Makes me love his character that much more. There's an uneasy friendship between Blake and Avon, or perhaps just an arrangement, as both see the other as an end to a means.

I'm giving this one 9 talking fetuses out of 10.
 

michaellevenson

Member: Rank 8
I don't know why but the chitter-chatter of the Decimas remind me of The Munchkins from The Wizard of Oz. Also do I detect a bit of Zygon in their design?
One little quibble; I took it that Geela and Novara were flesh and blood, albeit " grown to maturity and then had their aging halted", so when they perished, beaten to death by the Decimas, I expected bloodied corpses, but instead we got skeletons wrapped in their clothes as if they had instantly reverted to basic constituents. Possibly you could explain that by their unusual creation and control that Saymon influenced over them.
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
A fetus with an umbilical cord attached to its penis! Actors wearing cabbages! Candy floss and balloons! Won't someone think of the children?

This is a really good episode of the show, because it gives us a deeper look into Blake and Avon's personalities. Blake is fully convinced that the Decimas - like any life form - are worth saving, and that Saymon is a monster for wanting to destroy them. Avon disagrees, believing that any life is expendable. He even admonishes Blake at the end when the Decimas kill Geela and Novara, and destroy the lab, asking in disbelief "This is who you wanted to save?" We also get more sinister sounding talk from him, as when he tells Gan that Blake won't always be calling the shots. Also, I love how evil Avon looks when he smiles. Makes me love his character that much more. There's an uneasy friendship between Blake and Avon, or perhaps just an arrangement, as both see the other as an end to a means.

I'm giving this one 9 talking fetuses out of 10.

What's wrong with his smile...? :emoji_wink:
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
Under some form of powerful external psychic control, Cally sabotages the Liberator and brings it to an uncharted planet where it then becomes trapped in a mysterious white cloud of web-like strands that encompasses the entire planet. Jenna is also momentarily possessed by the same powerful external psychic control and relays a message to the Liberator crew from the inhabitants of the planet. They are a group of people known as the Lost, who are descendants of Cally's home planet of Auron. Cally talks about the legend of the Lost, who were cast out, because they were deemed unfit to share the soul of Auronar.

Blake teleports down to the surface of the planet to meet the Lost, who consist of six creatures that have set up a corporate identity and used their advanced scientific abilities to bring Cally - and the Liberator - to them. They offer Blake a means to escape from the web, but require energy cells from the Liberator crew as payment in return. In due course, Blake decides to give them the energy cells that they request, but then he discovers that the Lost intend to use the energy cells to destroy another race of creatures known as the Decimas, whom the Lost originally created through genetic engineering.

Not wanting to be a party to genocide, Blake tries to stop the Lost, as well as free the Liberator from the web. Eventually, Blake assists in the destruction of the gestalt, by helping the Decimas to invade their creators’ base and finally eradicate them. In the midst of the resulting confusion, Blake and Avon succeed in activating the fungicide beam that creates a clear passage through the web. This enables them to return to the Liberator and escape ahead of the oncoming Federation pursuit ships.

THE WEB is a highly enjoyable episode, which proves that BLAKE’S 7 has more than one string to its bow. It makes for an entertaining departure from the main narrative of the TV series, with the introduction of two alien species, the addition of further back story for Cally and an interesting moral dilemma. And, at first, it seems that Jenna’s ominous warning about the dangers of aliens from the previous episode is about to be born out. However, as she also falls under the psychic control of the Lost, she may find that particular argument difficult to continue prosecuting.

In any case, Jan Chappell and Sally Knyvette both get brief moments in the limelight, but it’s Gareth Thomas and Paul Darrow who both benefit the most from the best that this episode has to offer. By the way, is it just me, or do the Decimas - who I think look positively brilliant - look like they’re the result of a pairing between Mister Sin and a Zygon?

4/5.
 

Brimfin

Member: Rank 3
Now that the seven members of the Blake team have been revealed, the show is settling down into an episodic tone. This week, Cally is temporarily possessed by some of her planet’s super-intelligent scientists who went off on their own years before when their experiments became too controversial and dangerous. They force her to sabotage the ship to an extent where it is forced to speed toward their planet where the ship is literally caught in a web. No giant spiders around – it’s a form of fungus that leaves the ship unable to break free even with the fancy neutron blasters they have on board.

Kudos to Jan Chapell as Cally, who does a fine job of showing she is possessed. You can see it clearly even before she clocks poor Vera. But the award for the super creepiest scene of the show goes to Sally Knyvette as Jenna who temporarily projects the voice of Saymon, the evil scientist. Not only is the voice super-villain creepy, but Sally lip-synchs it perfectly making it seem like it’s genuinely coming from her. How effective she is becomes obvious when Geela tries the same thing down on the planet, but isn’t quite as good at it.
I liked the whole effect of the large head on the shriveled body in the bottle, all that is left of the last of the scientists. The first showing of that sets up the situation in an eerie fashion. Some of the other effects are weaker. The set of buildings looked like inflatable balloons posing as buildings, not letting you get close enough to them to really tell. The Decima people were midgets in fake plant suits. Giving them the voices they used was a mistake – they reminded me of the “Help Me” voice from THE FLY. When they attack the lab at the end, I had to mute the sound because I couldn’t stand listening to the endless incessant high-pitched babble of the creatures.

The premise of the story is that these intelligent beings from Cally’s planet continued their sinister experiments. They found the secret to eternal life, but only after they had aged beyond being able to make themselves young again. They did manage to create two humanoid beings – Geela and Novara - that had no emotion and were totally loyal to their masters. It was in trying to breed a race of slaves that they failed. The Decima showed emotion, a weakness to them. They wanted to destroy them but their power supply was too low to create the destruction needed. They wanted new power cells from The Liberator to do that. Blake, once he sees the creatures reacting with emotion over the death of their colleague – killed unnecessarily by Novara who could have just pushed him away instead. Blake tries to bargain for the creature’s lives but Novara just threatens to kill him and Avon so they comply. Fortunately, Novara carelessly leaves the door wide open (very carelessly – ludicrously so, in fact) allowing the Decima to storm in and destroy Saymon, his humanoids and all the equipment and scientific secrets. One might also wonder why Blake never tried to arrange for Avon to be transported directly into the building rather than in the open compound where he could have been attacked by the Decima. It worked out well for the Decima, though.

We also see Avon getting more and more determined to one day rid himself of Blake and go out on his own. But when he has a chance to let Blake die in an explosion he impulsively pulls him to safety instead, admitting he’s as surprised as Blake was by his action. Blake says he wasn’t really surprised, indicating he sees hope in Avon where even Avon himself does not.

An interesting storyline. Could have been done better in some aspects, but all right nevertheless. I’ll give it a 7 overall.
 

michaellevenson

Member: Rank 8
Now that the seven members of the Blake team have been revealed, the show is settling down into an episodic tone. This week, Cally is temporarily possessed by some of her planet’s super-intelligent scientists who went off on their own years before when their experiments became too controversial and dangerous. They force her to sabotage the ship to an extent where it is forced to speed toward their planet where the ship is literally caught in a web. No giant spiders around – it’s a form of fungus that leaves the ship unable to break free even with the fancy neutron blasters they have on board.

Kudos to Jan Chapell as Cally, who does a fine job of showing she is possessed. You can see it clearly even before she clocks poor Vera. But the award for the super creepiest scene of the show goes to Sally Knyvette as Jenna who temporarily projects the voice of Saymon, the evil scientist. Not only is the voice super-villain creepy, but Sally lip-synchs it perfectly making it seem like it’s genuinely coming from her. How effective she is becomes obvious when Geela tries the same thing down on the planet, but isn’t quite as good at it.
I liked the whole effect of the large head on the shriveled body in the bottle, all that is left of the last of the scientists. The first showing of that sets up the situation in an eerie fashion. Some of the other effects are weaker. The set of buildings looked like inflatable balloons posing as buildings, not letting you get close enough to them to really tell. The Decima people were midgets in fake plant suits. Giving them the voices they used was a mistake – they reminded me of the “Help Me” voice from THE FLY. When they attack the lab at the end, I had to mute the sound because I couldn’t stand listening to the endless incessant high-pitched babble of the creatures.

The premise of the story is that these intelligent beings from Cally’s planet continued their sinister experiments. They found the secret to eternal life, but only after they had aged beyond being able to make themselves young again. They did manage to create two humanoid beings – Geela and Novara - that had no emotion and were totally loyal to their masters. It was in trying to breed a race of slaves that they failed. The Decima showed emotion, a weakness to them. They wanted to destroy them but their power supply was too low to create the destruction needed. They wanted new power cells from The Liberator to do that. Blake, once he sees the creatures reacting with emotion over the death of their colleague – killed unnecessarily by Novara who could have just pushed him away instead. Blake tries to bargain for the creature’s lives but Novara just threatens to kill him and Avon so they comply. Fortunately, Novara carelessly leaves the door wide open (very carelessly – ludicrously so, in fact) allowing the Decima to storm in and destroy Saymon, his humanoids and all the equipment and scientific secrets. One might also wonder why Blake never tried to arrange for Avon to be transported directly into the building rather than in the open compound where he could have been attacked by the Decima. It worked out well for the Decima, though.

We also see Avon getting more and more determined to one day rid himself of Blake and go out on his own. But when he has a chance to let Blake die in an explosion he impulsively pulls him to safety instead, admitting he’s as surprised as Blake was by his action. Blake says he wasn’t really surprised, indicating he sees hope in Avon where even Avon himself does not.

An interesting storyline. Could have been done better in some aspects, but all right nevertheless. I’ll give it a 7 overall.
I agree about Sally Knyvette, not only was her lip syncing good, but her facial expression was really creepy.
Avon certainly isn't slow in stating his desire to be rid of Blake one day, in fact he doesn't particularly respect any of the others. I like his comment to Gan.when discussing the ship's auto repair system;
" it's slow, methodical.....you should appreciate that problem!"
 

The Seeker

Member: Rank 6
I know it will turn out at the end, but it’s always still suspenseful to me.

I agree the Decimas looked like mini Zygons. You can tell that these are the same people who created Doctor Who. And really, the Lost aren’t all that intelligent if they let their creation spin so widely out of control. What I don’t get is why they had to create the Decimas when they could have just created more Novaras and Geelas. They had no wills of their own, anyway. And the Lost are a pretty small group. When Cally talked about them I thought there’d be a whole colony of them. Budget restraints I guess?
 

Gavin

Member: Rank 6
VIP
I'm back!!! Been ill for the last couple of weeks - kidney stones followed by a severe stomach virus - not a fun time for me. Between being in undescribable pain, spaced out on pain meds, and throwing up I really haven't been up to watching things so now I'm playing catch up.

Anyway this was a strange episode for me. I think I'm going against the crowd on this one but I didn't really like it that much. I'm not really sure what it was that didn't work for me but I just couldn't get interested. It's an interesting concept but it didn't feel like what I'd come to expect from the show so far. I did like the performances from the main cast and it was good to see that Cally seems to still have a way to go to earn the trust of most of the others (although Blake seems too trusting really).

The concept of an alien race trying to manufacture a new species to ... well I'm not really sure what the end goal was ... I may have missed something, but the concept is intriguing. But Blake seemed to trust the Decimas very quickly, and without any real evidence to support that trust (they shot at him then begged for help and that was his sole contact with them). I can understand his revulsion at genocide but by letting the Decimas take over the base that's what occurred anyway.

Anyway as interesting as the concept was it just didn't work for me.

4 out of 10
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
I'm back!!! Been ill for the last couple of weeks - kidney stones followed by a severe stomach virus - not a fun time for me. Between being in undescribable pain, spaced out on pain meds, and throwing up I really haven't been up to watching things so now I'm playing catch up.

Anyway this was a strange episode for me. I think I'm going against the crowd on this one but I didn't really like it that much. I'm not really sure what it was that didn't work for me but I just couldn't get interested. It's an interesting concept but it didn't feel like what I'd come to expect from the show so far. I did like the performances from the main cast and it was good to see that Cally seems to still have a way to go to earn the trust of most of the others (although Blake seems too trusting really).

The concept of an alien race trying to manufacture a new species to ... well I'm not really sure what the end goal was ... I may have missed something, but the concept is intriguing. But Blake seemed to trust the Decimas very quickly, and without any real evidence to support that trust (they shot at him then begged for help and that was his sole contact with them). I can understand his revulsion at genocide but by letting the Decimas take over the base that's what occurred anyway.

Anyway as interesting as the concept was it just didn't work for me.

4 out of 10
Sorry to hear you were unwell.

Hope that's all behind you now.
 

Gavin

Member: Rank 6
VIP
It's an interesting concept but it didn't feel like what I'd come to expect from the show so far.
I've been thinking about this and is it possible that this was a story concept originally pitched for Doctor Who and later reworked for Blake's 7? It seems out of place in Blake's 7 but I could see it working in Doctor Who.
 

ant-mac

Member: Rank 9
I've been thinking about this and is it possible that this was a story concept originally pitched for Doctor Who and later reworked for Blake's 7? It seems out of place in Blake's 7 but I could see it working in Doctor Who.
Anything is certainly possible...
 
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