"Blake's 7" Warlord (TV Episode 1981) Poster

(TV Series)

(1981)

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7/10
The Swansong Of Servalan
Theo Robertson31 March 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Worried by the ever increasing expansion of the Terran Federation Avon proposes an alliance between five factions outside of Federation control all of whom are uneasy at making peace with rival warlord leader Zukon from the Planet Betafarl. A deal is eventually struck but Zukon is himself allying himself to Servalan and has planted bombs at the Xenon base

This is a slightly uneven episode mainly down to director Viktors Ritelis . It gets off to a good opening as subjugated citizens on an unnamed planet travel through a mall and are then gunned down by Federation troopers simply because the troopers are bored . It's an impacting scene but because the visual technique of multiple moving screens is similar to that used in the likes of THE KENNY EVERETT VIDEO SHOW and countless pop videos of the time instantly gives the opening a very dated early 1980s feel . There's also a very irritating scene where Soolin and Avon are on an outside location where the camera has them in close up then cuts to an establishing long shot which is done via very unconvincing CSO then back to location close p uagain . There's also a few instances that gives the viewer a feeling the production was rushed and that the episode isn't as good as it could have been

That said it is one of the better episodes from the season and is very political and does try to explore the trappings of power as Zukon has to betray the cause for the most practical of reasons . It also sees the destruction of the Xenon base that the crew of the Scorpio have been seeking refuge in since the start of the season which is keeping with the bleak nihilistic tone this much maligned show isn't given enough credit for

The episode also sees the final appearance of Jacqueline Pearce as Servalan who it must be said doesn't get much of a send off as she departs to her spaceship leaving a nasty surprise for Zukon in the form of a small bomb . That said it'd be a cliché if she died an on screen death and BLAKES 7 is a unique show so perhaps it's for the best she disappeared leaving the audience to ponder her fate
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6/10
It's a solid penultimate episode.
Sleepin_Dragon7 September 2022
Avon has taken a bold step against the federation, uniting the rulers of several worlds, including Zukan, an aggressive warlord, who's an uncomfortable bed fellow for the other delegates.

From the final batch of episodes, Warlord is the only one that I'm not a huge fan of, it's pretty good, but it lacks the originality of recent episodes, it's very much a more formulaic space opera.

Zukan is definitely a good character, he's interesting enough, and again you're sat waiting for that moment where he's going to change.

I'd you're a Doctor Who fan, you may recognise the point, the assembly of the random group of delegates, feels a little like the one that happened on Mission to The Unknown. With one of them holding a greater ambition than any of the others.

The hairstyles, they're just of the era I guess, straight out of a Toyah Wilcox video.

Pearce is good, but this should never have been her final episode, she should have appeared in the show's finale, a real shame.

Romance was never brilliantly handled on the show, and Tarrant's new relationship with Zeeona is poorly done, it's hard to take seriously.

Not a favourite, but not bad, 6/10.
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2/10
Silly costumes, absurd love lines
erizia4 December 2021
Series 4 was always a step too far and in fact was never envisaged by the series creators. The creaking spaceship is only matched by some the storylines that had all the qualities of something made up after an especially heavy night out.

This was by some measure the low point of the series, in fact the nadir of the entire project.

What else can we do with these characters? I know, who hasn't had a doomed romance yet? Tarrant hasn't?

So we get Stephen Pace tripping along with Zukhon's daughter, holding hands like a couple of 14 year olds.

Cringeworthy.

Meanwhile, the ambassadors gather in series of costumes that would have made Village People blush.

This episode, more than any other, revealed a project that was begging to be put out of its misery. As I said at the outset, series 4 was an afterthought. Something that someone thought was a good idea at the time. Rather like Operation Barbarosa.

A tragedy for such a fine show.
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