Michael Keating has died

3 days ago (bigfinish.com)

There was some graffiti near me that said "bring back Blake's 7". It appeared in the mid 80s, and lasted about 30 years. It was like a landmark. Eventually they did bring back Blake's 7, and it unfortunately wasn't any good, and the graffiti has faded and vanished now. Farewell, Vila.

  • I've seen graffiti about the miners' strike that managed to last well into the 21st century.

  • > Eventually they did bring back Blake's 7, and it unfortunately wasn't any good

    huh? They only announced the reboot in January.

    • My mistake: there was a long history of reboots, none of which got as far as being released. I see another one was announced this year. Sixth time lucky!

One of the only episodes of Blake's 7 I really remember is "Orbit", in which Avon and Vila play a game of cat-and-mouse aboard a shuttle that's been stripped back to the wiring but is still doomed to crash into the planet it's trying to launch from unless another 70 kg can be ejected: as Orac helpfully points out to Avon, this is more or less exactly Vila's body mass. The respective faces pulled by Avon and Vila as Orac announces this tell you everything you need to know about their characters.

Media companies spend untold millions on new content, and yet the acting and writing on a comparatively obscure and low budget British TV series still occupy a place in my psyche many decades later.

RIP Mr Keating.

  • Red Dwarf had a tiny budget initially, you just need good writers and actors

    I can’t imagine Yes Minister’s budget was particular high either.

    And it’s not just confined to the 70s and 80s. The IT crowd budget was pretty low, gave us some classic relatable episodes.

    You don’t need a big budget. Even the “big budgets revival of Doctor Who with Edleston in 2005 paled in comparison to the budget of the most recent series, but the quality was so much better.

Sad news. I just last month watched all the way through Blake's 7, which I hadn't seen since I was a kid. Vila was always my favorite as a kid, and Keating still held up.

  • For me, it was always a two-hander between Avon and Vila. The sparks just flew whenever they were in a scene together.

    Vila was the most relatable character though.

    • Avon and Servalan was the combo I liked seeing the most on screen. They had such great intellectual tension as they constantly tried to sniff each other out. But, as you say, Vila was definitely the most relatable.

    • Avon was a hell of an anti-hero and Paul Darrow nailed the role. All my friends at school wanted to be Avon. And don't get me started on Servalan...

Vila 'There isn't a lock I can't open if I'm scared enough' Restal was one of the finest sci-fi characters on British telly. The caustic exchanges between him and Avon were priceless.

> Michael was asked whether Vila could cope living in a society stripped of all technology [..] His answer was entirely in character: "I'm sure he would survive. As long as he could make fire, keep warm and meet a young lady. He'd learn a lot about the trees on the planet, build a little hut. It would be wonderful."

I'm not sure that is entirely in character. There's a marvellous episode 'The City at the Edge of the World' where Vila is the main focus of the story. He is given more or less the very opportunity described above and he turned it down:

KERRIL Are you coming with me? VILA I can't. KERRIL Why not? It's a chance to be free. You saw that place, it's beautiful. VILA But there's nothing there worth stealing [..] a thief isn't what I am, it's WHO I am.

https://www.hermit.org/b7/Episodes/scripts/City-EOTW.html

Michael Keating also did a cameo in 'Micro Men' which can be watched on YouTube.

Rest in peace.

  • turning down an option does not necessarily mean you can't cope with that option.

    • That was my thought when reading it as well. It wasn't the only option and he chooses to continue with everything else. The real question would be if the everything else suddenly vanished, would he be able to cope then?

Blake'7, what i can remember is green stuff (?) and a computer saying 'confirm' as a 'i heard you' sentinel. I remember how it sounded.

That's a bummer.

I'll admit that, at first, I thought this said Michael Keaton. And oddly enough, Michael Keaton's real name is Michael Douglas. So, there's a whole spiral of madness that my brain went off into.

  • I assume it was changed so there wouldn’t be a name collision with Issur Danielovitch’s son?

    • Yeah looks like Micheal Douglas was using that name professionally about decade before Michael Keaton started his career so union rules would require an alternate name.

      2 replies →

anyone else read this as Michael Keaton has died and have a panic attack?

  • I also read it as Michael Keaton at first. It didn't cause me to have a panic attack, though.

If webmaster is around, maybe let's adjust a bit the dictatorship? Can't browse (no privacy setup for this visit, just VPN)

Sorry, you have been blocked You are unable to access bigfinish.com

Edit: Works with privacy setup (Residential proxy + Spoofed fingerprints).

  • It's really weird you go straight to "dictatorship" when talking about a regular security feature of most websites.

    Most people don't use VPNs, nevermind spoofed fingerprints, etc. The problem is on your side.

    • I understand that some users are alright giving their browsing history to ISPs (it does, even with TLS 1.3 and DoH and so-on due to correlation but it's out of place here) but this is HN where I would believe that most have very basic security principles applied and we are also talking about tech, so it's relevant (VPN isn't for privacy, it's for basic security, it's unsafe to let ISPs resell history with identity attached).

      If we don't point it out, how can we expect a change and respect users that don't want to be KYCed when browsing a website?