- I never really fully accepted Tarrant. I think part of that was I got the impression that the producers were trying to pass him off as a Blake-replacement, right down to the curly hair, when I didn't feel he worked well at all in that regard. I spent most of third season hoping (futilely, I figured) that Blake would eventually come back.
- That said, Tarrant was infinitely superior to the terrible replacement actor they got for Travis in the second season. For fuck sake, if you can't get the original actor back, why not just kill him off-screen? Hell, he'd failed again last time we saw him, there was plenty of reason for Servalan to off him.
- 3rd season felt weirdly aimless. Maybe I'm not remembering it well enough, but it felt like they were just ambling around doing whatever. Which contrasts oddly with 4th season, where Avon seemed for whatever reason to take up the revolutionary ardor and bust his ass towards trying to mount a rebellion against the Federation.
- The part where Zen dies was touching.
- The "Servalan gets away in the end" supervillain routine started to wear thin. I could sort of accept it in the early part of the series - the notion that the (seemingly inept) enemy you know is less dangerous than the enemy you can't predict - but into the third season and most especially the fourth season it was just annoying after she'd proven she was too dangerous to let live. (And Servalan seemed somehow more deadly after the galactic war.) The "oh the teleporter magically saved me" save was also a bit too much - I would have been satisfied with her kicking it shortly after "Main drive: maximum power!"
- holy FUCK what is with that hilarious 4th season credits music?
- The BBC sure knows how to blow up a starship bridge. Although I noticed they did the tilting deck again for Scorpio; someone must have wanted to get their money's worth out of that hydraulic lift.

- Maybe I'm just still a bit psyched out by the "everyone dies" ending, but... is it just me, or did they do the "Blake's dead - oh no he's not that was just another lie ha ha" bit just so they could kill him off on-screen in the final episode?
--WAIT WAIT I JUST REALIZED: is the slow-mo 'everyone getting shot' thing in Galaxy Quest supposed to be a reference to the last episode of Blake's 7??

- It seemed like some episodes had some really terrible pacing issues, specifically footage of people walking here to there, or otherwise background exposition or character development that really dragged. And I seem to recall having similar complaints about Doctor Who episodes from roughly the same era. Is there some kind of directing or editing concept that I'm unaware of that was all the rage at the time but didn't really pan out, were they really bad at tightening things up overall, or were they just willing to resort to wasting time in order to pad out an underdeveloped script?
- AND FINALLY THE BIG ONE*:
Is it just me, or was this series sold on the premise of "okay there's these guys and they get captured each week..."? At least they eventually reeled in (to some extent) the terrible "okay let's split up so we can be more conveniently isolated and captured" shtick.
*there may be other thoughts later
Let's discuss! I've been (mostly) holding in for the past month or so for fear of someone accidentally spoiling something awesome.