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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Zen (''Blake's 7'')}}
#REDIRECT [[Characters of Blake's 7#Zen]]

{{Unreferenced|date=August 2009}}
{{Redirect category shell|1=
{{Infobox character
{{R from merge}}
| name = Zen
{{R to section}}
| series = [[Blake's 7]]
| image =
| caption = Zen
| first = Cygnus Alpha
| last = Terminal
| cause =
| portrayer = [[Peter Tuddenham]], [[Alistair Lock]]
| species = Computer
| gender =
| lbl21 = Affiliation
| data21 = The System/Resistance
}}
}}

'''Zen''' is a [[fictional character]] from the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[science fiction]] [[television]] series ''[[Blake's 7]].'' The voice of Zen was provided by the late [[Peter Tuddenham]] (in the new B7 audio series, Zen is voiced by [[Alistair Lock]]). .

==Overview==
Zen was the master computer aboard the ''[[Liberator (Blake's 7)|Liberator]]'' (formerly ''Deep Space Vehicle 2''), the highly advanced spacecraft used by [[Roj Blake|Blake]] and the others initially to escape from and then attack the Federation. Zen's history, like that of the ''Liberator'' itself, is unknown prior to its first appearance. It specifically refused to answer questions about the previous crew of the ''Liberator''. It was constructed by "The System" ("Redemption"), which also installed a series of over-rides to take external control of the ship if necessary. It is revealed in Escape Velocity that Zen killed it's original human crew who were rebelling against The System (a super computer group mind similar to the Borg in Star Trek). In retaking control Zen finally understands the concept of freedom and successfully rebels against The System and heads off into deep space.

Zen's visual interface was a large brown dome toward the front of the bridge with lights that flashed as it spoke; it was suggested in "Cygnus Alpha" that this 'visual reference point' was created by Zen to aid the crew after they asked it to show itself. Zen would simply make computer noises in place of speaking when overridden by The System.

Zen was capable of flying and fighting the ''Liberator'' on its own, with the notable exception of being unable to operate the teleport controls. It had banks of auxiliary computers that could be brought on-line when requested. These included navigation computers, which could pilot the ''Liberator'' to any known destination, and battle computers, that could formulate strategy, pilot the ship and operate the weapon systems during combat, even successfully fighting off a number of Federation pursuit ships without crew input ("Volcano"). Zen could also force the auto-repair systems to prioritize certain systems.

Zen had a chamber underneath its main dome that could perform instantaneous analysis of substances, such as the virus in "Project Avalon" or the drug in "Shadow". It also had access to more sophisticated analysis equipment, as demonstrated in its frantic attempts to find a solution to the corrosive space particles in "Terminal". Zen also had some crude telepathic ability. It operated a defense system against intruders that would use images of loved ones to draw them to their deaths. It could also form a temporary telepathic link with new crew - taking the name "''Liberator''" from [[Jenna Stannis|Jenna's]] mind, for example.

Although open to instruction, Zen projected a dour, non-committal personality all of its own. In some of the early episodes, Zen would reply to certain questions with the phrase "That information is not available" and it was left open as to whether Zen was secretly executing its own agenda or genuinely couldn't help. In the episodes "Time Squad" and "Breakdown", Zen refused to help the crew carry out actions it believed endangered the ship, and even though it could not control the Teleport, it disabled the system by causing a circuit burnout. Zen did not display these characteristics from season two, possibly due to being re-programmed by [[Orac (Blake's 7)|Orac]] in the episode "Redemption".

Zen's massive database was a paradox within itself. The Federation was totally unaware of ''Liberator'''s origins (The System), yet Zen was able to provide information on Federation Planets, colonies, space ship designs and history, but it was unable (or unwilling) to recognise the two Drones from The System (''Redemption'') despite their architecture being of its own kind.

After the crew were forced to abandon the ''Liberator'' temporarily due to being badly damaged in the Intergalactic War, Zen was ordered to take commands only from the voice prints of certain members of the crew. The psychic defence barrier seen in ''Space Fall'', was deactivated when [[Kerr Avon|Avon]] commanded Zen to allow an unrecognised ship to dock, which most likely contained Klegg and his troops. When [[Del Tarrant|Tarrant]] and [[Dayna Mellanby|Dayna]] joined the crew, their voice prints were added. [[Servalan]]'s voice print was also added when she managed to take over the ''Liberator'' temporarily (''The Harvest of Kairos''), but it was removed when the crew re-took control.

It is likely that any other Deep Space Vehicles constructed by The System had Zen-like computers of their own.

==Back Story==

In the B7 audio story ''Escape Velocity'', the original crew are revealed to have been humans kidnapped (in the Pilots case from a Federation world) who have had their memories erased and their skills put to work operating the ship by The System. Zen - at this point only referred to as the ships computer and possessing no name (as neither do the crew) - is aware of this, keeps this information from them and implies they are actually purpose grown clones.

Zen ultimately murders in cold blood all the crew but the Pilot in attempt to eradicate the ship of what it considers malfunctioning ''crew components''. However: damaged in battle, on a collision course and requiring manual helm control it bargains with the Pilot in exchange for revealing her true identity, and at this point Zen vocabulary becomes uncharacteristically human, imploring with the term ''please''. The Pilot breaks their agreement and kills herself rather than submit to Zen, suggesting Zen consider why she would do this as it considers its own impending destruction.

The DSV2 is then recovered by The System and in the meantime Zen has christened itself and the ship. This contradicts scene in the that [[Jenna Stannis|Jenna]] herself named the Liberator by telepathy, but perhaps the process was in fact in reverse and Zen implanted the thought in [[Jenna Stannis|Jenna's]] mind. Apparently having taken the Pilots final advice, Zen then resists attempts by The System to bring it back under its control.

The emotional content in its language during Zen's final conversation with the Pilot and Zen's apparent subsequent empathy with the Pilot's choice of resistance over survival suggest that Zen's impersonal demeanour through the TV series may have been contrived and Zen actually possessed a more emotional personality, which is only revealed at its demise.

Zen's resistance to The System also implies that Zen may have had underlying (but not directly expressed) sympathy with Blake's cause and even that it may have even allowed itself to be boarded by Blake rather than actually having its defences overcome in order to support his resistance.

==Demise==
Zen was destroyed with the ''Liberator'' in the episode [[List of Blake's 7 episodes|"Terminal"]] (aired March 31, 1980). In the episode, Zen finally reveals itself to be have been more self-aware and "human" than previously thought, apologising for its failure to repair the ''Liberator'', its last words being "I have failed you. I am sorry. I ...". Vila notes that this was the first and only time that Zen ever referred directly to itself.

{{Blake's 7}}

[[Category:Blake's 7 characters]]
[[Category:Fictional computers]]
[[Category:Fictional characters introduced in 1978]]

== External links ==
* Blake's 7: Escape Velocity [http://www.blakes7.com/index.php/audio/the-early-years/zen-escape-velocity/]

Latest revision as of 06:07, 16 June 2017