The best episodes of “Black Mirror” feel like they couldn’t exist as part of any other series. ![]() ![]() “Black Mirror: Smithereens” Stuart Hendry / Netflix (Also, this episode does have Hayek shouting “Paragraph A can suck my dick!” so that’s not for nothing, either.) Time will tell how potent this chapter ends up being outside the context of the ongoing WGA and SAG strikes, which should make for some illustrative future context. Like those, your enjoyment of this is almost entirely dependent on how well you respond to the one track it sets itself and stays on for almost its whole runtime, Salma Hayek-as-herself-subplot and some other trickery notwithstanding. This show has a growing tradition of episodes based around watching one person melt down as their entire perception of reality is shattered (see also: “Nosedive,” “Entire History of You”). In maybe the strongest “call coming from inside the house” episode of the show so far, Brooker and director Ally Pankiw turn their attention to Joan (Annie Murphy), whose life is inverted when she finds out a streaming series is recreating her life in real time. “Black Mirror: Joan Is Awful” ©Netflix/Courtesy Everett Collection ![]() It’s bleak enough to pacify the most masochistic technophobe, but ends with a parting message that offers the faintest bit of hope that the future isn’t as unconquerable as we might think. But what this episode truly delivers is an overwhelming sense of physical terror, the starkest example of characters wrestling with their own bodies - and even their own souls. With allusions to past installments and extensions of others, it’s the “Black Mirror” equivalent of a bonus track. Rolo Haynes (Douglas Hodge) is as good a narrator as he is an unreliable one, making for a tour guide through the show’s cemetery who delights in the twisted artifacts of his own creation. As a road-tripping visitor (Letitia Wright) stops into a gas station collection of technological curiosities, the accompanying trio of shorter stories make for a bizarre trip through the show’s self-contained history. The case quickly became a national news story, holiday go’ers were replaced by journalists and news vans until the death of Princess Diana and suddenly the story disappeared.“Black Mirror: Black Museum” Jonathan Prime / NetflixĪs gutsy a season finale that the show’s put forth so far, “Black Museum” is somehow both a love letter to the series and a massive grenade designed to blast it to smithereens. Perhaps of all the Black Mirror episodes to date, it’s not only the most plausible, it’s the stark reality of how exploitative television has become right here, right now.įor the first time Black Mirror heads to Scotland, to the fictional Loch Henry, the hometown of filmmaker Davis who brings his girlfriend Pia to make a documentary about an egg-protecting vigilante and stay with his widowed mother who lives alone since the death of his policeman father.ĭuring their stay they meet Davis’ friend Stuart and over drinks they talk about the history of the once popular tourist destination which became a ghost town after a couple went missing on their honeymoon in 1997. ![]() Loch Henry is the most apt perspective of true crime since Making A Murderer blew up the strange phenomenon and turned horrific murders into sick bingeable television. Loch Henry is my number one (Picture: Netflix)
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