At first... just the lead... talked in hesitating spurts... but in the last... episode.... it seems like...everyone... does... now. I think...the lead looks... like Marty Feldman.... had a baby... with a skeleton....
It wore out its intrigue with me pretty quickly. I always just kind of see TV as a worse version of movies because they have to condense the story in 45 minute chapters, and this is no exception. And I found a lot of the acting to be pretty terrible
I'm all caught up now. Episode 6 was almost TOO intense. Hat's off to writer Kyle Bradstreet for nailing the bro-argot. That is how one writes contemporary cyber-fiction for tv while tapping into realism. The foreboding background music in key scenes took the drama to a whole other level.
Throughout the entire episode I feared that it would not end well for a certain character. Writer Kyle Bradstreet did not let me off the hook. He reminded the audience and me that Elliot's world is a very dangerous one. Ironically, he did it while depicting Elliot in his most clear-headed & lucid state so even he (Elliot) wasn't anesthetized to the imminent danger in which he placed himself and acquaintances. In other words, shaite just got real.
It's what HBO's True Detective is sorely missing this season, well that and a better baddie than Vince Vaughn. The lives of Elliot, his accomplices, and the street criminals collided in a way that didn't seem contrived.
One nit: it's inconceivable that Elliot would have risked exposure by visiting Vera in prison. However, he's not a hardened criminal yet so perhaps he was slightly out of his element dealing with street criminals. There are just some lessons that can't be learned from a cubicle.
Actor Elliot Villar has been very convincing as a menace to society. In one scene, his Vera character lifted and burned the 7th veil of innocence that had shielded Elliot from the dark world which he had only dabbled in before. He's now caught between a rock and hard place in the forms of Mr. Robot/Christian Slater and Vera/Elliot Villar.
I now have something to look forward to in the remaining episodes.
HO. LY. SH!T. I knew there was some kind of surprise coming and we all thought it was going to be that Mr. Robot wasn't real. All of the insane revelations from this episode basically made this happen...
"Pardon my prior Mcfee slip. I know how to spell her name. I just don't know how to type it." -Talulah
Watched the last three and stayed very involved. Was very surprised with the big twist. When you read all the articles on summer programming Mr. Robot is considered a big hit.
This show is pretty obsessed with Fight Club. I do sort of keep there was a bait and switch, from the F Society stuff in the beginning, which barely came up again, as it turned into more of a soap opera...
haterobics said: "This show is pretty obsessed with Fight Club."
I think it would be entirely different if the show didn't acknowledge that fact. I think it was pretty obvious from the beginning that Elliot was Mr. Robot aka his own dad. During this episode they even played a cover of the Pixies "Where is My Mind?" which also plays in Fight Club. The real shocking twist was that Darlene was Elliot's sister and I don't think anyone saw that coming. I honestly can't wait for next week's episode because it's unimaginable where the show can go from here.
"Pardon my prior Mcfee slip. I know how to spell her name. I just don't know how to type it." -Talulah
It started so strong that I just started losing interest when it became a soap opera about his girlfriend's drug dealer and all this other stuff. I think I got the idea that we were going to see a show set inside of an Anonymous/Project Mayhem-type group, and then when it didn't go that way, and became way more conventional, it also got less interesting. Curious to see how the wrap it up, though.
On a related note, I watched Sam Esmail's film Comet on Netflix this weekend and really enjoyed it. It's pretty much just Emmy Rossum and Justin Long at different points during their 6 year relationship. The continuity is messed with and there might even be parallel universes at play. I found the performances really great and you definitely see Esmail's writing style when it comes to Long's character.
"Pardon my prior Mcfee slip. I know how to spell her name. I just don't know how to type it." -Talulah