22 December 2024: The three latest written interviews of me are here, here and here.
Showing posts with label Fight Club. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fight Club. Show all posts

Thursday, September 3, 2015

Mr. Robot: Cyberpunk Triumph

Well, my number-one television guilty pleasure this summer was "Mr. Robot" on the USA Network - though it was so good, easily the best new show on TV this summer, indeed of the year, maybe even the past year or two, that there's nothing whatsoever to feel guilty about watching it.  It was just a pleasure, rare, keenly intelligent, and provocative.  I saw most of it in the past few weeks, and the finale tonight.

Hackers have appeared in all kinds of TV series, most of them obvious, a few like CBS's CSI-Cyber not half-bad, but Mr. Robot is something else, in a class all its own.  Impossibly suave and gritty at the same time, as lyrical as Rectify - the other out-of-left-field masterpiece to come along in the past few years - but hipper, with words like louche in  it, and with a heart and soul and slap-in-your face realism and cynicism that's not to be believed, but is plausible all the same, you disbelieve Mr. Robot at your peril.

Cyberpunk has attained impressive heights in writing - Sterling, Gibson, Varley - but not so much on the screen.   Mr. Robot takes its place right up there with its story - its only competition screenwise being Bladerunner, an utterly different kind of tale.

There are elements not only of Occupy Wall Street and V for Vendetta but Fight Club in Mr. Robot, but I won't say which ones or what, because I don't want to spoil your surprise and fun if you haven't yet seen it.  But unlike Fight Club and its progeny, in which the narrative is completely situated in the minds of the characters, in Mr. Robot we have a ratification or support of this in the very digital age we in fact inhabit, in which the difference between the fantasies on screens and realities in first-hand tangible experiences in hand have never been less.

Like many series, the next-to-last episode, and the one before that, packed more of a punch than the finale.  But that doesn't matter, because the story is continuing, the series will be back next year, which makes tonight's finale not a finale at all, but a bridge, and a short one at that.

I'll be here next year with more.

#SFWApro



Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Criminal Minds 6.19: Fight Club Redux Plus

It's Criminal Minds 6.19, a week or who knows how many days after Emily, and we're treated to another Fight Club scenaro, in residence on a lot of shows these days.  A group of psychos seems to be on a killing rampage, but it's really just one guy, and the rest of the gang his hallucinations.   But there's more ...

First, the psycho killer - soon identified as just one killer, not a gang, by the BAU - makes Spencer think about his own headaches and family background.  His mother is schizophrenic, an illness that manifests right around Spencer's age.  He's been to doctors, who can't find any physical basis for the headaches.  He'd confided a little in Emily, but now that she's gone, whom can he talk to?  He shares some of his concerns with Derek.

Before this story is over, Spencer will be caught up and nearly killed by Ben - the pyscho's - illusions.  Spencer tells Ben all will be ok, if he gives up the knife.  Ben says, ok, are you sure?  But Ben is thinking that Spencer is telling him all will be ok if Ben kills Spencer with the knife.  Not knowing this, Spencer approaches Ben, and Hotch's shot stops him just in time.  A good Criminal Minds resolution.

Meanwhile, Hotch has a had a good night.  He not only saves Spencer, but realizes that Ashley, though good for the team, can't replace Emily.   And Hotch realizes that Ben is inside a house on the basis of seeing a young boy quickly closes the curtains.

Lots left unresolved at the end of this episode, too.   Ben is not killed by Hotch's shot.  He's put through shock therapy, but the cure doesn't stick.   Are we seeing the birth of a potential nemesis for Spencer?

And Spencer's status is also left up in the air.   Derek notes that he's sleeping on the plane back to Washington.  But is it a peaceful sleep?  It seems so, but, for all we know, Spencer might even have been dreaming the disquieting scene with Ben and his inextricable demons.

Good loose ends for the rest of the season ....

See also Criminal Minds in Sixth Season Premiere ... Criminal Minds 6.2: The Meaning of J. J. Leaving ... Criminal Minds 6.3: Proust, Twain, Travanti ... Tyra on Criminal Minds 6.13 ... Criminal Minds 6. 17: Prentiss Farewell Part I ... Criminal Minds 6.18: Farewell Emily

And Criminal Minds 5.22 and the Dark Side of New New Media




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