Mr. Robot is a captivating show that delves into the dark world of cyber-security and hacking, with complex characters, intelligent writing and engaging storylines that kept me on the edge of my seat. The show explores themes of mental illness, privacy, and consumeristic ideals, all while delivering an intense psychological thriller that has the perfect blend of suspense and drama. Elliot is an incredibly complex and flawed individual, and his journey through the dark underbelly of society is both thrilling and emotionally impactful. The writing, acting, and direction are all top-notch, making Mr. Robot an incredible show from start to finish. I'd say it's a must-watch for fans of the genre.
Hello, friend. If you didn't watch it yet you're so lucky. I would want to erase my mind and rewatch it to feel again the storm of emotions it gives. Twist after twist. One of the most perfect endings ever made. Don't give up the S2, you'll get it later. Goodbye, friend.
I am wondering if I should watch it again, with the exception of Fraiser, I have never revisited any tv series. What do you think?
Great start, looking forward to the rest of the season.
This show is genius.
It’s brilliantly acted and scripted, though challenging at times.
I’ve known a few friends who gave up during season 2, and I understand why, but if you stick with it, the puzzle pieces will eventually all fall into place.
What’s even more rare (given that it’s a tv show) is that it is filled with truly great filmmaking, and it has its own artistic style, often amplified by perfect editing. The silent episode and one take episode are both high marks of television in my book.
Whenever people are framed in the bottom of the corner for their close up, you instantly know you’re watching Mr Robot.
The music is also instantly recognizable. It’s almost where the show gets a little too David Fincher-y, but it still hits regardless. Just the whole vibe of this show is a thing to behold.
Is it perfect? No, it’s hours of television, so that’s impossible.
If you pick up on what the influences of the show are, you’ll probably find some of the twists in season 1 predictable.
Season 2 can get really abstract and weird, and isn’t as satisfying by itself (though it works perfectly in the overall narrative).
And finally, a few characters don’t really get a satisfying conclusion in season 4.
But overall, it’s incredible, probably my favourite tv show of all time.
So much subtext about the 1%, mental health, our relationship with technology, capitalism and it brilliantly challenges the way you perceive hackers. You’ll think twice about whether they’re a good thing or not.
watched it for the first time when it aired, except for s4, but i was too young and unexperienced with tv dramas to understand it back then. decided to try again and thank god i did bc i loved every second of it. thank you, sam esmail, mr robot altered my brain chemistry forever
Based off Season 3 alone, this series is right behind Breaking Bad as one of the best series ever. For sure I think its one of the Best Dramas of the 2010s.
I think this series is going to age very very well.
so love this show .love the different messages it puts across depending how you interpret them . really good they've made another season can't wait for next episode.
This TV show just makes me want to be a wannabe Hacker. ( Computer Engineering Student )
Can't wait for more. Let's hope it gets even better.
Mr Robot was a great watch, i'm glad i picked it back up after so long (i had watched the first season when it aired back in 2015 then dropped it, but finally decided to give it a second chance after so many years, and mainly because i heard that it's over)
the music can get really good sometimes, and it has exceptional sound design as well
the acting & directing is amazing, and i love the unique style and framing that this show has adapted, also, the (actually) accurate & real depiction of "hacking" here and there, and not like in most movies, where it's usually hacker noises.. krrt... i'm in.
you know?
anyway, this show has easily made Rami Malek go UP into my "favorite actors" list, and it has also become one of the few shows that leave me like "ok. what now" after finishing it
oh and how it messes with your mind every. single. season. that was incredible, absolutely immaculate writing.
Pilot was amazing. I'm going to keep my finger crossed that they not loose steam for an entire season.
Mr. Robot is a show that got it right in nearly all aspects of the story. The hacking was realistic but they didn't make it boring. The psychology was realistic. The story was captivating all the way through. Easily a top 10 show for me.
It's like an action genre for IT geeks.
They only show where I never know what's going on, but I can't stop watching it.
This is an unpopular opinion, so a reminder: I'm not demanding that the show be a certain way, nor do I intend to invalidate the feelings of those who like it. People will enjoy art to varying levels based on their personal experiences. This show means a lot to some people; this (long) review primarily outlines why the show failed to resonate with me.
Firstly, I like some story elements in Season 1. I found the pilot episode engaging. Whiterose receives a strong introduction, and the conflict between Elliot and Vera is well-executed. Elliot turns Vera, a crime lord, into the police because he's supplying Shayla drugs, only for Vera to realize Elliot was the one who turned him in. He then forces Elliot to break him out, threatening to hurt Shayla. Elliot breaks Vera out, but it turns out that Vera has already killed Shayla. I found this an engaging conflict because the show gave Elliot compelling motivations to act as he does. We're shown that Elliot knows turning in Vera is risky but justifies turning him in because doing so will protect Shayla.
Shayla's death ends up compelling, as I relate with Elliot's grief, understanding why Shayla meant so much to him. Early on, the show establishes how Elliot utilizes hacking to cope with his social ineptness. And through hacking, Elliot manages to understand the hidden side of people without directly interacting with them. Shayla ends up being the first person with whom Elliot gains a sincere emotional connection with. Even though Elliot hacks Shayla, she voluntarily reveals intimate aspects about herself that Elliot failed to learn while hacking her. Elliot finds emotional intimacy within a world where he feels isolated and misunderstood. I love it; it's sincere and, ultimately, a semi-meaningful representation of neuro-divergence. But unfortunately, I also found this the most meaningful emotional beat in the entire show.
Ultimately, rather than the show feeling like it had a story it wanted to tell, Mr. Robot often felt like it was desperately trying to pad out its run time.
Moreover, its dramatics are an incredibly mixed bag. While the conflict between Vera and Elliot isn't incredible, I found it more textured than anything else in the show. Some of the show's conflicts are engaging, such as Elliot and Mr. Robot fighting for control. But with many other conflicts, the tension involved is nebulous. I either couldn't emotionally invest in the characters involved, or they needed to be more developed for the emotional beats in these conflicts to carry much weight. Season 1 is the central part of the show that offers engaging, self-contained story arcs, and after Season 1, the show's pacing screeches to a halt.
I feel that implies I disliked the show's slower pacing, but I didn't. It's what I enjoyed most about the show. It's soothing to watch, and even though I found it visually impressive but monotonous, it created an immersive atmosphere. And I can appreciate a slow and deliberate pace in storytelling. It allows for introspection and contemplation of hard-to-swallow concepts; it will enable viewers time to contemplate one topic before the next is introduced, and minimalism often results in more effective pathos. It can also be fundamental to immersing into the world the artist constructs by focusing more on characters than spectacle.
However, I felt Mr. Robot rarely explored hard-to-swallow concepts. Although it aims to examine depression, anxiety, and its setting, I found its approach to these topics was often one-dimensional, vague, or callous. As a result, for the most part, I found the show's bleakness unnecessary and, at points, even mean-spirited.
It came across as a desperate bid at sophistication, portraying characters being abused and abusing themselves (and then pointless gimmicks like the "one-shot" episode and the heist where no one talks), yet I found it often shying away from sincerely delving into, and approaching with emotional intelligence, characters' trauma, and the whole affair, despite constant attempts at pathos, is weirdly cynical. For me, nearly the entire show is simply misery porn; it gets monotonous how every arc must end in tragedy. The show is hardly about working through or exploring trauma but more about presenting the ugly side of trauma and then one-upping itself. Even with its twist ending, what it unveils is not an anti-escapist message, but that Elliot had relied on escapism longer/and to a more extreme degree than we previously thought.
So, sadly, I found myself largely apathetic toward the story of Mr. Robot, so let's dive deeper into that story so I can attempt to explain.
With Elliot incessantly rambling on about the top 1% of the 1%, Mr. Robot attempts to discuss capitalism and class disparity. Unfortunately, I found the show's exploration of and the drama arising from the subject matter dull.
To explain why, I need to discuss the characters who are part of that top 1% of the 1%: Price and Whiterose. Price and Whiterose had the potential to be compelling characters; for example, they could have solid reasons for why they think they should be in power. Both had the potential to be compelling characters, but for me, they aren't.
Firstly, Price is unsympathetic. More specifically, his character doesn't have substantial motivations; I have an inefficient understanding of him, so I fail to empathize with him. Price is almost solely defined by the fact that he wants to be the most powerful person in the world. To my perception, he has a vague narcissism and therefore wants to be at the top of the human hierarchy, and unfortunately, that's all I find in this character.
On the other hand, Whiterose wants power to create her machine, and while I don't think she's unsympathetic, vital facets of her character are needlessly ambiguous. The device supposedly aims to create an alternate world; however, the show fails to address the rising moral implications of this machine.
Ultimately, both Whiterose and Price fail to have compelling goals because they fail to provide understandable arguments for why they could be in the right.
The most riveting thing about characters with this much societal influence is the dilemmas they face because it highlights their moral beliefs and explores their personal motivations/plans for those under their rule, but the show fails to provide this. Because both characters are wholly focused on their goals, they seemingly want to accomplish them by any means necessary. With characterization such as the dark army, the organization Whiterose runs, killing themselves rather than being captured, and Whiterose blowing up 71 buildings, killing over 3000 people. We're shown that Whiterose is willing to kill for her goals. (However, her willingness results from her belief that her machine can bring people back to life; Whiterose does care about human life, but she's killing people in the short term because she believes it can be undone.) Regarding Price, even though Price doesn't support Whiterose killing as many people as she does, thinking her to be delusional, he seems utterly unempathetic towards everyone except Angela.
With how Whiterose and Price are presented, I find the show wasting the potentially compelling ways it could explore people in positions of power. It had the potential to ask questions like: How much power should one person be allowed to have? And subsequently, how much control should a government be permitted over your life? You could write a thought-provoking story about exploring these questions and the dramatics that arise. However, Mr. Robot ends up only asking one much less interesting question: Would it be bad if people with selfish goals who are willing to kill large amounts of people to accomplish those goals were in power? Shockingly, the answer to that question is yes.
And herein lies the problem. The show shies away from exploring fundamental issues with its society because the conflict in Mr. Robot is positioned as individual rather than systemic. As far as I'm aware, if you were to try to fix the problems with the world of Mr. Robot, you wouldn't need to make fundamental changes to its systems; you would only need to remove people like Whiterose from power and the show reflects this. Elliot initially failed to fix society's problems by destroying the economy and all financial records. Many of those in power maintain their power, and rather than progressing society in a better direction, it creates chaos.
On the other hand, the Deus Group hack is portrayed cathartically. The Deus Group was created by Whiterose and encompassed some of the wealthiest people in the world. Through hacking them, Elliot succeeds in removing them from power. Ultimately, Elliot wins not by enacting changes to policy but with the temporary solution of removing those in power.
And to my memory, only assets with high liquidity. Core to socialism is the idea that the means of production are publically owned. So, I have to ask? Do they still own the means of production? You can redistribute cash, but there are other types of assets. So, how will the redistributed money be spent? People still have to produce products for purchase. Likely, the money will return to the rich, or maybe again, it's individual rather than systemic. Those who own the means of production are now penniless, so they will sell their assets to new owners. And maybe this is undoubtedly the case; the show may have contextualized that they only had monetary assets, and I sadly forgot. But I'm just nitpicking; this redistribution outlines the show's egalitarian sensibilities, and these actions are likely to have a positive impact, likely not to cause hyperinflation, and likely to cause an increase in the production of necessities over excess. As I'll reiterate, my core point is that I found the show's commentary on capitalism lacking.
But of course, I'm not expecting the show to give a foolproof solution to capitalism; there is no such thing as a perfect society, but its commentary on capitalism could be better. For example, the show could portray how Whiterose and Price exploited the free market to gain power. Through this, it could explore some of the issues with the free market. However, the show mainly explores why Price and Whiterose want power, and while we know Whiterose made Price CEO, the show is vague on how Whiterose acquired her power.
However, to be fair, the show does provide some good things. It provides some social commentary, showing that people in power will give the general public a false sense of security to retain their power. And it introduces certain ideas, such as commodity fetishism. It also outlines political corruption, showing large conglomerates being more or less integrated into the government, and one of the core issues with capitalism is its tendency toward monopolies. In the United States, because of monopolies in the past like Standard Oil, laws have been put in place to reduce monopolies, so this kind of political corruption would likely need to happen for the monopoly of E-Corp to arise. However, Whiterose having as much influence as she does and conglomerates being integrated into the government is simply the status quo of Mr. Robot; the reasons why capitalism could cause this are more or less implicit.
But the show presenting this is good; what it offers may be enlightening for certain people. Many people are wholly unskeptical of capitalism and never consider the possibility of another system. But I think the show itself isn't going to change anyone's mind; I can only imagine it doing so by proxy, in that the show would make people interested in the subject matter and seek answers elsewhere. But I can't even imagine the show doing this because its rampant cynicism is more likely to make everyone involved less interested. The show constantly labels those who disagree with its positions as "sheeple" without offering a proper philosophical position and research, so from people who actively disagree with the show, I struggle to imagine anything other than similarly brash counter-action.
When it comes to skepticism, especially in leftist spaces, I think it's important that skepticism be constructive; otherwise, it hinders our ability to seek genuine solutions. And in human societies, I believe we should be skeptical of any form of hierarchy. Mr. Robot tries to be, but unfortunately, all the skepticism it offers are strawmen and caricatures. The show's heart seems to be in the right place; it's a self-important effort to highlight real-world issues; however, it seems afraid to say too much. What it offers is simply not constructive; it's a thick layer of vague cynicism that I feel is likely only be particularly enlightening for idealistic people who think capitalism is perfect, and I find the inclusion of these themes adds little to its story, so for me, its efforts are an utter waste of my time.
And also, for me, a core issue is highlighted. Mr. Robot has a very jarring balance between its cynicism and its compassion. The show can surely be classified as contemporary art; it seems egalitarian, wants to be critical of current society, and offers quite a bit of queer rep. It intends to highlight differing perspectives, but despite clearly wanting us to care about Price and Whiterose, I also find it strangely misanthropic; I find all its villains relatively unsympathetic. Ultimately, I find the show only pawning at a vague anarchist/anti-society message; I honestly thought the f-society title was satircal, but the show hardly elaborates further than that. Ultimately, I feel the show mainly serves to allow those who already agree with its broader political positions affirmation and little else.
Anyway, I want to continue elaborating on my issues with Whiterose and Price.
I stated that I found Price unsympathetic. However, the show attempts emotional catharsis with him, and I want to explain why it didn't work for me. Price goes through a massive shift because of Angela's death at the end of Season 3. Whiterose explains to Price that Angela forced her hand because she looked too much into the toxic waste that killed her mother. After all, the plant is the power source for her machine. Fundamentally, Price thinks that Whiterose's machine won't work and that she's killing Angela out of delusion; this causes Price to drop his pursuit of wealth to team up with Elliot. But unfortunately, I found this transformation nebulous, and I think two changes could be made to offer more coherency.
The first would be to flesh out Price more in general. For example, the show could've given Price compelling reasons why he believes he should be in power or added some reason behind his lust for power. If they did something like this, it would add moral complexity to his character. Even though these changes are unrelated to Angela, I would better understand his character and how he thinks, inherently making his transformation more understandable.
The second way would be for the show to further develop Price's relationship with Angela, clearly establishing some basis for how much she means to him. Because in the show's current state, we don't understand Price's relationship with Angela further than she's his daughter. And, if anything, what we're shown suggests that he doesn't care much about her. He is still working as CEO of the company that killed Angela's mother, and, for the most part, Price ignores her. He does hire Angela and, at some brief moments, shows a fondness for her, and Price tells Angela that her mother took her away from him because he was a monster. But that raises the question: Why didn't he relinquish his goals sooner if Angela meant so much to him? Price's feelings towards Angela are vague, and Angela's death catalyzes a character shift for Price. The lack of a substantive logical basis behind their relationship makes that an ineffective catalyst.
And because I didn't find his transformation compelling, I could hardly care about his death. Price sides with Elliot and succeeds at avenging Angela. But Whiterose kills Price, which is fine. Price seems content with dying, yet I found that contentedness jarring. Unfortunately, again, I fail to understand this character enough for his death and the attempted emotional beats to carry any weight.
Also, I think catalyzing Whiterose and Price's conflict with Angela's death is a missed potential. A feud between the two characters in positions of power is intriguing; for example, Price and Whiterose could greatly disagree on certain things, such as how they should handle homeless people. Maybe Price believes homeless people should be killed because he thinks they're unproductive, but Whiterose empathizes with the homeless, feeling they are victims of a broken system. There's potential to offer a conflict that's genuinely provocative and confront relevant ethical questions by contrasting differing worldviews. Of course, it doesn't necessarily have to delve into ethics, but I still want an engaging conflict, and unfortunately, I found Angela's death an arbitrary catalyst for this conflict.
Regarding Whiterose, her introduction is engaging, but I didn't care for how her character was handled later in the story.
I mainly want to focus on the final scene in "eXit," when Whiterose kills herself. Elliot confronts Whiterose at the power plant, and they converse. The show continually alludes that Whiterose has some deeper secrets, and in "eXit," it seems primed to reveal. Whiterose tells Elliot what her machine is. A device that will transform their world into a parallel world, bringing people back to life. If this machine works and she can create a parallel dimension, that's morally conflicting. And by further fleshing out the machine's function, there's a lot of potential to delve into some rich thematics and character drama.
But what's Elliot's response to Whiterose is frustrating, and I believe it to be out of character: "You're not liberating them. You're forcing this on them."
We later learn that Elliot isn't Elliot; he's a created personality that embodies Elliot's rage, and he was "the mastermind" who orchestrated the 5/9 hack. Elliot's rage's core motivation is to make the world Elliot lives in better. His key character flaw is that he's willing to take radical action to accomplish this goal, and his efforts have caused many of those he cares about to be killed. This response to Whiterose makes no sense. He tried to destroy the economy; he's not a stranger to "forcing things on people," and it seems his goal is to improve the world around Elliot; if anything, the prospect should pique his interest. So, I found this dismissive approach a bit absurd for his character.
Following Elliot's rebuttal, Whiterose keeps insisting that she's right, alluding to what she previously showed Angela, but Elliot doubles down and doubts her machine even works. Nevertheless, Whiterose keeps implying that she has strong evidence her machine does work; however, Whiterose gets a sense of destiny. She states that all she wanted was for Elliot to believe in her, and "Our paths were too precisely linked to this moment for there not to be a reason," and this evidence never reveals itself. Then Whiterose kills herself. So, what does Elliot do? Well, he tries to stop her. Whiterose never explains why her machine will work, yet she has enough faith in it to kill herself and is convincing enough for Angela and an army that would rather die than be captured. Whiterose allows Elliot to stop her, claiming she could substantiate her position, but doesn't because of destiny.
When trying to stop Whiterose's machine, Elliot thinks he has succeeded, but it turns out it is too late, and her machine activates. But this is a fake-out; her machine doesn't work. And the show doesn't specify why, which makes Whiterose's character ambiguous. The show doesn't determine whether the machine didn't work because Elliot tried to stop it, it didn't work because it would never have, or it didn't work because she didn't have the necessary resources. So, with Whiterose's character, there are two ways to view this situation. That Whiterose was simply insane, Price was right, her machine would never have worked, and she needlessly killed many people for it, or Whiterose did have a point to make; she represents a conflicting philosophical position but refuses to reveal it because she gets a sense of destiny. Either way, it's a cop-out.
The most likely interpretation of Whiterose's character is that, in one way or another, she was incredibly delusional... Whiterose is transgender, and because of that, I kind of take issue with this. Many transphobes will attempt to label gender-expansive people as mentally ill and want to dehumanize and immoralize them. Obviously, queer representation is a complex topic, it's important to recognize that policing representation can support bigotry, and we shouldn't discourage writing flawed queer characters. If you found yourself meaningfully represented in Whiterose, I would never want to take that away from you, but I found the ominous send-off for her character insubstancial. It seemed like Whiterose would have a lot to say for herself but doesn't, and I found her portrayal as delusional to be disconcerting.
Whiterose is a character with potential; however, it feels like her character only existed to serve as an initial over-looming threat and for the show to later deceive its audience into thinking her machine worked. It saddens me that I felt this way about Whiterose's character; trans representation is currently scarce. The show provides a compelling base for Whiterose's character; we're shown her struggle against a lack of trans acceptance and her partner's suicide due to it. But I'm left desperately wishing the show handled her differently later on. But to be fair, Whiterose may have been written this way to contrast Elliot, who developed multi-personality dissociative disorder to cope with his trauma and frustrations. In contrast, Whiterose creates the delusion that she can bring people back to life to cope with her partner's death. However, I'm still off-put by the idea of making your trans character a delusional mass murderer.
Anyway, next, I might as well discuss specific side characters. Firstly, Tyrell Wellick.
When writing a loose-cannon-type character, there are two things I want to see. Firstly, if they receive substantial screen time, which Tyrell does, I want to see them consistently utilized as a loose cannon. Secondly, and most importantly, I don't want the fact that they are a loose cannon to define their character.
So firstly, regarding Tyrell Wellick being underutilized, he receives a lot of screen time dedicated solely to characterizing him as a loose cannon. The problem? So much time is spent building him up, but it's arbitrary, only coming to fruition in the Season 2 finale. Tyrell shoots Elliot, but even that is arbitrary and is only a death fake-out. In the overarching narrative, the only purpose Tyrell ends up serving is as a scapegoat for the 5/9 hack, which feels inconsequential. Did anyone need to take the fall for the 5/9 hack? I feel Tyrell's taking the blame for the 5/9 hack is only to serve his arc in that Elliot betrays him.
But secondly, I felt Tyrell Wellick's motivations remained ambiguous. As far as I could tell, they don't go further than: "He wants money and a legacy." We also know he loves his wife and likely has feelings for Elliot, but those feelings are nebulous. Regarding his feelings for Elliot, we know he has a sense of destiny, believing that he and Elliot are: "destined to do great things together." Otherwise, I found it vague and struggled to have any emotional investment in Tyrell's feelings for Elliot.
But also, this lack of development is detrimental to his arc because, like Price, who is also seeking exceptionalism, I think it makes his shift unbelievable. His wife's death and Elliot's betrayal catalyze a shift in Tyrell's character, yet this shift is obscured because I didn't understand enough about his relationships with these characters. And because of this, the maudlin tragedy that the latter part of his arc becomes carries little weight. When he struggles, and Elliot says he doesn't care about him, I struggled to understand how he felt about all of it, and when he sacrificed himself, I was relieved because it meant the show would stop wasting time on him.
Suppose they provided anything substantial to Tyrell's actions. For example, giving him a backstory or contextualizing him as having been in extreme circumstances as an immigrant. In that case, I can have some way to relate to him. But no, Tyrell seems to be already living in excess, is only killing people and the like in pursuit of further wealth, and falls in love with Elliot because he's exceptional, I guess. I just don't know how to feel about Tyrell's character because I failed to understand him as a person. Overall, I feel Tyrell's existence in the story is inconsequential and doesn't further any specific themes the story is going for. He mainly exists to add to the list of people around Elliot who died, so his eventual death carried no thematic or emotional weight.
But also, I disagree with how they handled Tyrell's death, where Tyrell finds something glowing blue from the ground. I found it incredibly portentous, suggesting that he may not be dead. Knowing that Tyrell stays dead, I don't see the purpose of doing this other than serving as a superfluous metaphor for his death, seeing the light at the end of the tunnel, a computer's blue screen of death, or some other nonsense. My problem with this is that suggesting he may not be dead during his death quickly removes most of the potential weight it could have had; however, I was already apathetic toward Tyrell, so I just found it annoying.
Anyway, Angela. I admittedly found Angela dull in the first two seasons. She has some decent points, such as her interactions with Elliot. Yet she also receives substantial screen time covering her independent misadventures, such as being hacked by Cisco and going undercover at Ecorp. I found these dull and ultimately irrelevant. Some of them do a decent job at humanizing her, but the show spends a lot of time focusing on her, and the only thing that feels impactful is her work at Ecorp because it's tied to Elliot.
Now, the bulk of Angela's arc takes place in Season 3, and initially, I thought it was fine, but there are some notable facets left undefined. At the end of Season 2, Whiterose shows Angela something that enthralls her but remains ambiguous. This is key to her character because it drives Angela to betray Elliot and work for Whiterose in Season 3.
Later, we learn that Whiterose's machine supposedly creates alternate dimensions. This could explain why Angela sided with Whiterose because Whiterose's machine meant she could get her mother back. The problem is how Whiterose used this machine to convince her remains vague. As a result, I fail to grasp Angela's internal conflict in deciding to betray Elliot.
Angela's arc has clear potential. The pieces are all there; Angela goes behind Elliot's back only to feel responsible for getting many people killed and then finds out that Price is her father. And we could've watched her battle with her temptations, ultimately deciding to betray Elliot. This could be great, but her motivations remain ambiguous; all we know is that what she was shown was potent enough for her to betray Elliot. The pieces are there, but the core decision-making that sparks this conflict isn't compelling.
There's also Trenton, Mobley, Cisco, and Romero. All four of them are killed by the Dark Army because they're considered loose ends, with Cisco only becoming a loose end after a police sketch is made of him and shown on the news. The problem with the Dark Army is that their hunt for these four carries no weight because the Dark Army is a nebulous entity, so their pursuit after these characters isn't engaging. All we know about the Dark Army is that Whiterose is their leader, and they're cautious about staying enigmatic. Also, their motivation to tie up loose ends is dull; their killings only give a repeat characterization of the Dark Army as careful about staying enigmatic, and generally, I simply lack a solid bearing on their capabilities.
Though, let's talk about these four characters. Elliots states that Trenton, Cisco, and Mobley worked with him because they wanted to change the world. However, Trenton is the only one with tangible motivations to change the world; her parents are immigrants and financially struggling. It makes sense why she would join an organization trying to ruin the world's economy. This isn't great, but it's better than nothing. And the other characters are nothing; Mobley and Romero receive little characterization. At points, Romero doubts Elliot's ability to carry out fsociety's plans, but that's about it. And while Mobley is rather charming, often being used as a source for comedy, I don't know anything about him or why he decides to work with Elliot. Cisco is part of the Dark Army and serves as Elliot's connection to them. However, all I know about Cisco's character is that he and Darlene are in love. He dies because Dom finds a keycard with his face on it, and he's announced on the news, making him a loose end. The Dark Army hunting these four characters down is not very engaging, and their deaths carry little weight.
I also found Dom and Darlene dull. Early on, there were some decent parts with Darlene, such as the show's brief exploration into how Darlene feels insignificant compared to Elliot. Later in the series, Dom and Darlene have drama with the dark army; however, I found this plotline irrelevant and not nearly interesting enough to stand alone. Both characters are underdeveloped; Darlene is primarily defined by her vague angst, while Dom is defined by the fact that she's tired because she's been working for the FBI for too long... I guess. They're both just nebulously struggling, and the time spent on them feels pointless. I was simply left apathetic toward both of them.
Lastly, though, we need to talk about the show's larger mystique. Let's discuss the show's twist ending.
My understanding of the show's twist ending is that the Elliot that we've been with was not the real Elliot. He created Fsociety and planned out "Stage 1" and "Stage 2." Then lies to the audience, making it out that Mr. Robot did all these things to feel like a hero. The show reveals that Elliot was the "rage" personality taking radical action and "the mastermind" behind the plans just mentioned.
Generally, I don't like puzzle stories. I care more about a story's characters and the emotions it incites and explores. For me, stories having an unfolding mystery are additive; for example, twists can enhance a story through recontextualization.
So, for me, there are three relevant things when analyzing a twist. How does the twist add to the prior story? How engaging is the twist's setup? And does it take the story in a compelling direction? (But this is irrelevant because the show has a twist ending.)
Firstly, and because it's what I care about most, I have negative feelings about how this twist recontextualizes the prior story. It's a massive cop-out that creates a lot of aimless ambiguity.
Of course, there's nothing inherently wrong with ambiguity; on the contrary, I'd argue it's one of the strongest tools in a storyteller's arsenal. However, I can't entirely agree with the creative choice of using ambiguity like this on such a vast scale. My problem is that the ambiguity here makes everything we see from Elliot's perspective unreliable regarding continuity, which is most of the show.
In the realm of art, this type of total ambiguity is frustrating, a slosh of symbols with little discernable pattern. Some may love this for its capacity for overinterpretation in an endless search for coherency, but I find it betraying.
Suppose I try to discuss parts of the show from Elliot's perspective. There's always the interpretation: "No, that's not what happened. Elliot was tricking you." And this is the problem. When discussing the validity of differing interpretations of a story, whether it be what the story is about or how it's told, the debate relies on whether you can provide evidence from the story to support your interpretation, and of course, there can be a myriad of interpretations that are all not mutually exclusive. However, usually, these differing interpretations are derived from the same story. But with Mr. Robot, rather than having various ways of viewing the same story, you're told that parts of the story might be completely fake, so you can make up whatever you want to replace it.
And because a lot of the show is vague, this causes many scenes to have various conflicting interpretations without any way to debate their validity. For example, there's the scene where Whiterose shoots herself. Now, you could take this scene at face value, how it's presented to you by Elliot, but you could also argue that Elliot lied. You could say that, in actuality, Elliot killed Whiterose, and Whiterose never explained why her plans would work because it allows Elliot to preserve his perception of the 1% as evil and make himself look like a hero stopping a villain rather than a murderer killing someone who had a point. But I could also say that Elliot let Whiterose run away, telling her he'd fix her machine.
All three are drastically different interpretations.
So far in this review, I've been discussing what the show presents at face value, specifically what Elliot shows you. But because of this ambiguity, the show's story becomes malleable enough for interpretations of Mr. Robot to have drastically different themes.
But character analysis is where it's properly crippling. Because Mr. Robot is a character-driven show, the most substantial engagement factor should be exploring the psyches of its characters and indulging in their conflicts. Now, I've already discussed my problems with individual characters. But similarly, my problem with this ambiguity is that it utterly destroys my desire to dissect these characters. When a character interacts with Elliot, anything they do in that scene is ambiguous, as Elliot could be portraying their behaviors inaccurately. This causes problems. I already discussed the different interpretations of the scene where Whiterose dies.
I like subtle storytelling; simplicity often makes things significantly more effective on an emotional level, but here, rather than subtle or minimalistic, the show's text is inexplicit and malleable... for me, that's incredibly emotionally dissociating.
But how does the twist add to Elliot's character? The main thing this twist directly changes is how we perceive Elliot. In Season 1, it's revealed that Elliot has multi-personality dissociative disorder, creating Mr. Robot to cope with societal issues and the abuses of his father. I found this rather bland; it's the plot of someone having trauma and creating a delusion to escape from it. This concept of utilizing escapism to escape one's trauma has been done to death, and I don't find Mr. Robot offering specific trauma or subverting traditional ways of telling this story. Or at least that's how I felt regarding Season 1, so does the final twist change my initial feelings?
Short answer: This twist adds nothing to this concept. Later in Season 4, we learn Elliot was sexually abused by his father, but I honestly don't understand how this abuse, on top of other physical abuses, added to the story. And the final twist reveals that our Elliot embodies Elliot's frustrations with the world when initially we thought it was Mr. Robot. This only changes which character embodies Elliot's rage, not why that personality was created.
Furthermore, regarding the twist's setup, (I will continue discussing whether or not the twist adds to the show, but I will now do so in tandem with discussing how the show builds to this twist.)
There is a clear distinction between a story with an unfolding mystery and any other story, and that's what questions you ask while watching it. With a regular story, your question is simple: What direction will the story go in? While a story with a mystery will bring up specific questions. For example, a murder mystery starts with the question: Who is the murderer? As the story progresses, more questions arise to answer the core question, and then, in some cases, more questions arise once you receive the answer to the core question. This type of plotting is engaging: a string of interconnected questions to follow along with.
Or the story will introduce an inconsistency: This character couldn't have possibly committed the crime, so who did, and who has the capabilities this character lacked? These make a story more engaging because anything that relates to this inconsistency will stand out and sit in the forefront of my mind. And, even if they're only red herrings, I'm still engaging with them.
Throughout the majority of Mr. Robot's runtime, the question I was asking myself concerning Elliot was: What direction will they take Elliot's arc in? And with the show suggesting that Tyrell may be a created personality, I began to believe that Elliot may have created more than one. But I hardly engaged with that question, and it wasn't until 407 (nearly the end of the show) that I was provided proper reason to engage with the mystery. This episode proposes Mr. Robot as the protector personality; I recognized this as an inconsistency; Mr. Robot's been consistently putting Elliot in harm's way.
This is an intentional inconsistency because Mr. Robot is the protector personality; it's just that earlier in the show, our Elliot, Elliot's rage, misrepresented him.
My main problem is that this inconsistency was too little too late. When it was introduced, I didn't contemplate it; I only continued questioning the direction the story would take. Confronted with this inconsistency, I merely waited to see whether or not this was a purposeful inconsistency or some mistake.
Of course, certain elements hint towards this twist, such as the meetings between Mr. Robot and the other personalities in 4x09, alluding to the fact that our Elliot is a created personality. And some parts allude to the fact that Elliot is deceiving us, such as the end of 4x06, where Mr. Robot muses: "What if Elliot isn't the hero?"
However, many poor allusions are mixed in, such as Angela handing Elliot a key and saying: "Elliot, you are the-" and it cutting out in 1x04, just to be reincorporated in the series finale as: "Elliot, you are the mastermind." My problem, if not obvious, is Angela could've just said anything like: "Elliot, you are the coolest person in the world." Stuff like this doesn't imply anything; it's claptrap you can gawk at on rewatch.
Unlike many mystery stories, this twist isn't revealing a specific aspect interconnected with a broader story; it's exposing that the story is being told in a certain way and why it's being told that way. This twist feels like it exists despite the rest of the show because I felt the show lacked a tangible gradual progression leading up to this twist. It lacked a sense of unfolding mystery because rather than peeling back layer after layer by fleshing out aspects and progressing specific themes, eventually concluding with this reveal, it felt like this twist more or less happened out of nowhere. Most hints towards this twist are scattered allusions to the fact that the story is being told in a certain way and why, and I feel the reveal in 407 that Mr. Robot is the protector personality is the only reveal that sparks genuine engagement.
Anyway, this lack of unfolding mystery caused me to be apathetic toward the mystery. I believe you can categorize the way you're brain handles information into two general systems. System 1 is fast thinking; it's an intuitive way of thinking through a situation. When your brain operates in this state, its experiences are stored in short-term memory. This is because the task is repetitive. Say you take out the garbage. Unless something particularly unique occurs, you'll never remember it. The action relies on long-term memory from when you initially learned to take out the trash. System 2 is slow thinking when you are presented with new problems. This is more likely to be placed in long-term memory. Mr. Robot is a show full of cryptic and vague elements, many of which are never fleshed out nor have any relevance. The problem is that rather than the story introducing some vague/cryptic and then fleshing them out shortly after, it overwhelms you with these elements. And this is where the problem lies; because of this, I began to engage with the show's cryptic and vague elements with System 1. I would put them into the backlog of my mind and potentially forget about them. I just pointed out some sequences that were definitive setups for the twist; however, these sequences were cryptic. So, unfortunately, when they were shown to me, while I did remember them by the time of this twist ending, I didn't engage with them beyond any superficial level. If I ever rewatched the show, I can take pleasure in recognizing hints I didn't pick up on and forgot about, but that's hardly engaging. Again, its plotting is a convoluted slosh of symbols with little coherency.
But what about Elliot lying to the audience?
Lying can be compelling in storytelling; however, usually, it's a character lying to another character. In these cases, the audience is either aware of the lie or unaware of the lie, but so is the perspective character. However, Elliot is not lying to another character but directly to the audience. Elliot has solid motivations for lying; he wants to make himself out as a hero, but again, the setup is hardly engaging.
Elliot was an unreliable narrator from the show's beginning. But they were minor things, such as his perception of E-Corp as Evil Corp. However, now, we find out that Elliot is an unreliable narrator who maliciously hides information from the audience. Early on, with Elliot's multi-personality dissociative disorder, we would experience his struggle with him. We saw the same delusions he did and shared his gaps with him, but now we find out that some of his gaps were sequences he didn't want to show the audience or whatever. Again, it creates a lot of ambiguity.
But how does this reveal change Elliot and Mr. Robot's characters? We were initially supposed to believe that Mr. Robot created the plans to take down the "top 1% of the 1%" and that Elliot spent the first three seasons trying to stop them.
This conflict is recontextualized. Now, Mr. Robot was trying to stop Elliot's rage from carrying out his plans, with Elliot's rage trying to preserve those plans. In Season 3, Elliot was trying to stop Whiterose because she went rogue... I guess. Also, when Elliot gets himself put into prison, we are led to believe he did so to stop Mr. Robot, but actually, Elliot was trying to stop Mr. Robot from ruining his plans.
These aren't engaging recontextualizations, and Mr. Robot's and Elliot's conflict in the show's early stages doesn't suggest this twist. Again, the setups are just allusions to the fact the story is being told in a certain way and why.
I've claimed that the twist feels like it exists despite the rest of the show. I want to do what I can to continue justifying that. I just talked about Mr. Robot and Elliot, but we also need to discuss what this twist adds to other characters.
With many characters, the only relation they have to this twist is that they died, fueling Elliot's general angst so that the story can be tragic, such as Trenton, Mobley, Angela, Tyrell, Cisco, etc. Concerning the twist, these characters could be put in numerous other tragic stories; they do not feel like they were written with this specific twist in mind.
With Whiterose, in the later seasons, which flesh out her tragic past, she feels written so that the fake-out that her machine worked is tangible. As I've previously outlined, I don't find this twist adding anything to her character; it just makes her character ambiguous.
And lastly, Darlene: In the final episode, Darlene admits she knew the entire time that our Elliot wasn't the "real Elliot." Here's the problem: many different things fueled Darlene's angst, all of which are only vaguely coped with. The twist recontextualizes her character so that she had multiple things we were already aware of that caused her angst, but knowing our Elliot wasn't the real Elliot was a cause we weren't aware of. And regarding her choice to work with Elliot on fsociety, it's initially contextualized that she worked with him to change the world because she cared about him. Neither of those motivations is altered by her knowing this, and I know of nothing that signifies Darlene is aware Elliot is a personality until it's revealed.
So, unfortunately, I was disappointed by this twist. The show failed to provide an engaging mystery, and the twist tells me nothing about the world of Mr. Robot. Generally, I found it adding nothing to its thematic dimension; it's just a neat turn of events, I guess.
For me, Mr. Robot was a string of missed opportunities: a show that steps up to the plate to address real social issues, explore interesting ideas, or provide compelling characters but backs down instead. It entices with moral ambiguity, characters preaching in grandiose deadpan ambiguity, and some intriguing ideas but fails to capitalize on them; instead, I found myself uninvested in characters and certain essential elements nebulous. And at its bitter end, I thought it made a damning decision, creating an extreme amount of ambiguity that encourages wild theorization rather than a simple, compelling story with unignorable themes. Mr. Robot left me enthusiastically intrigued by the end of its first season, but by its series finale, apathetic and let down.
Blatant political sniping, really shows the lefts disdain for Donald Trump. No place for this bullshit in our “Entertainment”
I just binged-watched all 4 seasons of Mr. Robot during the weekend, and highly recommend it.
I can't believe how much effort they have put into making sure that the technical aspects are accurate as well. Although you don't have to be a cybersecurity professional to enjoy this show, you will enjoy it much more if you are one. All the exploits, the commands and scripts that come up on-screen are realistic, although the effects and results are exaggerated at times.
Looks like the creators of this show are big fans of Kali Linux. It's all over this show. In Desktops, Laptops and Android devices. I might even go as far as to say that Kali Linux is an uncredited guest character in this show. :wink:
Wow! This was something else. So all along we've been watching the Mastermind and thinking he was Elliot? Great show. Didn't understand much, but loved it anyway. Bye Elliot.
I don't know how this will continue but the first episode at least was pretty great.
I started watching this show to fight boredom during the quarantine, but I quickly became invested. I loved everything about it, even though most of the times I was confused. It all made sense in the end. Excellent performances by everyone, but I have to admit, Mr. Malek and Mr. Slater were truly outstanding!
What a roller coaster ride this has been. Didn't understand much but loved it all! Great show. Goodbye Elliot or is it the Mastermind?
easily at the top 3 best shows of decade!
there is a lot to say about this show, but if you have not seen it yet. I have only envy at you.
so if you are reading these words, go now and embrace this amazing experience.
As someone who works in IT, this show is amazing! There are almost no flaws to find.
The fact that text doesn't make a sound when it slowly appears on screen is a big WHOOHOO! The show shows real shit and not that Hollywood crap. Real Linux with boring terminal windows with actual commands and actual terms.. The stuff they talk about is all real, not something made up in a studio. Some real security knowledge was used to make this believable and it worked out pretty good so far (I'm up to episode 5). I really hope they keep this up for the entire show..
I do however am kinda worried about the crowd this will pull... I'm afraid it will mostly pull the computer nerds (myself included, so no offence) interested in the topic and this may not be enough to get enough viewers for a second season
10 - Totally Ninja!
This series truly does have it all: from great acting to amazing plot twists it keeps you on the edge of your seat at all times. The first season is great and disorienting, but the other seasons manage to keep up just as well.
It left me electrified. Great show.
I watched Mr Robot like i was watching my own fantasies, what i want to express in the real world but in a way so beautifully put by the amazing crew, that i've never experienced this much awe, emotional waterfalls and intellectual orgasms in any thing that i watched before.
I can go on about how amazing this piece was but i would just waste your time here, so better to experience now and thank Sam later like me doing it now, Thank you Sam for this wonderful experience.
Perfection. Begins and ends incredibly on different sides of the same coin.
How is it possible that this only has an 86% rating? This show is 10/10 easily
What a stupid ending. So much bar writing and potential wasted :(.
This is one of those rare instances where I wish we had like a bonus point to give out for tv-series or movies that deserve more than 10/10 :first_place::trophy: #waitingforseason4
The first episode had me hooked. After that, it just gradually went downhill until I could barely get through the very very disappointing ending. This was one that, after watching it all the way through, I was wishing I'd spent my time on something better. NOTE The TV-MA rating is there for a reason; I'm not a prude, but this show just had a bunch of stuff that added nothing to the story and really could've been left out. Language was atrocious all the way through and again, didn't do anything for the story.
I'll take as much as I can get. Evil corp, Tyrell, Shayla, this show just has so many interesting elements. From hacking to the awesome meta reference about the portrayl of hackers to drug addiction, so intense. Malek is killing it as a cynical Elliot and the writing makes the cast shine even more. Looking forward to more.
one of the most boring i've seen
An amazing and exhilarating show. Great writing and pacing. Just would liked if he after effects on the other countries would’ve been shown as well.
I remember skimming the last season because I cared so little about everything happening. That's about it. Also the ASMR voiceover was annoying.
From the beginning, I knew this was a show I needed to see. For one reason or another, I never got around to it while it was airing. Recently, when the show went on sale, it fully poked me to watch it. I'll be damned, I should have watched this sooner. It is one wild, intricate ride. The first season wraps you in and pulls out the rug, seasons 2-3-4 build to the perfect ending. Check this one out. Go in blind! It is certainly worth your time.
Average Season Review: 8.63/10
Recommendation - Must See (for Psychological Thriller Fans)
Better than I expected. It starts off with a revolution made for conspiracy theorists, but adds a lot more nuance after that. Even the psychological aspect is interesting. That is, until the final episode. For some reason they decide to pull some grade A bullshit at the end. If he's a mastermind hacker personality, why would he need Mr Robot to execute his hacks? How could he forget that he's a personality? How could the people around him not tell him? Nevertheless, it's definitely worth a watch, especially if you're into coding/hacking. Rami's performance stands out, as well.
This show really could have been great with better writing and better acting. some of these characters were terrible, it reminds me why I usually stay clear of network TV series. Elliott sister, his best friend, the philosophical thug, the strange executive, the trans hacker/politician... these actors were terrible, completely unbelievable. I really wanted to like the show, but these people, along with some idiotic story lines, ruined it. I'm not saying don't watch it, Elliott's battle with delirium is entertaining, but these other people will make you want to pull your hair out. If HBO would have gotten a hold of this, made some casting changes, and hired better screen writers, this show could have been a masterpiece.
Unlike many, I didn't ike the ending
It could be better
But overall this is a f***ing MASTERPIECE
just watch it....
From the performances, the ever-so-slowly unraveling global conspiracy in the story/plot, the characters, the directing, the writing, the cinematography, the set design, costume design, editing, and lighting (and something else I'm sure I must be forgetting), everything is top-notch for me.
What seems to turn people off of this show is how it radically changes in its second season, and even partially through its first season. I guess I can understand this, Mr. Robot isn't a show for everyone. But I appreciate this because I personally felt that Mr. Robot came into its own when it started to get super abstract and philosophical and character-focused later in season 2. That's where I feel like it really became "Mr Robot" to me. No matter what, the plot moves nowhere before the characters are thoroughly explored. Those are the priorities of the show. The complex conspiracy in the main plot is often cast aside for character study and emotional development because the characters are the most important part of the story. This makes it so that once the full truth behind the conspiracy is ready to be revealed, it'll feel so much more rewarding getting to experience it with all of the characters that have had plenty of time to be thoroughly emotionally explored. Because, in the end, why care about the people in the world of the show if that aspect is being cut short for less impactful story arcs and reveals? Truly one of the best shows on Television.
Season 1 - 9.0
Season 2 - 9.4
Season 3 - 9.5
Season 4 - 9.8
"Mr. Robot" is far from being the perfect TV show, but it deserves praise for how it always tries to do something different. Like "Lost", some crazy solutions worked, some didn't, but I still dare you to find another series that is as personal and innovative in the last decade.
The plot is convoluted and all over the place, often with too convenient plot contrivances, pointless deviations, and easy ways out in the most desperate situations. However, the story has only relative importance as, after all, it's just an excuse to make a pitch-black cynical social commentary on our generation's social anxieties, chronic isolation, and insecurities. Everything we see is filtered through the alienated mind of an unreliable narrator who is nothing but the product of our fucked up society. The subjective perspective of the show is tastefully portrayed by uncomfortably odd camera framing and glitchy editing that always go along with Elliot's feelings.
The first season seems even too over-stylized and naive in its social commentary to be actually taken seriously, but as the show progresses, we realize that we should keep questioning whatever happens, that Elliot is as delusional and self-contradictory as the other characters. At some point we are not even sure if we are actually with the good guys, if the revolution is actually making any sense. The second season is a little too slow and sometimes even displeasing in how it tries to be artsy at all costs, but it manages to set the right tone for the definitely more mature and possibly even more cynical third and fourth season. I was not always satisfied with the abrupt ways most of the characters' arcs have been closed, but Elliot's inner journey has been dealt with almost perfectly.
A contemporary and culturally resonant drama about a young programmer, Elliot, who suffers from a debilitating anti-social disorder and decides that he can only connect to people by hacking them. He wields his skills as a weapon to protect the people that he cares about. Elliot will find himself in the intersection between a cybersecurity firm he works for and the underworld organizations that are recruiting him to bring down corporate America. INTJ Keywords: Drama, Thriller, Suspense, Robot, Science, Technology
One of the best series. MUST WATCH!
Apparently Mr Robot was originally envisioned as a movie, rather than a 4 season arc. Considering my favourite parts of the series were its first two and last two episodes, this makes sense.
The first season is enjoyable enough, but in the long run there are too many stretched out arcs, less than satisfying digressions, and less well thought out story points.
But there's no denying the sense of style in the filming, which is nice in smaller packages.
The only think I can see without spoiling is WATCH IT.
Great show and great evolution until the finale.
Absolutely brilliant. At times, I've found I started to think like Elliot, and I like it. The twists, problem solving, and legitimacy of this show is beyond any show I've seen before.
Happy to hear it has been renewed for a second season.
Love it, his personal demons and the interaction with the battle he's fighting. Great actors, great storyline!
The sheer amount of attention to details in this show is staggering! This is a masterpiece in the making. 'Mr. Robot' is topical when it needs to be, but timeless in its critique of the human behavior.
S3 is just superb so far, a tangled web with twists and turns at every available crossroad. With the plus that only twats have iPhones ... just one to annoy the fanboys. Fuck yeah skookum televisual especial.
I wasn’t actually interested in watching this, it was only because my daughter kept telling me too. I looked at the synopsis and trailer and wasn’t keen.
Oh boy was I wrong! I’m pleased there were 3 full seasons ready to watch as I couldn’t stop watching it, it was like an addiction.
Such a phenomenal concept, full of twists and suspense. A complex story, that keeps your full attention.
I was absolutely delighted to seen Season 4 released. Although, there’s a huge shift in character development and I hope it doesn’t spoil it.
No idea what’s going to happen, keeps you guessing.
Love it!
Awesome show that will probably not get renewed because it doesn't appeal to the masses :-(
Awesome camera work and special effects aside from the great actor performance!
fingers cross, it won't be cancelled. not great but very cool show.
Mr Robot is now one of my Top Thirty TV series. The acting is great and award worthy, the writing is brilliant, the social commentary is sobering, the hacking is believable, the struggle with mental illness and wellness is excruciating, the momentum between story and backstory is constant and supports a core cast loyalty for the viewers. Once the first season caught my attention it was all 9s (brilliant) out of 10. The second season held a rather transparent premise and an audience unuse to getting ahead of the scripts found the pace tedious, and my rating slipped to 6s (fair), but gradually recovered. But the third season, with all the pieces of the backstory filling in, and the characters undergoing serious challenges, took the series back, once again, to 9s (brilliant). It will be interesting to see where the writers can take us from here in season four. [Social Political Thriller]
It started really nice. But then nothing happened and it got weirder. Don't watch.
Renewed for a 3rd season!
S3 is a masterpiece so far.
It's a genius show. You never know what's true and what isn't. It's a must watch.
This show is absolutely beautiful I love watching it. If you havent check out the movie by the same director sam esmael to see how beautiful his shots are. Its in the romance genre so maybe not for all but its breathtaking
The show makes us as confused and crazy as Elliot. This show is brilliant.
The adoption of technology and everyone's obsession (rightfully so) about cyber-security makes this era the perfect time for a show like this. They went to great lengths to ensure technical accuracy but kept most of it relate able to the common person. It feels like they go a little overboard with the drug addiction, but it does add some nice twists to the plot.
It sucks having this show spoiled by a mere tag on a blogsite but still a great show.
I love this! Great pilot and tv show!
RawrRawr
I love this show! Lots of disclosure!
Amazing show. I really love that technology and code used in the show is actually plausible. Hollywood actually did their homework on this one. Even the data backup company in the show is supposed to represent http://www.ironmountain.com/. It just adds to the surreal feeling.
very technic, and hard to find flaws on it. probably the most accurate hacker show i've ever seen. Loving it. Also, an Executive who runs kde(old habitis really die hard!)... I laugh a lot and didn't expected that... way more real approach unlike all of that scorpion like b*s***
really enjoyed this pilot, hope it keeps on giving :)
It's just a great show. Much better than all those mainstream series.
Working in IT I loved this, Although I picked up on the major twist very early on I was hooked. Elliott is s great character and if you don't figure it out as quick as some then the twist is brilliant. highly recommend this if you've not watched.
This show is awesome, need more!
This show is awesome, need more!
Fantastic show! Not sure whether S02 has been green lit yet, or not, but I really hope so, and soon!
An excellently well packaged show, including great cinematography, soundtrack, acting, plot and dialogue. One episode does not make a masterpiece but if it maintains the high quality then we are talking placing this in the same category as breaking bad, the wire, sopranos, deadwood etc...
If you're even the slight bit interested in networking, digital privacy or cryptocurrency—this show is a must see. For a TV series, the hacking scenes are exceptionally realistic and the narrative is very compelling. Technology professionals will definitely relate to the themes at hand.
THIS SHOW IS PURE ART
Very cool actor.
I believe that the story line is picked up very well.
This end of season... I feel more confused than Elliot right now, what a masterpiece
The show less technical ( 10% ) especially season2 is kind of letdown . Season1 is awesome
Season 2 is more of how he handles the psychosis rather than the plot moving forward with the Phase II
Expecting Season 3 to be more interesting. You have to force yourself to watch season 2. But never Rami Malek is a very talented actor and his acting skills comeforth in Season2 more than Season1. Mr.Robot dominating more in Season2
One of my favourite tv shows! OMG
Great to have this back!
This show made me schizo.
Sat down to watch the first episode and the next thing I knew the weekend was over and I had seen all 10. Hooked!
If the last episode got you confused, that's the whole point. You're supposed to empathise with Elliot and his state of mind. Understand that a good TV show isn't just about entertaining the viewer with big action/wow moments, more importantly it's supposed to suck you right into it. Mr. Robot is a wonderful work of art. Can't wait for the second season!
Elliot's character is genius! The story is a little off in my opinion, but that's not what this show is all about.
Impressed with the first episode I must recommend it to you fellow reader, reading this if you haven't watched the first episode yet GO DO IT, you will be amazed.
loved the tech savvy in this. Didn't palm face once.
loved the tech savvy in this. I didn't shake my head into my palm once!
Great show!!! Can't wait for season 2! 1 more day!!! Finally
The pilot was amazing and I anxiously waited for the rest. Most were great, some were OK. And then came the first season's ending... and just blew my mind. I don't want to put a spoiler here, just watch! PS. Amazing soundtrack.
I can only say this was the best show I have seen in some time.
I really loved S01, S02 is so so. I just can't seem to finish the second season....
ATM the first episode alone outdoes overrated shows like Scorpion, Homeland, Gotham, The Flash, Daredevil, GoT, (CSI Cyber)... in all aspects. It's like "keep a little boring stuff for mainstream, but still mainly focusing on the cool stuff";) Logical flaws are hardly to find. This I did not expect!
hello mr.Robot how Are you
can u tell me why I am here
Hack the planet που λένε
People, stop giving THE WHOLE SHOW a rating based on the first episode or two, it screws with future ratings...just wait until at least a season is over and rate individual episodes until then. I agree that the show is very, very promising, but all those people giving it 10s based on the first episode? That's ridiculous. That's like rating a movie based on the opening credits.
Shout by CoreyVIP 2BlockedParent2020-04-26T06:25:18Z
3 Thoughts After Watching ‘Mr. Robot’:
Sam Esmail is an absolute visionary.
I never imagined it’d end the way it did.
While the show often made my brain hurt, it was a beautiful work of art - some of the most captivating episodes of television I’ve ever seen.