Monday, August 1, 2016

Maybe Mr. Robot's real message is to show how incredibly damaging mental illness can actually be on a society if not to outright question why society even exists in the first place

I'm a few episodes into season two of USA's hit, Mr. Robot. Although I'd classify it as "good" by placing it within the same vein as "A Beautiful Mind" or "Memento," these are both films that I don't revisit. Once was enough, because they're basically depressing shows. But on top of that, Mr. Robot adds another layer of "annoying" for me: the whole "unreliable narrator" schtick. Basically, we see the world of Mr. Robot through crazy person "Elliot" or through Tyrell Wellick's sociopathic wife (who knows what motivation she is up to). It makes me wonder if I (as a writer) would ever toy with the unreliable narrator trope, and I think it frustrates me so much that I compare it to "it's all a dream" sequences that are in books (but are only revealed as dreams after whole chapters). It's like pulling the "just kidding!" button and leaves the reader feeling like they've wasted time. Furthermore, it makes the reader question what is real, what isn't real, and why should I even care? So no, I don't think I'd ever use that.

I do think that Mr. Robot definitely has an audience out there. Disaffected people who are angry at the world and just narcissistic enough to lay no blame at their own feet for the choices they have made in life will love the show. People who express frustration, or who feel neutered and disrespected by life will flock to its themes of using computers to disrupt systems and bring pain to the rich elite whom they see as undeserving of the blessings within their life. In the latest episode, Elliot was praised for "hearing voices" and compared to the likes of Moses and Jesus. That's sure to stroke the ego of any narcissistic computer nerd out there whose life has been made a living hell through low self-esteem but likens himself as a social justice warrior (read "moral narcissist" into this phrase). The "no one appreciates that I'm a genius" mantra is a HUGE underlying current in Mr. Robot. Sigh.

So I'm what? Four episodes into this season. The big reveal last season was that Mr. Robot was in fact Elliot's dead father, and he wasn't real at all. I'm beginning to suspect that this season has even more big reveals. I think Elliot (for one) is in a mental institution. He keeps a journal, gets regular meds, there's only one phone he uses, and his only way to access a computer looks like it happens in an office in a prison or asylum (with a guard). He watches hoops from bleachers, and the show makes you think that it's probably a neighborhood park that he walks down to. But I suspect it's just in the yard where he's being kept prisoner. And I think he landed in there because he killed Tyrell Wellick in the season opener. But who knows, maybe I'm wrong. Tyrell might still be alive because we get hints through his sociopathic wife, but she doesn't give us much as far as that goes. The only thing that we really know about her is that she's into bondage, doesn't have enough hush money, and that she's dating a bartender because dating a loser (in her own words) is really appealing since she had all of the material things she could ever want and was never happy. But does the woman even know what happiness is?

The characters in this show are incredibly frustrating, evil, manipulative, and crazy. It's a good show, but it's not a "feel good" drama. Maybe it's only real purpose is to show how incredibly damaging some kinds of mental illness can actually be on society, if not questioning why society even exists in the first place. That, and maybe to compare hackers to gods. I'm sure Julian Assange would approve to being deified. Why not? The narcissism runs strong in the almost all male dominated tech community. But at least these narcissists seem to have good intentions: they want the world to be a better place. I guess we couldn't expect hackers to have read Virgil's Aeneid wherein the quote "The descent to hell is easy" appears and probably morphed into the phrase "The road to Hell is paved with good intentions."

8 comments:

  1. I guess if people want something different this is it.

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  2. It's not a show I've had time to watch. If you say the narrator is unreliable and it's frustrating, I'll probably never watch it.

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  3. Hmm... I haven't watched this one, yet. Maybe I don't want to.

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  4. We watched the first few episodes but then lost interest. It's getting such critical acclaim that we're thinking about giving it another try.

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  5. I don't like this show. I'm watching this show, but I've put off watching the latest episode. I understand where they're coming from, but it's so dismal and dark. And people love this.

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  6. I had trouble keeping up with this last season, and only watch bits of two episodes this season. It might make more sense if I binge watch, but not sure that will happen. I do love the characters though.

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  7. This was my favorite show on TV last year as it wove a pretty tight narrative from a script originally written as a movie. My biggest fear coming into this season was how they could keep viewers interested now that the biggest question was answered.

    The problem is they really haven't. They could focus on the world outside of Elliot's brain but we don't see much of that. Tyrell was the most intriguing thing after Elliot last season and we still haven't seen him after 4 episodes. Right now it feels like filler though perhaps the writer felt some transition was necessary to morph Elliot into his next incarnation.

    The showrunner has stated he wrote a 5 year arc for this story before it aired which is encouraging but this season the show has been boring thus far and as a result it is hemorrhaging viewers. Assuming these set up shows are necessary for a great payoff I hope enough people are watching to get a renewal. I do respect the writer for taking a chance however. There isn't enough of that these days.

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