Black Mirror season 7 episodes ranked from best to worst
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Overview
The Hollywood Reporter |
“You’ve got human beings and then some form of miraculous technology is introduced into their lives that upends it,” says Brooker about the theme of the new episodes.
Time |
Few anthologies have captured audiences’ attention quite like Black Mirror.
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Black Mirror' creator Charlie Brooker hints at what the adorably menacing 'Plaything' Throng's message means and explains the episode's shocking ending.
Creator Charlie Brooker explains season 7’s unsettling inspirations and endings, including the show’s first sequel ‘USS Callister: Into Infinity.’
The new season, premiering Thursday on Netflix, includes the show’s most blatant satire of streaming services yet.
"It's now canon," writer-director Brooker tells EW of "Plaything," a chilling video game tale that sees Will Poulter's character return from the 2018 "Bandersnatch" movie.
1don MSN
Paul Giamatti’s performance as Paul, a man revisiting his memories of a doomed relationship, makes for the most heartbreaking episode of the season.
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1don MSN
While that first episode, “Common People,” is indeed a slog, the rest of the season — including and especially the bracingly nasty second episode, “Bête Noire,” which upended my expectations, and then did so again — make the argument that the free-ranging imagination “Black Mirror” has demonstrated in recent years is for the good.
Black Mirror' creator Charlie Brooker explains how the season 7 Issa Rae-Emma Corrin romance 'Hotel Reverie' is a 'spiritual sequel' with references to the classic 'San Junipero' episode: 'It’s a companion piece,
We're dissecting the end of 'Black Mirror,' season 7, episode 1 (premiere), called "Common People." Here's what happens to Amanda (Rashida Jones) at the end of the episode.