awesome.
thank you.
It won't help if this show keeps teetering perilously close to 0.1 ratings in demo. At least last season had a big DVR boost, but the ratings utterly cratered this season.I guess it's a good thing Rami won his Emmy. Haha
Can someone lay out exactly what Stage 2 was about? I might have missed something, but they planned to destroy E-Corp's building with all the hard copies of people's financial info, yeah?
E-Corp hasn't been as affected by the hack because of the physical copies of its documents (loans, deeds, etc.). For some reason (probably to reestablish their database) they've been sending its physical documents from all over the country into one building in New York. Stage 2 is destroying that building using their uninterruptible power supplies and blowing it up.Can someone lay out exactly what Stage 2 was about? I might have missed something, but they planned to destroy E-Corp's building with all the hard copies of people's financial info, yeah?
What if the crow isn't real? ��Hey, NaM. Can we get video proof of you eating crow?
Watched the last 20 minutes twice and I still dont think I fully understand wtf was going on with Tyrell. Can someone explain it to me lol.
What if the crow isn't real? ��
No, it makes it consistent.I know, but that makes it cheap. For a show that is supposed to be the opposite is disappointing.
Tyrell is dead, deal with it.
Yeah, I don't really think he is in jail for killing Tyrell, but Tyrell is dead. I do hope he is not, but he is.
Tyrell is confirmed dead for me since the first scene in episode 1 this season.
The Tyrell emotional connections is fucking wierd. I already felt it was weird how buddy buddy he was, but now he was in love with him? How? When?
I mean, he called Elliot or rather his plan " God". I think it's safe to say Tyrell is a little bit on the emotional unstable side of things.The Tyrell emotional connections is fucking wierd. I already felt it was weird how buddy buddy he was, but now he was in love with him? How? When?
I mean, he called Elliot or rather his plan " God". I think it's safe to say Tyrell is a little bit on the emotional unstable side of things.
Trenton was not on the FBI board.
Romero whacked by his neighbor was fucking hilarious and cheap.
Tyrell could had shot Elliot in the leg or something.
And about that WR scene with Angela...
I think part of the problem is that the show tries to obscure a lot of details for no particular reason.I really don't get a lot of the complaints about this show or this season.
Angela is fine.
Part 1 of the two parter was great, weird Lynch tribute and all.
The show is nowhere near as cryptic as people seem to think.
On that last point - seriously, there's not even that many unanswered questions, and you knew that the likelihood of every single question being answered was pretty much nil so long as season 3 is happening.
EDIT: I have to admit I laughed out loud when the credits started rolling. Fantastic.
I think part of the problem is that the show tries to obscure a lot of details for no particular reason.
As for the first half of the season being wasted...I disagree. The show is about more than forward movement of the main plot.
Elliot's part in the first half seemed like a waste since the jail thing (at least seemingly) didn't amount to anything. The fight with Mr. Robot could have happened in any context... and it all seemed to happen just to have a twist revealing his mental state, but we already know he's a completely unreliable narrator... so ultimately it's a twist for the sake of having a weird 80s sitcom episode more than anything else.
Angela's plan to infiltrate E-Corp to get to the township files is ultimately pointless because once you figure out their plan to burn down the entire company, even she says "fuck it" and hops on board the train willingly, to the point where she's having fun phone calls with Tyrell. So none of her actions actually mattered since all she needed was a quick pep talk from the Chinese hackers.
I don't even really remember if there was a real point to the whole F-society thing, other than Angela inadvertently letting them install the backdoor that will let them burn down all the documents.
Honestly, I think someone could have just started watching after Elliot left jail and be fine in terms of actually following the narrative of this season.
We learned more about Elliot in the prison scenes than maybe the entirety of season 1. Once again, it's not about the supposed twist,but what it tells us about the character. These obsession with twists and "calling it" is making nearly every conversation about this show utterly tedious.Elliot's part in the first half seemed like a waste since the jail thing (at least seemingly) didn't amount to anything. The fight with Mr. Robot could have happened in any context... and it all seemed to happen just to have a twist revealing his mental state, but we already know he's a completely unreliable narrator... so ultimately it's a twist for the sake of having a weird 80s sitcom episode more than anything else.
I mean, I don't disagree in that things happened of course. But if this was a British show and they only had 6 episodes to tell the same story, I'm genuinely convinced that it would have been a better viewing experience.This all feels a bit "Why didn't the eagles just fly them to Mordor?" to me.
Elliot being in prison did a number of things. It took him out of play, more or less, meaning both Angela and Darlene were basically left to do their own thing. The latter is especially important, since Darlene's decisions are a large part of what ended up compromising the group. It also established Elliot's relationship with Leon. It resulted in Elliot coming to terms (or at least coming to some sort of uneasy truce) with Mr. Robot.
Whiterose had no reason to involve Angela at all until Angela kept popping up as a result of her pursuing her own schemes. Her plot also gives us an additional POV inside E-Corp now that Tyrell is out of the picture. It shows her struggling with a feeling of moral compromise as she tries to reform the system from within. Her failed effort to turn whistleblower demonstrates just how far the conspiracy actually reaches and confirms the near impossibility of actually taking on the system through legal means. Also, it's clear that some unspecified amount of time passed between Elliot being shot and Angela receiving the phone call from Tyrell.
The F-Society plotline not only had them installing the Femtocell, but it also had the group disintegrating and getting sniffed out by the FBI.
I dunno - I firmly reject the idea that something in a story has a "point" only if it advances a specific plotline some arbitrary amount. There's more to a story than moving things along a bullet point list of major plot points.
I guess it's like the "Fight Club" revelation in S1 being kind of mundane because it wasn't really that big of a secret.We learned more about Elliot in the prison scenes than maybe the entirety of season 1. Once again, it's not about the supposed twist,but what it tells us about the character. These obsession with twists and "calling it" is making nearly every conversation about this show utterly tedious.
And it also introduced Leon, who seems like he's got a role to play.
There isn't the moral complexity of a woman betraying her principles and her own father to work for the big evil corporations because she had this secret plans, because we see her immediately compromise herself to get in league with the Dark Army (at least in the last two episodes of this season). Maybe there's some flashback in season 3 that explains all of Angela's decisions, but since we don't see any of that, I can't really make any assumptions about her character either way..
Tyrell loves that he matters, that he has all that power, and Elliot is the reason why.
It seems like Joanna loves to be with weak men and gets off on manipulating them.
Just to pick out this one particular point -
It's not immediate. It's the culmination of everything she'd been through this season. It's not like she was on the verge of a principled victory when Whiterose strolled up and made her pitch. She'd been isolated from her family, found out a bunch of nasty stuff about her friends, been repeatedly leaned on by the FBI, and despite all that, she continued with her plan to get the files and do things the right way.
Only when she did THAT, she found out (or at least had reason to believe) that the people she was going to were in on it. She had nowhere to go, and here's Dom again, breathing down her neck. So she decides she's had enough. She's going to turn herself in. She steels herself, says her goodbyes, reconciles herself to likely spending a significant amount of time in prison, and...she's grabbed off the train by two total strangers who put her in a van and drive her into a David Lynch film. Then, and only then, does Whiterose make her mysterious pitch (after revealing, of course, that having Angela killed was always on the table).
How can you be disappointed in this season when Darlene looked RIGHT AT THE USA LOGO IN THE CORNER OF THE SCREEN.
IN 2016.
This season was such a cataclysmic drop in quality, Sam Esmail obviously should never be left alone to his own devices. I've had enough of his bullshit and his gimmicks.
I disagree. This season could have been streamlined a bit but the quality was still there in spades.
And the only big "gimmick " this year was the prison which IMO made a whole lot of sense. And I liked the twist that Elliot has gone so far in questioning what was real and what wasn't, that it ended up biting him. Sooooo much better than if Tyrell had been another figment of his imagination.
C'mon man, you should be happy!
i felt nothing both during the taunting and after. Same with the stuff with the boyfriend afterward.
i dont know what to tell you. That didnt do anything for me either.
What was the exact quote Tyrell said was the only words his father knew in English?
Only reason I ask is I know there was something about a red wheel barrel in it, and on the elevator going up to "Mount Olympus" the dark army kid who was with them eating, I believe the bag said Red Wheel Barrel BBQ.
That instantly made me believe Tyrell made up whatever the quote was.
This season was such a cataclysmic drop in quality, Sam Esmail obviously should never be left alone to his own devices. I've had enough of his bullshit and his gimmicks.
Why does Tyrell "love" Elliott? Why did Angela suddenly become a Dark Army fixer? How is Elliot going to "wake up" from a gut shot? Why does Tyrell even give a shit about doing all this crazy stuff, last season he was a complete Mr. Corporate Guy. What did Whiterose show Angela that suddenly got her to change sides? Why is Whiterose doing any of this? Whats the deal with the nuclear plant that E Corp owns and Whiterose wants private?
What was up with Leon at the end? Why would he work for Whiterose? I thought he was just some random dude at the prison who hanged with Elliot.
He was always Elliott's dark army appointed guardian. When he saved Elliott from being beaten up/raped in prison, he told him that.
Oh man I guess I missed that.
Trenton was not on the FBI board.
Romero whacked by his neighbor was fucking hilarious and cheap.
Tyrell could had shot Elliot in the leg or something.
And about that WR scene with Angela...
Dw about it, if i didnt check up on gaf sfter the episode i would have never knownOh man I guess I missed that.