I too can't stand Black Mirror. The only episode that I think it's good is Nosedive and that's because it's a good mirror (no pun intended) image of the most toxic elements in current day social media.Stinkehund wrote: ↑Sat Apr 18, 2020 11:30 pmThe same "message" that every other Black Mirror episode has: Technology is bad and people are inherently evil. There's nothing deep or profound in that show, no moral ambiguity, no aesop, no meaning. Technology is bad, fire is scary and Thomas Edison was a witch. Star Trek's about how humanity can better itself and strive towards utopia; Black Mirror is how we're doomed from the start and shouldn't even fucking try - that's why i hate that series with a passion.I might be in minority, but I honestly didn't get what the message of the episode was. Like at all. Even after carefully listening Chuck's speech.
Is it that liking one fictional show (too much) turn you into a monster?
BM's issue is that it suffers greatly from plot-induced stupidity or Idiot Ball, whatever is called. The humans just don't act like humans, they act like plot-squeezed characters, there is very little flexibility to the story. A piece of technology could be used to cause harm in some way? Why, it can ONLY be used for that! Could it be changed so that it doesn't? Nah, let's just adjust the plot and add in some other characters just to make things worse, so something worse happens! But who would do such a thing? Won't the population have some concerns about the technology and demand change, like it happened with many inventions throughout the history? Naah, it'll be fine!
So when the humans act like idiots in BM, and people gloss over that, yeah, the message that "all technology is bad" is visible. But on a closer look, it's clear that the there's just a lot of idiot ball bouncing around. The problem is that the writers don't seem to either grasp or actually believe that's how humans act in face of a new technology, so they do seem to send the message that "all technology is bad", not helped by the fact that everything in the plot is focused to make things worse. And even episodes where the technology is less involved, the character interaction feels either forced or again dumbed down to fit the plot. So I feel that even if the writers did not intend that "all technology is bad", it all ends up "no, except yes".
I have a feeling that if HISHE would do BM videos they'd have a field day since it's just too easy.
EDIT: Upon reading more about the creator of BM, I now have a better understanding of some of the show's "dark" aspects. He comes across to me as Zach Snyder-esque, only with less slowmo and less Martha!, but still having the same level of superficiality.
"My favourite Twilight Zone is the one where a nuclear bomb goes off." Sums up BM to me.