![]() ![]() I fully support the stylistic exercise attempted with this episode, but it just ends up being a little thriller that doesn’t invite any possible reflection. If they want to survive, they must escape through an inhospitable wasteland. Synopsis: In an abandoned warehouse, scavengers in search of supplies encounter an implacable enemy. It generates much more repulsion than intrigue and, of course, than reflection. ![]() Although it wants to play with the usual Black Mirror tone, Striking Vipers gets lost in a thesis that it fails to defend at any time. I’m still not quite clear what they wanted to tell with this episode: is it a stale metaphor about homosexuality? Because it certainly seems like it. Synopsis: When Danny and Karl, two old college friends, meet again in a virtual reality game, their nightly games will have unexpected consequences. Undoubtedly, it seems to me the one that is more out of what Charlie Brooker’s series represents. The narrative is rushed and the pace is too frenetic. The final twist is predictable, the warlike tone does not fit very well with what it wants to tell and, in addition, it does not give you time to connect with the characters. Technologically they have an advantage, but they don’t know if it will be enough to survive.ĭespite not having a very low score, this episode is, for my taste, t he one that most departs from the tone of Black Mirror. Warren Buffett predicts U.S.Synopsis: Stripe and Raiman are two soldiers who must protect the inhabitants of a village from the invasion of savage mutants. ![]()
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