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Black Mirror: Here's the secret inspiration for 'USS Callister'
Black Mirror: Here's the secret inspiration for 'USS Callister'
Note: This story discusses spoilers from the Black Mirror episode “USS Callister.”
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I remember visiting this website once...
It was called Black Mirror: Here's the secret inspiration for 'USS Callister' | EW.com
Here's some stuff I remembered seeing:
Note: This story discusses spoilers from the
episode “USS Callister” was first released, it’s a safe bet that everybody had pretty much the same thought:
And of course, to some degree, that assumption is perfectly correct.
tells the story of a classic sci-fi show called
. But as is revealed in the episode, it’s really the story of modern-day tech company’s quietly monstrous CTO (Jesse Plemons) who virtually escapes into an immersive virtual version of an old TV show — and drags clones of his coworkers into his sci-fi world so he can torment them mercilessly as an all-powerful god.
creator Charlie Brooker talking season 4, we briefly discussed “USS Callister” and the
at all, but rather another 1960s-era TV series, the one that most directly inspired
Remember the 1961 episode “It’s a Good Life,” about a town terrorized by an all-powerful 6-year-old (who even looks a bit like a young Plemons)?
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY: When we last spoke, you hinted that a certain other piece of material inspired “U.S.S. Callister” beyond
CHARLIE BROOKER: You may well be right! We were on the set of an episode from last season, “Playtest,” and we were talking about virtual reality and video games, and the conversation went to, “Well, you could be the king of the castle in there, you could have an evil emperor or tyrant.” Which reminded me of that episode, a story they revisited again in
movie. I watched the episode again not that long ago and it’s still utterly terrifying. It’s like a depiction of what it must be like living under King Joffrey. You’ve got to watch your step. That was the starting point. What if we do a story about an all-powerful tyrant who cast himself as the hero?
There’s a lot to metaphorically unpack in this episode: Workplace sexual harassment, criticism of classic science-fiction tropes, white men who long for the entitlements of yesteryear, and even possibly a critique of our current president. What were you trying to say with this one?
It was written in November last year, so certainly when we came to film it in January 2017, it was around the time of the inauguration. There was a certain mood among a lot of the cast that we were dealing with a new regime coming in. That’s an aspect of it. It’s not where the idea came from. But as soon as you get into the workplace stuff, forcing people [into the virtual prison] for what he perceives as slights in the workplace, that then gets to a whole other level of stuff. So often with our episodes, really, there’s not a central message or certain thing we’re trying to evoke, but it comes out alongside of that. Certainly, a lot of those things resonate in that episode, but it’s not directly about any one of those things. Really “USS Callister” is about someone who is wielding absolute power who shouldn’t be, and people overthrowing him.
More Black Mirror season 4 postmortem interviews: —
creator explains that ‘Metalhead’ robot nightmare
creator reveals what Jodie Foster changed in Arkangel
showrunner reveals the ‘Hang the DJ’ ending you didn’t see
read more
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