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LAST WEEK’S REVIEW: ‘Mr. Robot’ Season 2 Goes Full David Lynch As We Prepare for the End
We begin with another view of a scene from last season, with Mr. Robot talking to Tyrell. Except now we see Elliott delivering the same words, and planting the idea in Tyrell’s head that “you’re only seeing what’s in front of you. You’re not seeing what’s above you.” Then Tyrell tells us the significance of the “Red Wheelbarrow” — a reminder of a father he doesn’t want to resemble — which highlights Elliott’s decision to give that name to the notebook he used to distance himself from his own unacceptable father figure.
And we finally learn the details of Stage Two, a Wisdom-esque attempt to wipe out all of E-Corp’s backup paper records and prevent them from rebuilding their database of “the bloodline of all real property in the country.” The femtocell hack of the FBI, ostensibly allowing fsociety to erase evidence of their involvement, was really a way to give the Dark Army access to E-Corp’s system to plant the malware that will blow up the building and burn all the paper.
When we watch a show like “Mr. Robot,” a lot of the fun is in speculating. What’s real? Who’s imaginary? Did we really see that thing we thought we saw? But if we get it wrong, there are no consequences. The same doesn’t hold true for Elliott, who believes Tyrell is another projection right up until the moment Tyrell shoots him with Chekhov’s Popcorn Gun. As he lies on the floor bleeding out, Mr. Robot blinks and flashes and fades out of existence. But Elliot’s not going to die, especially since he’s played by this year’s newly-minted Emmy-winning Best Actor. But the episode ends with a surprise, as the person Tyrell calls for help is Angela, who was told to expect the call. Last week Whiterose asked Angela for her belief; it would seem she’s given it. And as Angela leaves to meet them, and be “the first person he sees when he wakes up,” power across the whole city goes out.
The packages Joanna Wellick has been receiving, ostensibly from Tyrell, turn out to be coming from E-Corp CTO Scott Knowles, who has been trying to inflict pain on her in retaliation for Tyrell killing his wife. But he has no idea who he’s up against. He beats her bloody, which only allows her to bend DJ Derek into agreeing to implicate Knowles in his wife’s death. Poor Derek, who will undoubtably find himself dumped to the curb (or worse) once he’s outlived his usefulness to her. We get another reminder that they met at that same E-Corp party where Sharon Knowles was killed; has Joanna Wellick been playing this long con ever since that night?
Dom finally faces off against Darlene, who used her plot armor to survive the attack that we learn killed Cisco. It’s a credit to Carly Chaikin’s performance that when she says that Cisco “may have been the love of my life,” we actually believe that might be true. Dom and Darlene play a few rounds of interrogation bluffing, before Dom drops the bombshell — the FBI knows everything. Dom has been waiting, laying low, patiently using “The Python Approach” to reach the “Man In The Middle,” i.e. Elliott. With this knowledge, it would be interesting to rewatch the whole season to see just what Dom knew and when.
The entire reveal is a great scene; Grace Gummer and Chaikin continue the top-notch work that they’ve been doing all season. Which is why, perhaps, the show chooses this moment to try and slip by a small piece of head-scratching information — the murder of Romero, which kicked off most of this season’s action, was not the work of the Dark Army, but an accident. For a show that builds layers upon layers of manipulations and plots and reveals, turning this inciting incident into a Macguffin is a cop-out, and leaves a bitter aftertaste to an otherwise stellar conclusion to the season.
No Phillip Price this week, so we do not get one last delicious Phillip Price monologue before the hiatus. But with the revelation of Stage 2’s objective, it seems that while Price and Whiterose work together at times, they are not on the same side at all. Alas, we still have no more information about what happened in Washington Township, and why it is still so crucial to Whiterose’s plans.
Last year, the final episode gave us a post credit sequence that showed us the first connections between Price and Whiterose, which served to expand the world of the story and the possibilities of what could come next. This year’s finale post-credit scene does the opposite, tying up loose ends — specifically Trenton and Mobley, who have left town and are hiding out in Arizona, working at a Fry’s Electronics. Mobley just wants to lay low until everything blows over, but Trenton has discovered something that she thinks may allow them to reverse all the damage they did with the Five/Nine hack. Just as she convinces him to take a look at what she’s found, someone approaches and asks the time — and it’s Leon. Given how we’ve already seen Leon kill several people on Dark Army orders, it’s a fair bet to say Trenton and Mobley will not survive their shift at Fry’s.
And that’s a wrap on Season 2 of “Mr. Robot,” which for the most part successfully navigated a very difficult job of expanding the very strange world that its built, while still keeping it fresh and surprising. But with USA placing heavy bets on the show, it will be interesting to see how long they’ll be able to keep this type of storytelling going, or if they’ll need to dial back on the secrets and reveals and imaginary people.
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