In Season 5,Watch Nun in Rope Hell (1984) full movie Black Mirrordoesn't feel as foreboding as it once did. Two of the three episodes end on a surprisingly hopeful note. The shock value has lessened, perhaps because we've grown numb to its ideas as the real world has started to catch up.
That's exactly why Season 5's final episode feels like such a missed opportunity. "Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too" left me with one lingering question: Why did they gloss over the concepts it introduced instead of continuing to stretch its own bizarro limits?
This episode had the potential to examine the profound and dangerous effects the tech it involved -- mind cloning, self-aware dolls, artificial intelligence, hella realistic holograms -- yet it feels half-baked in its efforts. It never expands to cover the humane and scientific depths of it all.
Don’t get me wrong: “Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too” is still the best, most delightfully over-the-top episode this season. But the bar wasn’t set high by the previous two to begin with.
The episode introduces Ashley O (Miley Cyrus, perfectly cast), a musician who wants to reinvent herself, but whose aunt/manager is too controlling to let that happen.
Enter Ashley Too, a doll modeled after the pop singer's apparent funky personality thanks to brain mapping. The toy, which copies Ashley O down to her pink bob hairstyle, makes for the perfect gift for superfan Rachel (Angourie Rice) -- much to the chagrin of her sister Jack (Madison Davenport).
As Ashley Too bonds with Rachel and starts asking deeply intimate questions about her life, you're bound to assume this doll is Black Mirror's version of Amazon's Alexa "accidentally" listening in on its customers.
Instead, Black Mirrorsubverts this expectation by turning Ashley Too into a friend for the girls -- even skeptical Jack. It's not a bad twist, but it takes away the opportunity to explore the impact of spying via the artificial intelligence that we now welcome into our homes.
Rachel is being trained by Ashley Too to dance and perform like her for a school event. The scene with Rachel dancing to a provocative song on stage as shocked parents look on is meant to make you ponder the arbitrary nature of celebrity influence.
It's an interesting and timely theme, but the episode only hints at it when they could've explored it to capacity. I would assume the impact of having a mind-clone of your favorite celebrity at home would be more significant and less casual. We never get to see Rachel freak out enough, which is what I would have done if Mindy Kaling decided to map herself into a toy that I could purchase, converse with, and learn from like she's really present with me.
By not letting characters deal with the emotional fallout of the technology at hand, "Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too" falls short of the insight Black Mirrorhas done so well in the past. Season 2's "Be Right Back" is one of the best episodes of the series because Martha (Hayley Atwell) has to face the consequences of her decision to create an android version of her dead husband. Her grief resonates even if the wild circumstance does not.
SEE ALSO: Every 'Black Mirror' episode ever, ranked by overall dreadIn another scene, Ashley O's aunt Catherine (Susan Pourfar), six months after the singer has been in a coma, displays an extremely large hologram of her on stage. "Ashley Eternal" will perform like the real singer would have, with new music extracted out of her brain. The audience barely flinches at the thought of an almost-dead person's super-sized virtual body blowing kisses at them.
All the elements were right there! Black Mirror just chose not to dig deeper.
In most Black Mirror episodes, the characters are familiar with the futuristic technology. We're supposed to be awed, not them. But in this case, the hologram is an unusual milestone for their universe -- and the reaction is still crickets. How are viewers supposed to feel anything when we don't see those onscreen feel it, too?
Once Ashley Too becomes self-aware and guides Rachel and Jack with what to do next, I kept waiting for the other shoe to drop. Maybe she would turn on them? Maybe an entire army of evil dolls would show up to take over the world after saving their OG form? Maybe Rachel herself would decide to step up as a new version of Ashley?
The episode delivers an optimistic ending for the heroes, circumventing the show's typically bleak look at life. That hopefulness worked for "San Junipero" and "Hang the DJ" because we were treated with sufficient emotional investment in the characters. But that's not the case here.
While "Rachel, Jack and Ashley Too" does present fascinating central players and an unpredictable storyline, it barely scratches the surface of its own ideas. The first half seems to build toward the promise of something wild, through its haunting choice of background score and pivotal shots like of Ashley Too chilling in Rachel and Jack's apartment.
But by neglecting its own sinister tropes despite all the elements of a cautionary tale about technological advancements in "Rachel, Jack, and Ashley Too," Black Mirror isn't able to elevate the episode from being a fun romp to a deadly specialty.
Topics Black Mirror Netflix
Dashiell Hammett's Strange Career by Anne DiebelDeana Lawson: A Preview by Deana LawsonThe social media apps we use, from best to worstBest Cyber Monday vacuum deals 2023: Shark, Dyson, and moreBest Cyber Monday vacuum deals 2023: Shark, Dyson, and moreCyber Monday deals at Best Buy: TVs, laptops, headphones, and moreRedux: The Idea of Women’s Language by The Paris ReviewJames Joyce’s Baby Talk (and Swift’s and Lear’s) by Anthony MadridDeana Lawson: A Preview by Deana LawsonDrag queen Taylor Sheesh brings Taylor Swift's Eras Tour to the Philippines15 other words for periods that are funny any time of the monthBecoming Kathy Acker: An Interview with Olivia LaingThe Last of French Seventies Counterculture by Stephanie LaCavaSchiele, Shoes, and Kavanaugh by Larissa PhamAmazon Cyber Monday deals: 200+ of our favorite discounts from the holiday saleNYT's The Mini crossword answers for November 27When is Taylor Swift's Eras Tour film streaming?Cyber Monday Fire TV deals 2023: Amazon's sale is liveSamsung Cyber Monday TV deals 2023: $1,000 off 85Feminize Your Canon: Violet Trefusis by Emma Garman How to protect your bitcoins from Spectre and Meltdown Hollywood stars will bring activists to the Golden Globes Apple releases iOS, MacOS updates to patch Spectre vulnerabilities The first draft of that steamed hams script from 'The Simpsons' was excellent too Guillermo Del Toro totally shut down the Golden Globes' attempt to hurry up his speech Here's what to know to be part of the lawsuits against Intel Kia adds Google Assistant to its new cars FX says it didn't know about Louis C.K.'s sexual misconduct Sound Dimension's Soundots speakers stack like legos 'Call Me By Your Name' is the rare case when movie should precede book GoPro announces layoffs, end of drone business Golden Globes 2018: The full winners list HP issues a recall for laptop batteries that melted and charred LG's new 4K TVs come with both Google Assistant voice controls 'Three Billboards' and 'Lady Bird' win Best Picture at Golden Globes What happens when governments get into cryptocurrency New drone tech could make crashes a thing of the past LG robots are here to serve, with some kinks Dell XPS 13 2018 hands on: Thinner, lighter and USB LG to show its drool
1.5595s , 10132.9296875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Nun in Rope Hell (1984) full movie】,Exquisite Information Network