The entire episode is fraught with Kafkaesque expressionism and dystopian overtones. If the world says democracy, then democracy will perish; if everyone praises freedom, then freedom will die. After watching Black Mirror, I realized that this country is still producing Orwell. E01 The National Anthem Technological homicidal, group-polarized satire. From the Prime Minister's pajamas and the uniforms of important ministers, the thick black is revealed, and the last paragraph is like a national mourning shooting method that sends chills down the spine. Thousands of people are vying to watch the prime minister fuck a pig and save the United States in a dilemma, and the ferocious information spread on the Internet is mixed. The whole story is nothing more than a game made by an artist. This behavioral experiment has no political appeal. It is just a game played by pessimists with secret hopes. Like God, there is a righteous man in Sodom, and the artist is waiting for anyone in the world. Not bound by the screen, go to the street to find the princess. His suicide was out of disappointment with the result, convinced that the supreme power is in the hands of bottomless spreaders and can willingly die as a deception. The Internet has made the world a stage, and there is no difference between spectators and actors. The irresponsibility of human nature finally turns comedy into tragedy, and tragedy into comedy. E02 Fifth Million Merits In the era of consumerism entertaining to the death, not only vulgarity itself has become a consumer product, but even the anger and despair of this era of consumption has also become a consumption. When he used his own life to say that declaration of resistance, he finally surrendered to this society that had been corrupted by consumerism. Isn't this the society in which we have been and will be in the future? People feel social injustice only because they are not the beneficiaries. Use entertainment to suppress resistance. When you become a vested interest, will you still fight for others? E03 The Entire History Of You If you put everything under the microscope, everything is dirty. Remembering too clearly is not necessarily a good thing, it allows the good to stay and the flaws nowhere to hide. Lingering on old memories doesn't make much sense. Memory is the most precious treasure and the most terrible enemy. When you can look at memories at will and zoom in on their analysis, you'll never get out. The whole season is a mockery of the contemporary "right to know" so glorified, whether it is political taboos or people's livelihood sentiments. Those who insist on the truth in every episode are defeated, whether it is the artist in E01, the black brother in E02, or the memoir in E03, the only necessities of life for human beings are lies, and the "right to know" can only be equally affected. Survive the sale as a commodity. Every episode ends with the feeling of being blown by a gust of cold wind. In the face of God's work, I can only be silent.
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