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Crocodile (Black Mirror)

"Crocodile" is the third episode of the fourth series of the anthology series Black Mirror. It was written by series creator Charlie Brooker and directed by John Hillcoat. The episode first aired on Netflix, along with the rest of series four, on 29 December 2017.

"Crocodile"
Black Mirror episode
Promotional poster released as part of the "13 Days of Black Mirror"
Episode no.Series 4
Episode 3
Directed byJohn Hillcoat
Written byCharlie Brooker
Original release date29 December 2017 (2017-12-29)
Running time59 minutes
Guest appearances
Episode chronology
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List of episodes

The episode follows Mia (Andrea Riseborough) fifteen years after she helped her friend Rob (Andrew Gower) cover up a hit-and-run death, as she commits several murders in order to cover up her past crimes. Meanwhile, Shazia (Kiran Sonia Sawar) is an insurance investigator who uses a "Recaller" that can project people's visual memories onto a screen. The writers were inspired by Nordic noir and by a similar memory technology in series one's "The Entire History of You". The first draft featured a male protagonist and Scotland as its setting. It was filmed in Iceland.

The episode garnered mixed reviews. Critics mostly found its bleakness and violence to be excessive, with further criticism of the plot twists. Some reviewers found the Recaller technology to be interesting, but not meaningfully explored by the episode. Riseborough and Sawar's acting, as well as the visual aesthetics, were acclaimed.

Plot

Driving intoxicated after a party, Rob (Andrew Gower) hits a cyclist on a mountain road, killing him. Rob's companion Mia Nolan (Andrea Riseborough) helps him throw the body off a cliff into a lake.

Fifteen years later, Mia is married with a nine-year-old son and works as an architect. After she delivers an important presentation, a newly-sober Rob meets her at her hotel. He is going to write an anonymous letter to the victim's wife, after seeing a news article indicating she never moved on, but Mia is afraid the letter will be traced. An argument ensues and Mia breaks Rob's neck, killing him. Out of the window, she notices a self-driving pizza delivery truck hit a pedestrian. Playing pornography in the room as an alibi, she disposes of Rob's body.

The pedestrian is visited by Shazia (Kiran Sonia Sawar), an insurance investigator who uses a "Recaller" to view his memories, as best as he can picture them, on a screen. She finds a woman he passed on the street before the incident, who directs her to a dentist, who saw Mia looking at the accident from her hotel room. In each case Shazia makes them smell beer from the nearby brewery and replays a song that played in a passing car to strengthen their memories. Hoping to get bonus pay from a quick investigation, Shazia makes a lengthy drive to meet Mia.

A tense Mia only allows Shazia in when told that refusal will be reported to the police. Mia tries to divert her memory away from the accident but fails, and Shazia sees memories of both of her killings. Shazia tries to leave but her car does not start and Mia smashes the window, knocks her out and ties her up in a shed.

Mia disbelieves Shazia's promise to keep the information secret, and uses the Recaller to learn that she told her husband Anan (Anthony Welsh) whom she was visiting. Mia kills Shazia, drives to her house and, masked, kills Anan as he bathes. As Mia exits, having removed her mask, she sees the couple's baby son babbling in front of her and kills him so as not to leave a witness. However, the baby was born blind.

Police use the Recaller on the baby's pet guinea pig, which had observed the final murder. Officers then quietly arrive at the ending of Mia's son's school production of Bugsy Malone, where she is in the audience.

Production

Whilst series one and two of Black Mirror were shown on Channel 4 in the UK, in September 2015 Netflix commissioned the series for 12 episodes,[1] and in March 2016 it outbid Channel 4 for the rights to distribute the series in the UK, with an offer of $40 million.[2] The twelve-episode order was divided into two series of six episodes each, with "Crocodile" in the latter group. The six episodes in series four were released on Netflix simultaneously on 29 December 2017.[3] "Crocodile" is listed as the third episode, but as Black Mirror is an anthology series, each instalment can be watched in any order.[4]

Writing and casting

The episode was written by the series creator Charlie Brooker, with Annabel Jones as executive producer. It was inspired by the series one episode "The Entire History of You", which featured a personal implant that a person could use privately to review their memories. According to Jones, they considered what the situation would be like if these memories were not private, developing a "cat-and-mouse type drama" that would highlight the importance of memories, and to what lengths someone with a secret would go to conceal them.[5]

In its original form, the script involved a woman who, at the age of two, had seen her mother die, causing her to become an anxious and fearful person. Brooker compared this to a virtual reality trip down a jungle river with random events: one person may have an enjoyable experience despite some negative happenstances, but an unlucky person may be attacked by a crocodile almost immediately and, thinking that they are in a "crocodile attack simulator", be anxious for the rest of the game. While the script significantly changed over the course of production, the title was established as "Crocodile" because of this analogy.[6][7]

The episode was initially conceived with a male protagonist. Andrea Riseborough read the script to audition for the insurance investigator, who was later renamed Shazia and played by Kiran Sonia Sawar.[7] However, Riseborough liked the journey of the protagonist and asked if the part could be rewritten as a woman.[8] Both Brooker and Jones described the change as interesting, with Jones asking, "How often do you see a mother reduced to this level of desperation?"[8][9] Though they questioned whether a woman would have the physical strength to dispose of a body, Riseborough argued that her character could find that strength in desperation. Brooker commented that "the panicking male murderer is practically a trope", so the gender change was "refreshing".[7]

The episode ends with Mia killing Shazia's son, who turns out to be blind, and her murder is witnessed by a guinea pig. This was intended as dark humour in the tone of 1996 black comedy thriller Fargo, though the episode had been more serious up until that point. Mia then watches her son in a stage adaptation of the 1976 musical film Bugsy Malone, which starred Jodie Foster—the director of the preceding episode "Arkangel".[7]

Filming

 
Though set in Scotland, the episode was filmed at locations in Iceland including Harpa.

The episode was directed by John Hillcoat, who described the episode as a "pitch-black comedy of errors". Hillcoat said that "Crocodile" is about "how human beings actually work and how we would respond to something the tech revolution may well bring into our lives".[7] The memory reader technology was conceived by Brooker with the arcade machine for Space Invaders in mind. Production designer Joel Collins compares it to a slide viewer, contrasting with the thin screens of contemporary devices. After the memory reader was designed, other technology in the episode such as the pizza truck were re-designed with similar box styles.[7]

The episode was shot in Iceland and includes scenes filmed in the Harpa concert hall.[8] Brooker had originally called for filming in Scotland in his script, but he later said that Netflix suggested Iceland as a "stunning backdrop".[10] Hillcoat commented that the "cruel inescapable logic" of Mia's actions were suited for Icelandic "strange, vast and primeval landscapes".[7] During filming, Iceland had its largest snowfall in forty years.[10] The scenes involving the pizza van were the worst affected, with shooting taking place over two nights. Snow needed to be continually brushed and special effects teams used heaters and hoses on important areas in frame. A line of dialogue about snow was added, the intention being that the difference in snow was a consequence of observers' differing memories.[7][10]

Riseborough's performance as Mia was less panicked than Brooker had pictured when writing the episode. Hillcoat opined that Mia has ambition as a "deep inner flaw", whereas Jones thought her actions was a "logical inevitability" of her initially protecting her friend Rob. Brooker said that Mia "really turns" when she hides Rob's body, rather than confessing to causing his death. In her first rehearsal, Riseborough injured her ribs. Sawar found the scene in which her character Shazia was killed by Mia difficult to film, and was unable to watch the scene in the finished episode.[7]

Marketing

External video
  Black Mirror – Crocodile
Trailer for "Crocodile"
  Black Mirror – Featurette: Crocodile
Commentary by Charlie Brooker and Annabel Jones

In May 2017, a Reddit post unofficially announced the names and directors of the six episodes in series 4 of Black Mirror.[11] The first trailer for the series was released by Netflix on 25 August 2017, and contained the six episode titles.[12][13] Beginning on 24 November 2017, Netflix published a series of daily posters and trailers for the fourth series, referred to as the "13 Days of Black Mirror".[14] The trailer for "Crocodile" was the second to be released, on 27 November 2017.[15] On 6 December, Netflix published a trailer featuring an amalgamation of scenes from the fourth series, which announced that the series would be released on 29 December.[16]

Analysis

The writers were inspired by the aesthetic of Nordic noir, a genre of crime fiction in the Nordic countries.[17][18] David Sims of The Atlantic additionally identified elements of psychological thriller, and Charles Bramesco of Vulture found "a familiar series of law-and-order beats".[19][20] Shazia has the "detective role" in the story, according to Nick Harley of Den of Geek.[21] Harley and The Guardian's Lanre Bakare both found it one of the bleakest episodes of Black Mirror, and Paste's Jacob Oller wrote that there was an "unrelenting pessimism at the heart of the story".[21][22][23]

Critics suggested various motivations or emotions behind Mia's actions. Louisa Mellor of Den of Geek found her to be "traumatised by her actions but ... stuck on a murderous path from which she can't turn back".[18] The Telegraph's Chris Harvey saw a message that "there in all of us, a long way down" is the propensity to murder.[24] Prior to her killing spree, Bramesco found that Mia was "trying her best to be a dutiful mother and wife while pursuing excellence as an architecture expert".[20] Writing for The Verge, Laura Hudson viewed that Mia "benefits from the presumption of innocence" as a white woman, and that she is "effective" as "an unlikely killer". Hudson noted that most of Mia's victims are people of colour and drew comparisons to Get Out (2017), a horror film which she said "positioned white femininity as the canny, quiet heart of its violence".[25] Oller saw Mia's predicament as like the video game Until Dawn (2015), describing that in the game "your every decision begins a series of butterfly effects".[23]

 
The title "Crocodile" originated from an idea in the initial script, but reviewers drew connections to Mia possibly expressing "crocodile tears".

Some critics drew connections between the title and the idiom "crocodile tears", which refers to insincere expressions of sorrow. Rosie Fletcher of Digital Spy commented that Mia is seen crying in the episode, and initially seems much more emotional than Rob about the car crash death, but Fletcher says that she becomes "a completely ruthless and cold killer".[26] Zack Handlen, a reviewer for The A.V. Club, saw an ambiguity over whether Mia's grief was insincere, suggesting that it could be "all for show" or because "no matter how awful she feels, she keeps pushing forward".[27] Hudson compared her "pseudo-sympathetic tears" to a line from Shakespeare's Hamlet that a person can "smile and smile and smile and be a villain".[25] Jason Koebler of Vice noted that Mia does not read the End-User License Agreement (EULA) for the Recaller, and suggests that Shazia is lying about the "legal requirement" to use the Recaller, as she previously implied Mia could opt out. Thus, Mia reading the EULA could have allowed her to decline, and the later murders would not have happened.[28]

Kevin P. Sullivan of Entertainment Weekly saw the technology in the episode as "the means to another end and a different message entirely", though Hudson wrote that it was "hard to identify a takeaway".[29] Some questions were raised by the Recaller. Hudson said it was "an obvious proxy for the increasingly invasive ways our lives are surveilled, from cameras to face-recognition to data theft".[25] Handlen viewed that the episode asks: "Is it ethical to force people to reveal their memories? Is it just another form of police questioning, or something more sinister?"[27] Alissa Wilkinson of Vox found it "frightening" that "memories are not just unreliable, but suggestible". In the episode, one person's memory is seen to change when Shazia tells the person what colour a woman's jacket was. Wilkinson thought that this could be misused by a malicious employee in the justice system.[30]

In January 2018, Toyota announced its self-driving delivery vehicle, the e-Palette. One of their partnerships was with Pizza Hut, to create a self-driving pizza delivery truck. This led to comparisons to the truck with the same function in "Crocodile".[31] The official Twitter account for Black Mirror replied to the announcement with "We know how this goes."[32]

Comparisons were made to other Black Mirror episodes. In terms of the genre, Bramesco found that the instalment "pivots into a two-pronged procedural" like that of "Hated in the Nation".[20] In relation to the technology, the "grain" in "The Entire History of You" records one's vision and hearing exactly, whereas in "Crocodile" the Recaller is dependent on imperfect recollections.[21] In "Crocodile", the song "Anyone Who Knows What Love Is (Will Understand)" plays—it became a recurring feature of Black Mirror after Abi sang it in "Fifteen Million Merits". The talent show Hot Shots and pornography channel WraithBabes, two other features of "Fifteen Million Merits", are also mentioned in "Crocodile". Other "Easter egg" references to Black Mirror instalments include the appearance of UKN, a news channel from "The National Anthem", and the pizza company Fence's, which also features in "USS Callister". A newspaper article briefly shown also contains the text: "Of course the real question is why anyone would pause what they're watching just to read a sentence in a printed out newspaper article, says a voice in your head — before advising you to go and share this finding on Reddit".[33][34][35]

Reception

The episode received mixed critical reception, with consensus that the technological themes could have been explored further and that the ending was gratuitously dark, but that the characters were well-acted and the setting was aesthetically pleasing. On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the episode received positive reviews from 53% of 19 critics, with an average rating of 6.39/10. The site's summary says that the episode is "beautiful but blunt" and that its "nightmarish concept can't quite overcome its own shallow nihilism."[36] Out of five stars, the episode received a rating of three stars in Vulture and The Telegraph and 2.5 stars in Den of Geek.[20][21][24] Additionally, Paste rated it 7.1 out of 10 and The A.V. Club gave it a B−.[23][27]

Handlen said that the episode was the "thinnest from a conceptual standpoint" of the series four episodes, that there was "not a lot to this story" and that its plot becomes "clear" when the Recaller's functionality is established.[27] Wilkinson wrote that it "doesn't feel all that innovative" and Sims felt "emotionally and intellectually unfilfilled". Harvey said it was "a little too predictable". In contrast, Mellor had a more positive response, calling it "stunning to look at, very sick and very funny".[18] Critics mostly found the bleakness to be unjustified: Vulture's Jen Chaney wrote that it was "filled with so much brutal, senseless violence", comparing it unfavourably to the episode "Black Museum".[37] Harley saw it as "grossly over the top" and "the most mean-spirited" Black Mirror episode to date.[21] Sims wrote that it "didn't seem to have much of a deeper point".[19]

Reviewing for Wired, James Temperton said that the episode "raises genuinely interesting questions about technological advancement", though there is a question of how the Recaller would become "universally accepted".[17] Hudson saw the design of the Recall as having "a lot of potential" that "is largely wasted" and Harley concurred that the episode "never really takes advantage" of the idea of "distortions of recalled events".[21][25] Similarly, Handlen said it was "frustrating how much time the episode spends developing its technology without that development actually leading to anything relevant".[27] Sims wrote that "there seemed to be no broader message to justify the horror".[19] However, Harvey saw the Recaller as "a fascinating example of how science-fiction does not need vast budgets to play with interesting ideas".[24]

The ending was mostly criticised. Handlen summarised: "while both reveals are unexpected, neither of them illuminate anything that came before it".[27] Hudson saw the "dramatic irony" in the baby's blindness, but critiqued that "it arrives abruptly and without setup".[25] Bramesco saw the twist that the baby was blind as "needlessly cruel" and Bakare analysed that it was "a step too far for many".[20][22] Hudson said that the guinea pig being used to catch Mia "makes no sense, even within the episode's techno-mythos", though Mellor found this twist funny.[18][25] Oller said that the ending overall was "written well enough that the dread precedes the groans", but contained "enough overkill" and was "more than a bit silly".[18][23]

 
John Hillcoat's directing received praise.

The acting received acclaim, although Mia's character was criticised. Sullivan lauded that "Riseborough's performance is as close to undeniable as they come".[29] Sims said she was a "wonderful actress" and "almost sold [him] on Mia's abrupt descent into darkness early on in this episode".[19] Harley said that she was "steely and reserved" but shows emotion "at all of the right times", so that Mia does not become "a complete heartless sadist".[21] In contrast, The Independent's Jacob Stolworthy saw her as "perhaps the most unlikeable creation to have featured in Black Mirror" to that point, and it was "unclear" whether that was intentional.[38] Chaney said that Mia's actions "seem completely out of character" given her initial behaviour after the car crash.[37] Sawar was praised, with Harley saying that she employed a "bright, plucky determinism" as Shazia.[21] Oller said that her "professionalism and personal touch" was "endearing" and desirable in a detective character.[23] Additionally, Sims found it pleasant to see Shazia assembling information "methodically but with empathy and care".[19]

The aesthetics were praised: for instance, Hudson found them "austere and beautiful" and Temperton commented that the episode "looks magnificent".[17][25] Handlen said: "The Icelandic setting is gorgeous, managing to convey the characters' isolation and vulnerability with visuals alone".[27] Hillcoat was praised for his directing work by Stolworthy, who found the episode "often stylistically pleasing".[38] Oller enjoyed the "unflinching, up-close grotesquery" in his direction.[23] Chaney saw Hillcoat as "summoning a frostbitten grimness from forbidding territory", made possible by the "vivid, evocative setting".[20]

Episode rankings

"Crocodile" received middling rankings on critics' lists of the 23 instalments of Black Mirror by quality, from best to worst:

IndieWire authors ranked the 22 Black Mirror instalments excluding Bandersnatch by quality, putting "Crocodile" in last place.[47] Eric Anthony Glover of Entertainment Tonight found the episode to be second-worst of the 19 episodes from series one to four.[48] Instead of by quality, Proma Khosla of Mashable ranked the episodes by tone, concluding that "Crocodile" is the 12th-most pessimistic episode of the show.[49]

Other reviewers ranked "Crocodile" against other series four episodes:

  • 4th (grade: C+) – TVLine[50]
  • 5th – Christopher Hooton, Jacob Stolworthy, The Independent[51]

References

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External links

crocodile, black, mirror, crocodile, third, episode, fourth, series, anthology, series, black, mirror, written, series, creator, charlie, brooker, directed, john, hillcoat, episode, first, aired, netflix, along, with, rest, series, four, december, 2017, crocod. Crocodile is the third episode of the fourth series of the anthology series Black Mirror It was written by series creator Charlie Brooker and directed by John Hillcoat The episode first aired on Netflix along with the rest of series four on 29 December 2017 Crocodile Black Mirror episodePromotional poster released as part of the 13 Days of Black Mirror Episode no Series 4 Episode 3Directed byJohn HillcoatWritten byCharlie BrookerOriginal release date29 December 2017 2017 12 29 Running time59 minutesGuest appearancesAndrea Riseborough as Mia Nolan Kiran Sonia Sawar as Shazia Akhand Andrew Gower as Rob Anthony Welsh as Anan Akhand Claire Rushbrook as DetectiveEpisode chronology Previous Arkangel Next Hang the DJ List of episodesThe episode follows Mia Andrea Riseborough fifteen years after she helped her friend Rob Andrew Gower cover up a hit and run death as she commits several murders in order to cover up her past crimes Meanwhile Shazia Kiran Sonia Sawar is an insurance investigator who uses a Recaller that can project people s visual memories onto a screen The writers were inspired by Nordic noir and by a similar memory technology in series one s The Entire History of You The first draft featured a male protagonist and Scotland as its setting It was filmed in Iceland The episode garnered mixed reviews Critics mostly found its bleakness and violence to be excessive with further criticism of the plot twists Some reviewers found the Recaller technology to be interesting but not meaningfully explored by the episode Riseborough and Sawar s acting as well as the visual aesthetics were acclaimed Contents 1 Plot 2 Production 2 1 Writing and casting 2 2 Filming 3 Marketing 4 Analysis 5 Reception 5 1 Episode rankings 6 References 7 External linksPlot EditDriving intoxicated after a party Rob Andrew Gower hits a cyclist on a mountain road killing him Rob s companion Mia Nolan Andrea Riseborough helps him throw the body off a cliff into a lake Fifteen years later Mia is married with a nine year old son and works as an architect After she delivers an important presentation a newly sober Rob meets her at her hotel He is going to write an anonymous letter to the victim s wife after seeing a news article indicating she never moved on but Mia is afraid the letter will be traced An argument ensues and Mia breaks Rob s neck killing him Out of the window she notices a self driving pizza delivery truck hit a pedestrian Playing pornography in the room as an alibi she disposes of Rob s body The pedestrian is visited by Shazia Kiran Sonia Sawar an insurance investigator who uses a Recaller to view his memories as best as he can picture them on a screen She finds a woman he passed on the street before the incident who directs her to a dentist who saw Mia looking at the accident from her hotel room In each case Shazia makes them smell beer from the nearby brewery and replays a song that played in a passing car to strengthen their memories Hoping to get bonus pay from a quick investigation Shazia makes a lengthy drive to meet Mia A tense Mia only allows Shazia in when told that refusal will be reported to the police Mia tries to divert her memory away from the accident but fails and Shazia sees memories of both of her killings Shazia tries to leave but her car does not start and Mia smashes the window knocks her out and ties her up in a shed Mia disbelieves Shazia s promise to keep the information secret and uses the Recaller to learn that she told her husband Anan Anthony Welsh whom she was visiting Mia kills Shazia drives to her house and masked kills Anan as he bathes As Mia exits having removed her mask she sees the couple s baby son babbling in front of her and kills him so as not to leave a witness However the baby was born blind Police use the Recaller on the baby s pet guinea pig which had observed the final murder Officers then quietly arrive at the ending of Mia s son s school production of Bugsy Malone where she is in the audience Production EditWhilst series one and two of Black Mirror were shown on Channel 4 in the UK in September 2015 Netflix commissioned the series for 12 episodes 1 and in March 2016 it outbid Channel 4 for the rights to distribute the series in the UK with an offer of 40 million 2 The twelve episode order was divided into two series of six episodes each with Crocodile in the latter group The six episodes in series four were released on Netflix simultaneously on 29 December 2017 3 Crocodile is listed as the third episode but as Black Mirror is an anthology series each instalment can be watched in any order 4 Writing and casting Edit The episode was written by the series creator Charlie Brooker with Annabel Jones as executive producer It was inspired by the series one episode The Entire History of You which featured a personal implant that a person could use privately to review their memories According to Jones they considered what the situation would be like if these memories were not private developing a cat and mouse type drama that would highlight the importance of memories and to what lengths someone with a secret would go to conceal them 5 In its original form the script involved a woman who at the age of two had seen her mother die causing her to become an anxious and fearful person Brooker compared this to a virtual reality trip down a jungle river with random events one person may have an enjoyable experience despite some negative happenstances but an unlucky person may be attacked by a crocodile almost immediately and thinking that they are in a crocodile attack simulator be anxious for the rest of the game While the script significantly changed over the course of production the title was established as Crocodile because of this analogy 6 7 The episode was initially conceived with a male protagonist Andrea Riseborough read the script to audition for the insurance investigator who was later renamed Shazia and played by Kiran Sonia Sawar 7 However Riseborough liked the journey of the protagonist and asked if the part could be rewritten as a woman 8 Both Brooker and Jones described the change as interesting with Jones asking How often do you see a mother reduced to this level of desperation 8 9 Though they questioned whether a woman would have the physical strength to dispose of a body Riseborough argued that her character could find that strength in desperation Brooker commented that the panicking male murderer is practically a trope so the gender change was refreshing 7 The episode ends with Mia killing Shazia s son who turns out to be blind and her murder is witnessed by a guinea pig This was intended as dark humour in the tone of 1996 black comedy thriller Fargo though the episode had been more serious up until that point Mia then watches her son in a stage adaptation of the 1976 musical film Bugsy Malone which starred Jodie Foster the director of the preceding episode Arkangel 7 Filming Edit Though set in Scotland the episode was filmed at locations in Iceland including Harpa The episode was directed by John Hillcoat who described the episode as a pitch black comedy of errors Hillcoat said that Crocodile is about how human beings actually work and how we would respond to something the tech revolution may well bring into our lives 7 The memory reader technology was conceived by Brooker with the arcade machine for Space Invaders in mind Production designer Joel Collins compares it to a slide viewer contrasting with the thin screens of contemporary devices After the memory reader was designed other technology in the episode such as the pizza truck were re designed with similar box styles 7 The episode was shot in Iceland and includes scenes filmed in the Harpa concert hall 8 Brooker had originally called for filming in Scotland in his script but he later said that Netflix suggested Iceland as a stunning backdrop 10 Hillcoat commented that the cruel inescapable logic of Mia s actions were suited for Icelandic strange vast and primeval landscapes 7 During filming Iceland had its largest snowfall in forty years 10 The scenes involving the pizza van were the worst affected with shooting taking place over two nights Snow needed to be continually brushed and special effects teams used heaters and hoses on important areas in frame A line of dialogue about snow was added the intention being that the difference in snow was a consequence of observers differing memories 7 10 Riseborough s performance as Mia was less panicked than Brooker had pictured when writing the episode Hillcoat opined that Mia has ambition as a deep inner flaw whereas Jones thought her actions was a logical inevitability of her initially protecting her friend Rob Brooker said that Mia really turns when she hides Rob s body rather than confessing to causing his death In her first rehearsal Riseborough injured her ribs Sawar found the scene in which her character Shazia was killed by Mia difficult to film and was unable to watch the scene in the finished episode 7 Marketing EditExternal video Black Mirror CrocodileTrailer for Crocodile Black Mirror Featurette CrocodileCommentary by Charlie Brooker and Annabel JonesIn May 2017 a Reddit post unofficially announced the names and directors of the six episodes in series 4 of Black Mirror 11 The first trailer for the series was released by Netflix on 25 August 2017 and contained the six episode titles 12 13 Beginning on 24 November 2017 Netflix published a series of daily posters and trailers for the fourth series referred to as the 13 Days of Black Mirror 14 The trailer for Crocodile was the second to be released on 27 November 2017 15 On 6 December Netflix published a trailer featuring an amalgamation of scenes from the fourth series which announced that the series would be released on 29 December 16 Analysis EditThe writers were inspired by the aesthetic of Nordic noir a genre of crime fiction in the Nordic countries 17 18 David Sims of The Atlantic additionally identified elements of psychological thriller and Charles Bramesco of Vulture found a familiar series of law and order beats 19 20 Shazia has the detective role in the story according to Nick Harley of Den of Geek 21 Harley and The Guardian s Lanre Bakare both found it one of the bleakest episodes of Black Mirror and Paste s Jacob Oller wrote that there was an unrelenting pessimism at the heart of the story 21 22 23 Critics suggested various motivations or emotions behind Mia s actions Louisa Mellor of Den of Geek found her to be traumatised by her actions but stuck on a murderous path from which she can t turn back 18 The Telegraph s Chris Harvey saw a message that there in all of us a long way down is the propensity to murder 24 Prior to her killing spree Bramesco found that Mia was trying her best to be a dutiful mother and wife while pursuing excellence as an architecture expert 20 Writing for The Verge Laura Hudson viewed that Mia benefits from the presumption of innocence as a white woman and that she is effective as an unlikely killer Hudson noted that most of Mia s victims are people of colour and drew comparisons to Get Out 2017 a horror film which she said positioned white femininity as the canny quiet heart of its violence 25 Oller saw Mia s predicament as like the video game Until Dawn 2015 describing that in the game your every decision begins a series of butterfly effects 23 The title Crocodile originated from an idea in the initial script but reviewers drew connections to Mia possibly expressing crocodile tears Some critics drew connections between the title and the idiom crocodile tears which refers to insincere expressions of sorrow Rosie Fletcher of Digital Spy commented that Mia is seen crying in the episode and initially seems much more emotional than Rob about the car crash death but Fletcher says that she becomes a completely ruthless and cold killer 26 Zack Handlen a reviewer for The A V Club saw an ambiguity over whether Mia s grief was insincere suggesting that it could be all for show or because no matter how awful she feels she keeps pushing forward 27 Hudson compared her pseudo sympathetic tears to a line from Shakespeare s Hamlet that a person can smile and smile and smile and be a villain 25 Jason Koebler of Vice noted that Mia does not read the End User License Agreement EULA for the Recaller and suggests that Shazia is lying about the legal requirement to use the Recaller as she previously implied Mia could opt out Thus Mia reading the EULA could have allowed her to decline and the later murders would not have happened 28 Kevin P Sullivan of Entertainment Weekly saw the technology in the episode as the means to another end and a different message entirely though Hudson wrote that it was hard to identify a takeaway 29 Some questions were raised by the Recaller Hudson said it was an obvious proxy for the increasingly invasive ways our lives are surveilled from cameras to face recognition to data theft 25 Handlen viewed that the episode asks Is it ethical to force people to reveal their memories Is it just another form of police questioning or something more sinister 27 Alissa Wilkinson of Vox found it frightening that memories are not just unreliable but suggestible In the episode one person s memory is seen to change when Shazia tells the person what colour a woman s jacket was Wilkinson thought that this could be misused by a malicious employee in the justice system 30 In January 2018 Toyota announced its self driving delivery vehicle the e Palette One of their partnerships was with Pizza Hut to create a self driving pizza delivery truck This led to comparisons to the truck with the same function in Crocodile 31 The official Twitter account for Black Mirror replied to the announcement with We know how this goes 32 Comparisons were made to other Black Mirror episodes In terms of the genre Bramesco found that the instalment pivots into a two pronged procedural like that of Hated in the Nation 20 In relation to the technology the grain in The Entire History of You records one s vision and hearing exactly whereas in Crocodile the Recaller is dependent on imperfect recollections 21 In Crocodile the song Anyone Who Knows What Love Is Will Understand plays it became a recurring feature of Black Mirror after Abi sang it in Fifteen Million Merits The talent show Hot Shots and pornography channel WraithBabes two other features of Fifteen Million Merits are also mentioned in Crocodile Other Easter egg references to Black Mirror instalments include the appearance of UKN a news channel from The National Anthem and the pizza company Fence s which also features in USS Callister A newspaper article briefly shown also contains the text Of course the real question is why anyone would pause what they re watching just to read a sentence in a printed out newspaper article says a voice in your head before advising you to go and share this finding on Reddit 33 34 35 Reception EditThe episode received mixed critical reception with consensus that the technological themes could have been explored further and that the ending was gratuitously dark but that the characters were well acted and the setting was aesthetically pleasing On the review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the episode received positive reviews from 53 of 19 critics with an average rating of 6 39 10 The site s summary says that the episode is beautiful but blunt and that its nightmarish concept can t quite overcome its own shallow nihilism 36 Out of five stars the episode received a rating of three stars in Vulture and The Telegraph and 2 5 stars in Den of Geek 20 21 24 Additionally Paste rated it 7 1 out of 10 and The A V Club gave it a B 23 27 Handlen said that the episode was the thinnest from a conceptual standpoint of the series four episodes that there was not a lot to this story and that its plot becomes clear when the Recaller s functionality is established 27 Wilkinson wrote that it doesn t feel all that innovative and Sims felt emotionally and intellectually unfilfilled Harvey said it was a little too predictable In contrast Mellor had a more positive response calling it stunning to look at very sick and very funny 18 Critics mostly found the bleakness to be unjustified Vulture s Jen Chaney wrote that it was filled with so much brutal senseless violence comparing it unfavourably to the episode Black Museum 37 Harley saw it as grossly over the top and the most mean spirited Black Mirror episode to date 21 Sims wrote that it didn t seem to have much of a deeper point 19 Reviewing for Wired James Temperton said that the episode raises genuinely interesting questions about technological advancement though there is a question of how the Recaller would become universally accepted 17 Hudson saw the design of the Recall as having a lot of potential that is largely wasted and Harley concurred that the episode never really takes advantage of the idea of distortions of recalled events 21 25 Similarly Handlen said it was frustrating how much time the episode spends developing its technology without that development actually leading to anything relevant 27 Sims wrote that there seemed to be no broader message to justify the horror 19 However Harvey saw the Recaller as a fascinating example of how science fiction does not need vast budgets to play with interesting ideas 24 The ending was mostly criticised Handlen summarised while both reveals are unexpected neither of them illuminate anything that came before it 27 Hudson saw the dramatic irony in the baby s blindness but critiqued that it arrives abruptly and without setup 25 Bramesco saw the twist that the baby was blind as needlessly cruel and Bakare analysed that it was a step too far for many 20 22 Hudson said that the guinea pig being used to catch Mia makes no sense even within the episode s techno mythos though Mellor found this twist funny 18 25 Oller said that the ending overall was written well enough that the dread precedes the groans but contained enough overkill and was more than a bit silly 18 23 John Hillcoat s directing received praise The acting received acclaim although Mia s character was criticised Sullivan lauded that Riseborough s performance is as close to undeniable as they come 29 Sims said she was a wonderful actress and almost sold him on Mia s abrupt descent into darkness early on in this episode 19 Harley said that she was steely and reserved but shows emotion at all of the right times so that Mia does not become a complete heartless sadist 21 In contrast The Independent s Jacob Stolworthy saw her as perhaps the most unlikeable creation to have featured in Black Mirror to that point and it was unclear whether that was intentional 38 Chaney said that Mia s actions seem completely out of character given her initial behaviour after the car crash 37 Sawar was praised with Harley saying that she employed a bright plucky determinism as Shazia 21 Oller said that her professionalism and personal touch was endearing and desirable in a detective character 23 Additionally Sims found it pleasant to see Shazia assembling information methodically but with empathy and care 19 The aesthetics were praised for instance Hudson found them austere and beautiful and Temperton commented that the episode looks magnificent 17 25 Handlen said The Icelandic setting is gorgeous managing to convey the characters isolation and vulnerability with visuals alone 27 Hillcoat was praised for his directing work by Stolworthy who found the episode often stylistically pleasing 38 Oller enjoyed the unflinching up close grotesquery in his direction 23 Chaney saw Hillcoat as summoning a frostbitten grimness from forbidding territory made possible by the vivid evocative setting 20 Episode rankings Edit Crocodile received middling rankings on critics lists of the 23 instalments of Black Mirror by quality from best to worst 8th Travis Clark Business Insider 39 10th Corey Atad Esquire 40 11th Matt Donnelly and Tim Molloy TheWrap 41 12th Charles Bramesco Vulture 42 16th Aubrey Page Collider 43 17th Morgan Jeffery Digital Spy 44 18th James Hibberd Entertainment Weekly 45 19th Ed Power The Telegraph 46 IndieWire authors ranked the 22 Black Mirror instalments excluding Bandersnatch by quality putting Crocodile in last place 47 Eric Anthony Glover of Entertainment Tonight found the episode to be second worst of the 19 episodes from series one to four 48 Instead of by quality Proma Khosla of Mashable ranked the episodes by tone concluding that Crocodile is the 12th most pessimistic episode of the show 49 Other reviewers ranked Crocodile against other series four episodes 4th grade C TVLine 50 5th Christopher Hooton Jacob Stolworthy The Independent 51 References Edit Birnbaum Debra 25 September 2015 Black Mirror Lands at Netflix Variety Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 12 January 2021 Plunkett John 29 March 2016 Netflix deals Channel 4 knockout blow over Charlie Brooker s Black Mirror The Guardian Archived from the original on 30 December 2017 Retrieved 12 January 2021 Ling Thomas 7 December 2017 Black Mirror season 4 episode guide Charlie Brooker reveals new plot and episode details Radio Times Archived from the original on 10 December 2017 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Thomas Leah 29 December 2017 Watch The Black Mirror Season 4 Episodes In This Order For The Best Viewing Experience Bustle Archived from the original on 2 September 2018 Retrieved 2 September 2018 Turchiano Danielle 29 December 2017 Black Mirror Co Creator Breaks Down Season 4 We Want to Be Surprising and Unpredictable Variety Archived from the original on 31 December 2017 Retrieved 1 January 2018 Mellor Louisa 6 November 2018 Black Mirror Charlie Brooker Finally Explains Crocodile s Title Den of Geek Archived from the original on 6 November 2018 Retrieved 6 November 2018 a b c d e f g h i Brooker Charlie Jones Annabel Arnopp Jason November 2018 Crocodile Inside Black Mirror New 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e Sims David 30 December 2017 Black Mirror Crocodile Is a Nihilistic Nordic Noir The Atlantic Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f Bramesco Charles 29 December 2017 Black Mirror Recap Nothing Stays Buried Vulture Archived from the original on 12 January 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f g h Harley Nick 29 December 2017 Black Mirror Season 4 Episode 3 Review Crocodile Den of Geek Archived from the original on 9 August 2020 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b Bakare Lanre 3 January 2018 Black Mirror season four step away from your smartphone Discuss with spoilers The Guardian Archived from the original on 12 January 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f Oller Jacob 1 January 2018 Black Mirror Review Crocodile Constructs Its Point Beautifully Then Bludgeons It to Death Paste Archived from the original on 18 March 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c Harvey Chris 29 December 2017 Black Mirror season 4 Crocodile review a hoary predictable plot makes this one of the lesser episodes The Telegraph Archived from the original on 2 January 2019 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f g Hudson Laura 9 January 2018 Black Mirror s Crocodile lacks a meaningful perspective on surveillance or privacy The Verge Retrieved 14 March 2021 Fletcher Rosie 2 January 2018 What does title of Black Mirror s ep Crocodile mean Digital Spy Archived from the original on 25 November 2018 Retrieved 14 March 2021 a b c d e f g Handlen Zack 29 December 2017 Nothing stays forgotten on Black Mirror The A V Club Retrieved 14 March 2021 Koebler Jason 2 January 2018 Black Mirror Made a Murder Thriller About Overbearing Licensing Agreements Vice Archived from the original on 3 January 2018 Retrieved 9 January 2018 a b Sullivan Kevin P 29 December 2017 Black Mirror recap Crocodile Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 13 February 2021 Retrieved 14 March 2021 Wilkinson Alissa 29 December 2017 Black Mirror s Crocodile plumbs our memories and drags out what lurks in them Vox Archived from the 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Retrieved 17 February 2021 Bramesco Charles 21 October 2016 Every Black Mirror Episode Ranked Vulture Archived from the original on 12 March 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Page Aubrey 28 October 2016 Every Black Mirror Episode Ranked From Worst to Best Collider Archived from the original on 2 February 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Jeffery Morgan 9 April 2017 Ranking all 23 episodes of Charlie Brooker s chilling Black Mirror Digital Spy Archived from the original on 6 August 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Hibberd James 23 October 2016 Every Black Mirror Episode Ranked including season 5 Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on 18 March 2021 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Power Ed 28 December 2017 Black Mirror every episode ranked and rated from Striking Vipers to San Junipero The Telegraph Archived from the original on 1 January 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Greene Steve Nguyen Hanh Miller Liz Shannon 24 November 2017 Every Black Mirror Episode Ranked From Worst to Best IndieWire Archived from the original on 29 August 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2020 Glover Eric Anthony 22 December 2017 Every Black Mirror Episode Ranked From Worst to Best Entertainment Tonight Archived from the original on 1 August 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2020 Khosla Proma 5 January 2018 Every Black Mirror episode ever ranked by overall dread Mashable Archived from the original on 8 March 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Black Mirror Season 4 Episodes Ranked TVLine 29 December 2017 Archived from the original on 12 January 2021 Retrieved 17 February 2021 Hooton Christopher Stolworthy Jacob 29 December 2017 Netflix s Black Mirror season four Every episode ranked The Independent Archived from the original on 20 January 2018 Retrieved 17 February 2021 External links Edit Crocodile at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crocodile Black Mirror amp oldid 1170594602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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