fbpx
Wikipedia

Halt and Catch Fire (TV series)

Halt and Catch Fire is an American period drama television series created by Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C. Rogers. It aired on the cable network AMC in the United States from June 1, 2014, to October 14, 2017, spanning four seasons and 40 episodes.[1][2] It depicts a fictionalized insider's view of the personal computer revolution of the 1980s and the early days of the World Wide Web in the early 1990s.[3] The show's title refers to computer machine code instruction Halt and Catch Fire (HCF), the execution of which would cause the computer's central processing unit to cease meaningful operation (and in an exaggeration, catch fire).[4]

Halt and Catch Fire
GenrePeriod drama
Created by
Starring
Theme music composerTrentemøller
ComposerPaul Haslinger
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons4
No. of episodes40 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Christopher Cantwell
  • Christopher C. Rogers
  • Jonathan Lisco
  • Mark Johnson
  • Melissa Bernstein
Production location
Cinematography
Camera setupSingle-camera
Running time41–54 minutes
Production companies
  • AMC Studios
  • Gran Via Productions
  • Lockjaw Productions
  • 320 Sycamore
  • Sic Semper Tyrannis
Original release
NetworkAMC
ReleaseJune 1, 2014 (2014-06-01) –
October 14, 2017 (2017-10-14)

In season one, the fictional company Cardiff Electric makes its first foray into personal computing with a project to build an IBM PC clone, led by entrepreneur Joe MacMillan (Lee Pace) with the help of computer engineer Gordon Clark (Scoot McNairy) and prodigy programmer Cameron Howe (Mackenzie Davis). Seasons two and three shift focus to a startup company, the online community Mutiny, headed by Cameron and Gordon's wife Donna (Kerry Bishé), while Joe ventures out on his own. The fourth and final season focuses on competing web search engines involving all the principal characters.

Halt and Catch Fire marked the first jobs that Cantwell and Rogers had in the television industry. They wrote the pilot hoping to use it to secure jobs as writers, but they instead landed their own series with AMC. The initial inspiration for the series was drawn from Cantwell's childhood in the Dallas–Fort Worth area, located within northern Texas's Silicon Prairie, where his father worked as a software salesman. The creators subsequently researched the contributions of Texan firms to the emerging personal computing industry during the 1980s. Self-produced by the network and mostly filmed in the Atlanta, Georgia, area, the series is set in the Silicon Prairie for its first two seasons and Silicon Valley for its latter two.[5][6]

Halt and Catch Fire experienced low viewership ratings throughout its run, with only the first episode surpassing one million viewers for its initial broadcast. The series debuted to generally favorable reviews, though many critics initially found it derivative of other series such as Mad Men. In each subsequent season, the series grew in acclaim, and by the time it concluded, critics considered it among the greatest shows of the 2010s. In 2022, Rolling Stone ranked it the 55th-greatest television series of all time, based on a poll of 46 actors, writers, producers, and critics.

Premise edit

Taking place over a period of more than ten years, Halt and Catch Fire depicts a fictionalized insider's view of the personal computer revolution of the 1980s and the early days of the World Wide Web in the early 1990s. The series begins in 1983, just as IBM is cornering the personal computer market with the IBM PC. Entrepreneur Joe MacMillan joins Cardiff Electric, a fictional Dallas-based mainframe software company, and has a vision of building a revolutionary computer to challenge IBM. For the project, he enlists the help of computer engineer Gordon Clark and prodigy programmer Cameron Howe. Taking advantage of the open architecture of the IBM PC, the characters reverse engineer its BIOS and set out to build a clone called the "Giant", but obstacles both internal and external threaten to derail the project. Halt and Catch Fire follows the protagonists' endeavors in the computing industry, their shifting partnerships and competitive relationships, and the personal costs of pursuing their professional ambitions.

Cast and characters edit

Main edit

 
Lee Pace portrayed Joe MacMillan.
  • Lee Pace as Joe MacMillan: an entrepreneur and former IBM sales executive who joins Cardiff Electric and instigates a project to reverse engineer the IBM PC.[7] Joe is a charismatic, slick-talking businessman and a tech visionary obsessed with pursuing "the next big thing",[8][9] despite lacking technical skills.[10] Owing to his original conception as an antihero,[11] Joe uses manipulative tactics in his endeavors,[8][12] bending people to his will to get what he wants.[13] He is portrayed as an enigmatic figure with a dark backstory,[14] having left IBM under mysterious circumstances.[15] The Sydney Morning Herald described Joe as an "acutely damaged man underneath the slick suits, bravado and motivational speak",[16] while Pace said his character was hiding behind a persona.[11] Critics compared Joe to the Mad Men character Don Draper.[17][18][19] In subsequent seasons, Joe is humbled by his professional failures and how his actions affect other people, and as he comes to terms with his behavior, he becomes a more empathetic character.[20][21][22][23] Pace said that Joe's bisexuality was a reflection of the character being a "mutable person", "a questioner and a disrupter", and someone who "doesn't feel limitations".[24] The idea for the character was inspired by co-creator Christopher Cantwell's father, who was a software salesman. For Joe's personality, Pace recalled "corporate raiders and that kind of spirit of '80s excess" upon reading the pilot,[25] and he took inspiration from real-life figures Steve Jobs, Ivan Boesky, and Michael Milken, as well as the fictional characters Patrick Bateman and Gordon Gekko.[16][26][27] Later in the series, Joe initiates projects involving time-sharing,[28] antivirus software (MacMillan Utility),[29] the NSFNET computer network,[10] and a search engine (Comet).[30]
 
Scoot McNairy portrayed Gordon Clark.
  • Scoot McNairy as Gordon Clark: a computer engineer at Cardiff Electric who Joe recruits to reverse engineer the IBM PC and lead the Giant's hardware team. After the failure of the Symphonic, a computer he built with his wife Donna years earlier,[31] Gordon gave up on his dreams and retreated to a dead-end job before having his ambitions reignited by Joe.[32][33] Farhad Manjoo of The New York Times likened Gordon to Breaking Bad's protagonist Walter White, calling him "apparently brilliant but underutilized in his job, and smugly depressive about his lot in life".[34] Cantwell said the creators cast McNairy in the role because they wanted an actor "who could be a nebbish, with his shoulders shrunken in, but then also reveal himself unexpectedly to be a budding alpha male."[35] Despite not having a background in computing, McNairy related to his character as a fellow tinkerer and builder, drawing from his interest in fixing engines, radios, and air conditioners and his experience in carpentry.[36][37] McNairy built the foundation of his character on having a chip on his shoulder and something to prove, which were personality traits he came across from researching computer engineers of the past.[38] Critics also compared Gordon's working dynamic with Joe to that of Steve Wozniak with Steve Jobs, two co-founders of Apple Computer.[39][40][41] Gordon's talents are frequently undercut by poor decisions and bad luck,[42] as well as his deteriorating mental state due to toxic encephalopathy, the result of extended exposure to lead solder;[43] Dennis Perkins of The A.V. Club called him "Halt's tragic hero—the dreamer without the necessary piece to ever truly succeed".[44] In subsequent seasons, Gordon works at Mutiny,[45] runs the CalNect Internet service provider,[46] and co-founds the Comet search engine.[30]
 
Mackenzie Davis portrayed Cameron Howe.
  • Mackenzie Davis as Cameron Howe (born Catherine Howe): a computer programming prodigy who is recruited from a university by Joe to join Cardiff Electric and write the Giant's BIOS.[40][47] The creators made the character female and a punk because they wanted to depict someone who was disruptive to the 1980s corporate culture of the tech industry, while her interest in video games was meant to signify the coming generation and technology.[48] Davis said that her character "doesn't fit into this male-dominated computer world, nor does she fit into the idea of feminine beauty of Texas and the South" with her androgynous appearance.[49] A video game designer,[50] Cameron later forms her own startup company, the online gaming service Mutiny, and partners with Donna to run it.[51] To prepare for the role, Davis drew from prior experience writing HTML in a high school class,[52] and she watched online programming courses from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology while trying to get into the mindset of a college student.[53] She also researched the history of women's roles in the tech industry, as well as early hackers such as phone phreakers.[54] Her character was inspired by people such as Sierra On-Line game designer Roberta Williams, Centipede designer Dona Bailey, and pioneering programmers Grace Hopper and Ada Lovelace.[48] Cameron is anti-social,[55] and finds the "truest expression of herself" through her work.[56] James Poniewozik called her an "idealist who saw computing as art–the machines could have personality, could inspire emotion, could be a place to play".[57] Filling the void left by her father's death during the Vietnam War, Cameron's frequent co-worker John Bosworth becomes a father figure to her.[58][59] After Mutiny, she goes to work for Atari and develops the successful Space Bike game series.[60]
  • Kerry Bishé as Donna Clark (née Emerson): a computer engineer at Texas Instruments.[61] After a failed attempt to build a computer with her husband Gordon years earlier,[31] Donna put her dreams on hold to focus on raising their two daughters,[61][62] and she has misgivings about him getting involved in the Giant's development.[63] To dispel the notion that her character was merely the disapproving, "wet blanket wife" in a television drama, Bishé was adamant that she be able to adroitly disassemble and fix the children's Speak & Spell in the series pilot, hinting at the depth of her character.[64] Donna is eventually enlisted by Gordon to aid Cardiff Electric with the development of the Giant.[65] Contrasting with her character's technical expertise, Bishé described herself as a Luddite, and in preparing for the role, she did not find it necessary to "understand the way the computers work" but rather to "understand the people that understand the way computers work".[66] The backstory and first initials of Gordon and Donna were references to Gary and Dorothy Kildall, the married couple who founded Digital Research and whose CP/M operating system was displaced after IBM's introduction of DOS.[31] After Gordon's pursuit of his dreams in the first season, Donna takes the opportunity to pursue her own ambitions when she joins Mutiny to co-manage the company with Cameron.[41] There, she reluctantly "becom[es] den mother to Mutiny's nerdy employees",[67] her pragmatism contrasting with Cameron's manic work style.[68] Donna grows into a "savvy businesswoman", and after Mutiny, she joins a venture capital firm, culminating her evolution from "unfulfilled sidekick to cutthroat Silicon Valley executive".[69] Like Cameron, Donna was partially inspired by Williams, Bailey, Hopper, and Lovelace.[48]
 
Toby Huss portrayed John Bosworth.
  • Toby Huss as John "Bos" Bosworth: the senior vice president of Cardiff Electric who hires Joe.[70] John is a back-slapping businessman known for his folksy, "good ol' boy" charm.[71] In the first season, he represents the "established Texas American capitalist patriarchy", according to Huss,[72] and is positioned as an antagonist to the other characters building the Giant.[11] Huss said the creators initially envisioned the character as "an older, sedentary kind of conservative Republican Texas guy",[58] but they decided to shift course for the character after Huss gave an unexpectedly energetic performance in his audition.[11] The writers subsequently wrote to what Rogers called a "really surprising warmth and vulnerability" that Huss brought to the character,[48] as well as his unexpected chemistry with Davis during their scenes together.[11] John subsequently becomes a father figure to Cameron, having neglected his own family over the years due to his job.[58] Huss based his character partly on his uncle Tom, who he described as a "no-nonsense" Houston oilman, and he developed John's accent by blending the speaking styles of his Iowan father and his Montanan uncle.[73][74] Amidst the changing landscape of the technology industry, John grapples with how to adapt to avoid becoming a "dinosaur aging out of the business".[75] In the process, he becomes more open-minded and acknowledges the brilliance of the young developers and their innovations.[72] After Cardiff Electric, he is hired by Cameron to provide managerial experience at Mutiny,[76] and later by Donna to oversee the search engine Rover.[77]
  • Aleksa Palladino as Sara Wheeler (season 2): a freelance journalist and Joe's romantic partner

Recurring edit

  • Morgan Hinkleman (seasons 1–3) and Kathryn Newton (seasons 3–4) as Joanie Clark, the older daughter of Gordon and Donna
  • Alana Cavanaugh (seasons 1–3) and Susanna Skaggs (season 4) as Haley Clark, the younger daughter of Gordon and Donna
  • August Emerson as Malcolm "Lev" Levitan (seasons 1–3), a programmer for Cardiff Electric and later Mutiny
  • Cooper Andrews as Yo-Yo Engberk (seasons 1–3), a programmer for Cardiff Electric and later Mutiny
  • David Wilson Barnes as Dale Butler (seasons 1, 4), Joe's former IBM colleague
  • Randy Havens as Stan (season 1–2), a Cardiff Electric employee
  • Graham Beckel as Nathan Cardiff (seasons 1–2), the owner of Cardiff Electric
  • Annette O'Toole as Susan Emerson (seasons 1–2), Donna's mother
  • Mike Pniewski as Barry Shields (seasons 1–2), Cardiff Electric's lawyer
  • Scott Michael Foster as Hunt Whitmarsh (season 1), Donna's manager at Texas Instruments
  • John Getz as Joe MacMillan, Sr. (season 1), Joe's father who works for IBM
  • Bianca Malinowski as Debbie (season 1), Bosworth's secretary at Cardiff Electric
  • Eric Goins as Larry (seasons 1–2), a Cardiff Electric employee
  • Justin Randell Brooke as Dave (seasons 1–3), a programmer for Mutiny
  • Pete Burris as Ed (seasons 1–2), a Cardiff Electric employee
  • Mark O'Brien as Tom Rendon (seasons 2–4), a programmer for Mutiny and Cameron's boyfriend
  • James Cromwell as Jacob Wheeler (season 2), Sara's father and the CEO of Westgroup
  • Gabriel Manak as Arki (seasons 2–3), a programmer for Mutiny
  • Nick Pupo as Carl (seasons 2–3), a programmer for Mutiny
  • Joshua Hoover as Bodie (seasons 2–3), a programmer for Mutiny
  • J. Elijah Cho as Wonderboy (seasons 2–3), a programmer for Mutiny
  • Annabeth Gish as Diane Gould (seasons 3–4),[78] a venture capitalist who becomes involved with Mutiny
  • Manish Dayal as Ryan Ray (season 3),[79] a programmer at Mutiny and later at MacMillan Utility who becomes Joe's protégé
  • Matthew Lillard as Ken Diebold (season 3),[78] an executive at MacMillan Utility
  • Sasha Morfaw as Tanya Reese (season 4), an AGGEK employee
  • Charlie Bodin as Trip Kisker III (season 4), an AGGEK employee
  • Anna Chlumsky as Katie Herman (season 4),[80] a Comet employee and Gordon's girlfriend
  • Molly Ephraim as Alexa Vonn (season 4), Cameron's financier for an independent project

Production edit

Conception and development history edit

Halt and Catch Fire was created by Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C. Rogers, who met while working at the Walt Disney Company. Cantwell's online movie company was acquired by Disney and he was moved into its marketing department, while Rogers was hired by Cantwell's team to manage Disney's editorial program for social media. After a year of working together, they learned that they had each graduated from screenwriting programs in college—Cantwell from the University of Southern California as an undergraduate student, and Rogers from the University of California, Los Angeles as a graduate student.[81] Rogers referred to himself and Cantwell as "dream-deferred writers".[82] In August 2010, they agreed to partner as screenwriters. For their first collaboration, Rogers helped Cantwell with creating a television adaptation of his film screenplay Very Prepared Men, a story about a secret society of the ultra-wealthy.[83][82] Rogers shared the script with Chris Huvane, a former colleague from Condé Nast who had become a talent manager at Management 360. Huvane and his coworker Jennifer Graham offered to represent Cantwell and Rogers,[83] while urging them to produce another script they could use as a staffing sample. Since the managers thought it was unlikely a network would option a script from first-time writers, their intent was to use the sample script to land Cantwell and Rogers entry-level writing positions in the industry. The managers advised them to write something in which they were personally invested.[82]

 
The original IBM Personal Computer. The real-life attempts to reverse engineer it inspired the series's pilot.

Cantwell and Rogers initially discussed "men under pressure" stories like Glengarry Glen Ross, although they did not want their subjects to be doctors or police officers, believing them to be well-trod territory in television.[47] As they brainstormed, Cantwell recalled his childhood;[82] in 1982, when he was just six weeks old, his family moved from Elgin, Illinois, to Plano, Texas, so his father could take a job as a systems software salesman for UCCEL Corp.[82][84][85] During his childhood, Cantwell had been unaware of Texas's role in the personal computer revolution of the 1980s, but after speaking to his father and researching the era with Rogers, they learned how the Silicon Prairie of Dallas–Fort Worth (in which Plano is located) became a secondary technology hub behind California's Silicon Valley.[82] Companies in the Silicon Prairie included Texas Instruments, Electronic Data Systems, Tandy, and RadioShack, while elsewhere in Texas, Dell (in Austin) and Compaq (in Houston) were also prominent players in the PC industry.[5][81] Executive producer Jonathan Lisco said: "[Texas] was viewed by a lot of people at the time, per our research, as sort of a catch basin for people who had not succeeded [in Silicon Valley]. On the other hand, there was a lot of wonderful tech going on here."[5] Cantwell said that he and Rogers were intrigued by the lesser-known players and settings of the tech industry: "We wanted to find the place you didn't know. Silicon Valley, Boston, New York, IBM, Microsoft, all those stories and companies have been exploited dramatically to great effect."[81] In their research, Cantwell and Rogers came across stories of computer engineers at Compaq taking risks by attempting to reverse engineer the IBM PC.[82][86] The duo conceived the pilot for Halt and Catch Fire in January 2011.[31] The first eight pages of the script followed their protagonist Joe MacMillan at IBM.[87] In May, Cantwell quit his job at Disney,[87] though Rogers remained until the future of their project was assured.[82]

Cantwell and Rogers finished the draft of their pilot in the summer of 2011.[87] Their agents liked the script but were not optimistic about selling it.[88] After a few unproductive meetings, Cantwell and Rogers turned their attention to writing film scripts;[89] one of them called The Knoll, about the assassination of John F. Kennedy, appeared on the Black List of popular unproduced screenplays.[82][88] At the end of that summer, Cantwell and Rogers asked their agent again to shop the Halt and Catch Fire pilot to television networks,[89] leading to meetings with HBO and Showtime that were mostly introductory in nature.[88] In late October,[87] they met with AMC, by which point Cantwell had been out of work for five months and was quickly diminishing his savings. He and Rogers were surprised to find that the AMC executives had a copy of their script at the meeting. One of them, Ben Davis, said: "We were really interested in trying to tap into that world—into the spirit of innovation, and the tech world specifically. I loved the idea that it took place in Dallas and that I didn't hear Steve Jobs' or Bill Gates' name. It approached it from the backdoor instead of straight ahead."[82] After a second meeting with Cantwell and Rogers on December 5, 2011, AMC optioned the script the following day.[82][87]

To continue to develop the project, AMC brought in Gran Via Productions' Mark Johnson and Melissa Bernstein, who were producing the network's hit drama series Breaking Bad at the time.[90] They helped Cantwell and Rogers refine the pilot and create a 20-page pitch document, which Rogers said they worked on "day and night".[89] The creators called Johnson and Bernstein their "advocates... with the network".[90] In March 2012, Cantwell learned that AMC would not make a decision about the project until autumn; by that point, he and his wife had depleted their savings.[87] In April, Cantwell and Rogers presented Halt and Catch Fire at AMC's annual pilot script showcase, dubbed the "Bake-Off"; network executives opted to keep the project in consideration.[91] On October 23, 2012, Cantwell and Rogers pitched the network on how they envisioned Halt and Catch Fire as a potential series.[87] The network ordered a pilot the following month.[91] The project was Cantwell's and Rogers's first jobs in the television industry.[88] Cantwell said, "The first writers' room we walked into was our own."[31] In July 2013, the network announced a series order of 10 episodes.[92]

Casting edit

In February 2013, it was announced that Lee Pace had been cast in the lead role of Joe MacMillan, and Mackenzie Davis in a co-starring role as Cameron Howe.[93] Actors that were considered for the role of Joe included David Harbour, Ryan Phillippe, and Wes Bentley. The role of Cameron took the longest to cast, with actors such as Dakota Johnson and Brie Larson auditioning for it. After Davis's screen test, the creators were convinced they had found the perfect person to portray her.[83]

In March, it was announced that Scoot McNairy had been cast as Gordon Clark and Kerry Bishé as Gordon's wife Donna;[94][95] it was a reunion for the two actors, who had played a married couple in the film Argo a year prior.[95] Actors that auditioned for the role of Gordon included Jimmi Simpson and Jason Mantzoukas, while Karen Gillan was considered for the role of Donna. During the casting process, McNairy emailed the creators to tell them how the pilot's story resonated with him, as he grew up in Dallas and his father had been a salesman.[83] Also in March, David Wilson Barnes was cast as Dale Butler.[96] Barnes was initially credited among the main cast in the pilot episode, but his character was written out after just two episodes when the story went in a different direction.[97]

For season two, Aleksa Palladino joined the cast as a regular, while James Cromwell and Mark O'Brien joined as recurring characters.[98][99] For season three, Manish Dayal was cast as Ryan Ray, an Indian-American computer programmer native to San Francisco. Cantwell and Rogers created the character to match the change in demographic after the series's setting shifted to Northern California.[100] Matthew Lillard and Annabeth Gish were also cast in recurring roles.[78] For season four, Kathryn Newton and Susanna Skaggs were cast to play teenaged versions of the Clarks' daughters, and Anna Chlumsky joined in a supporting role.[80]

Prior to the fourth season, AMC addressed the gender pay gap among its four leads by giving Davis and Bishé salary raises to match what Pace and McNairy were earning. Davis and Bishé were relatively unknown when they signed their original deals at lower salaries; Davis was earning the minimum rate at the time. Their characters were given more screen time beginning with the second season, but the actresses did not feel they were being equitably compensated for their work. Before Davis and Bishé could renegotiate with AMC, the network gave them unsolicited raises.[101]

Showrunners edit

 
Producer Jonathan Lisco served as the series showrunner for the first two seasons.

Due to Cantwell's and Rogers's inexperience, AMC chose to hire someone more experienced in television to be the series's showrunner.[102] As part of a two-year deal with AMC, Jonathan Lisco was selected for the role in July 2013, having just concluded three seasons as executive producer on the television drama series Southland.[103] Lisco was impressed by the script for the Halt and Catch Fire pilot but initially was unconvinced that he was best suited for the showrunner role. He did not view himself as a technophile and wondered if there would be "enough stakes in the bits and the bytes",[104] saying the subject matter did not "dramatically blow your hair back".[105] The network helped change his mind by telling him the series could not be exclusively about technology, and that they believed he could help them delve deep into the characters to create stakes. Lisco felt an immediate creative connection with Cantwell and Rogers upon meeting them, and sensing they had a strong vision for the series, he signed on as showrunner.[104][106] Leasing office space in Studio City, Los Angeles, Lisco helped Cantwell and Rogers through the process of assessing and hiring writers.[82]

Lisco stepped down as showrunner after the second season to work on the TNT television series Animal Kingdom. Joel Stillerman, AMC's president of original programming and development, called Lisco's departure "completely amicable".[107] Cantwell and Rogers took over as showrunners prior to the third season.[108] Rogers called Lisco the duo's mentor, saying: "He kept us creatively involved and really showed us the ropes, and we felt like it was a master class in how to run a room, both in terms of getting a great story out of people, and in terms of being a really good and decent and fair person in what can sometimes be a brutal industry."[100]

Pre-production and research edit

For research, the production staff and cast consulted Robert X. Cringely's documentary Triumph of the Nerds and read the books Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson, The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder,[109][110] The Nudist on the Late Shift by Po Bronson, and The Silicon Boys by David A. Kaplan.[111]

The series had at least three technical advisors.[85] Industry veteran Carl Ledbetter, who worked at IBM, AT&T Consumer Products, and Sun Microsystems, reviewed early scripts for authenticity.[112] He also wrote sample computer code that appeared on screen,[111] and helped operate props on set; he controlled lights on a breadboard from underneath a table and hand fed printouts through a dot matrix printer.[31] After the series's focus shifted to networking and proto-Internet services for the second season, the producers relied more on the expertise of Bill Louden, who founded the GEnie online service for General Electric in 1985 and designed games and computer programs for CompuServe. The producers also sought out journalists such as Paul Carroll, who covered the tech industry in the 1980s for The Wall Street Journal.[113]

Due to the production schedule, the actors did not have formal table reads of the scripts. Instead, they organized their own, gathering at Pace's house on weekends to prepare dinner, drink wine, and discuss the scripts and their characters. Davis said of the cast dinners, "it was really nice, because you got to hear other people's point of views about your character."[11][114] For the third season, Pace, Davis, and McNairy lived together in a rented house in Atlanta,[115] with Toby Huss joining them for the fourth season.[116] The arrangement helped foster a camaraderie among the cast members.[115]

Writing edit

Each season, the writers strove to "use up [their] story fast" rather than save the most dramatic moments for later.[117] Rogers said that the uncertainty of the series's fate from season to season "reinforced a hold-nothing-back mindset in the storytelling".[118] They aimed to advance the plot quickly enough that it would not be predictable. Rogers described their approach: "We want to put ourselves into corners and ask ourselves to write out of them."[117] To avoid depicting binary relationships between the characters of either getting along or fighting, the writers attempted to change the dynamics between the characters, often by creating new pairings on screen to interact with one another.[119]

Cantwell and Rogers originally intended to use the pilot to land writing jobs on series they already liked. Consequently, they wrote it to emulate the "difficult men" dramas that inspired them to get into television, shows that included The Sopranos, The Wire, and Breaking Bad. Joe MacMillan was written in the pilot as a traditional antihero, with the world organized around him. Once the series was picked up and the staff began writing subsequent episodes, they found what Rogers called a "writers' groove" and changed their approach: "We figured out what was our voice, as opposed to the voice that felt like it was emulating the shows we liked."[11] Rogers acknowledged that he and Cantwell were initially inexperienced as writers but said that they were "careful enough to lay... these little grenades into each character" that the writers could later "explode" to evolve the characters beyond their archetypes.[90] Bishé said that when the cast signed onto the series, they believed it would be a "slick corporate thriller", but over time it evolved into an ensemble-based "real human drama".[115][120] Cantwell said the dynamic between Joe and Gordon in the first season was inspired by his father's experience in software sales in the 1980s; Cantwell's father pitched to clients on sales calls, while the software engineer he would bring along would explain the technical details.[86]

In the second season, the series's narrative began to focus on the partnership of Donna and Cameron in their startup company, the online gaming service Mutiny.[121] Rogers said the technology of the time period seemed to point to "this proto-internet connectivity" and that as actors, Bishé and Davis deserved more attention.[21] Cantwell said that the staff did not consciously refocus the show around the female characters, but rather it naturally developed that way as they sought to create "compelling and earned stories for each of those characters based on where [they] left them in season one".[121] Rogers said the first-season partnership between Joe and Gordon was dominated by egos, a need to prove themselves, and a lack of mutual respect. They did not want to repeat that dynamic in the Donna–Cameron partnership, and instead created a "bedrock" on which a friendship could be built. The theme of connectivity was incorporated into the season as an exploration of whether technology "brings us closer together or pushes us apart", as well as what the characters' motivations were for their involvement in the industry. The second season also isolated Joe and Gordon somewhat from the main storylines to reflect an "absence of connection".[21] Cantwell and Rogers liked making viewers think they were "the worst writers in the world for about five minutes" by creating familiar situations, only to subvert expectations with the end result.[21]

Between the second and third seasons, all of the series's writers departed to work on their own projects, requiring Cantwell and Rogers to build a new writing staff.[90][122] The creators rented a house in Joshua Tree National Park for three days in October 2015 and discussed how they wanted to plot out the season's story.[122][121] They wanted to reach the advent of the World Wide Web in 1990, which they considered an exciting setting and a natural destination for the series. However, doing so would have required them to advance the plot by four years from the end of season two.[121] They thought they still "had so much story left on the table at the end of season two" with the characters' arrival in California in 1986 that they did not want to skip over with a time jump.[123] Ultimately, instead of choosing one of the two approaches, they decided to incorporate both of them; the majority of the season takes place in 1986 before making a time jump to 1990 for the final two episodes.[122][121] With the new setting in Silicon Valley, Cantwell and Rogers wanted to explore if the characters who had demonstrated their potential in Texas could "really pull it off once they're in the big leagues".[100] One of their themes for season three was "people with the right idea at the wrong time" who failed due to market or technology forces not aligning.[123]

Heading into the fourth season, Cantwell and Rogers knew it would be the series's final one, giving them the opportunity to write a conclusion on their own terms.[124] In researching the tech industry following the inception of the World Wide Web in 1990, they found that there was not "a lot of major business investments [or] huge development in the web" for several years due to its nascency.[119][124] As a result, they created another time jump in the series's storytelling. The opening sequence in the season's first episode shows the passage of more than three years and was meant to depict the characters in stasis, waiting for the technology world to catch on.[119] In the final season, Cantwell and Rogers wanted the characters to grapple with the existential question of whether their continued pursuits of the next big idea could ever make them feel whole and whether they could break free from the constant cycle of reinvention.[20][125] As the season was being written in 2017, a potential strike by the Writers Guild of America loomed. Fearing an abrupt end to their series, Cantwell and Rogers proposed alternate plans to their writing staff for how the show could be written to a conclusion quicker. After receiving pushback from the writers that it would undermine their strike, Cantwell and Rogers abandoned any such plans in solidarity; the strike ultimately did not occur.[126] The creators decided to kill off a major character during the season but did not plan in advance when it would occur. Eventually, they plotted it into the seventh episode, allowing them to dedicate the eighth episode to the characters' grief, before incorporating it into the two-part finale, in which they wrapped up the series's remaining plot threads.[117]

Filming edit

 
AMC paid to restore a neon sign of Big Tex in Dallas for the filming of the pilot.[127]

Halt and Catch Fire was produced in-house by AMC Studios.[5] Although the series was set in Dallas and Silicon Valley, it was primarily filmed in and around Atlanta, Georgia,[81] where the studio has infrastructure and crew due to state tax incentives that are favorable to filming.[5] The writing staff, however, was based in Los Angeles.[31] Many crew members who worked on another Atlanta-based AMC series, The Walking Dead, were borrowed during its offseason to work on Halt and Catch Fire. The series was shot using Arri Alexa cameras, with dailies being delivered by FotoKem Atlanta using their nextLAB system.[128] The series had a budget that various sources estimated between $2–3 million per episode, which Variety said was on the lower end of cable TV dramas.[129][130]

The pilot was directed by Juan José Campanella[131] and produced over six weeks from April to May 2013.[87] It was primarily shot on location in the Atlanta area, although one set was used as Joe's condominium.[81][128] Additionally, as part of a one-day shoot in Dallas in May,[87] AMC paid to restore a 50-foot-tall neon sign of Big Tex located at a former Centennial Liquors store.[127] For the series's visual appearance, the producers initially took inspiration from the 1970s films All the President's Men, The Parallax View, and The Conversation, according to producer Jeff Freilich.[120] After the series was picked up, several scenes from the pilot episode were re-shot.[132][133] Lisco said that the staff wanted to make the tone "a little more jagged, a little more ambiguous" by giving Cameron more edge and by exploring whether Joe is "a visionary or a fraud".[132]

After the series order, the staff decided that the production facility housing Joe's condo set was too far away from other locations where the crew would need to shoot. As a result, they partnered with Mark Henderson, Daniel Minchew, and Glenn Murer, who built the Atlanta Filmworks sound stage in a converted facility that previously served as a DuPont plant and a dog food factory. The space comprised two adjacent 20,000-square-foot (1,900 m2) warehouses and a 17,000-square-foot (1,600 m2) production office. The soundproofed Studio A, measuring 110 by 200 by 42 feet (34 by 61 by 13 m), housed the set for Cardiff Electric's corporate offices, which occupied 9,000 square feet (840 m2). Studio B was initially envisioned as a flex space for set construction, but ended up being used for filming as well, housing the set for Joe's condo, among others. As a result, several enhancements were made to the studio for the second season, such as quieter heaters and additional lighting.[128]

Production on the remaining nine episodes of the first season began in October 2013 and lasted until May 2014.[87] The weather was uncharacteristically cold and snowy for Atlanta, complicating outdoor shoots and suspending production for a few days. Location scouting was carried out by location manager Ryan Schaetzle to find settings that would not be anachronistic and would require the least amount of modification to match the period setting. Strategic framing of shots was also used to avoid anachronisms,[128] as was computer-generated imagery to turn an Urban Outfitters location into a rug store.[134] Scenes set at a Las Vegas hotel hosting COMDEX attendees in the season's penultimate episode were filmed at the American Cancer Society Center in downtown Atlanta.[128] Other first season shooting locations included the Cobb Galleria Centre, Chops Lobster Bar,[135] Northside Tavern, the Plaza Theatre, the Georgia State Capitol,[136] an office building near The Weather Channel's headquarters, and a brick ranch-style house in Conyers.[134]

Production on season two lasted from October 2014 to May 2015,[87] with filming commencing in January 2015.[137] The staff dismantled all of the first-season sets except for the Clark family house,[124] a decision Cantwell said was made to force the series to reinvent itself and to parallel the reinvention common within the technology industry.[118] Production on season three took place from November 2015 to August 2016.[87] Due to the shift in setting from Dallas to California that season, the producers hired a new director of photography, Evans Brown, to give the series a sunnier look.[122] Despite the setting change, production of the series remained in the Atlanta area, with the exception of two scenes from that season that were shot near the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco.[122]

The fourth season's first episode opens with a sequence edited to appear to be a "one shot" that covers three years of story. The sequence was conceived by Campanella and filmed over two days, requiring several hairstyle and wardrobe changes to the actors.[124] For the series finale, "Ten of Swords", Donna's and Cameron's diner scene in the closing moments of the episode was filmed at the Waffle House Museum.[138] Donna's idea at the end of the scene is never revealed, but the producers ensured that each camera shot in the diner showed an analog aspect of life for which there would be a future digital innovation.[13][117] After production on the series wrapped in late July 2017,[139] the crew transitioned to a new AMC television series, Lodge 49, within a week.[140]

Production design edit

The series's production designers were Chris Brown,[128] Craig Stearns,[111] and Ola Maslik.[119] Set decorator Lance Totten said the 1980s cliches of the "whole neon-pastels and shoulder pad vibe" were not prevalent until 1986, and that he focused on the design period of 1978–1983 at the series's onset. To identify period-accurate lighting fixtures, televisions, telephones, kitchenware, and curtains, he consulted: back issues of Texas Homes and D Magazine; old Sears and J. C. Penney catalogues; the Interiors books by English designer Terence Conran; and the Malls Across America collection of photographs by Michael Galinsky. Due to the difficulty of finding decor items with brass finishes, Totten often resorted to reproducing the look with gold paint or brass spray paint specially ordered from Krylon. Other heavily sought after items included: lamp shades with pleats and tapered or bell shapes; furniture with clean, linear lines and upholstery on the arms, legs, and feet; and metal constructed props instead of plastic.[133] The set designers purchased from thrift shops, antique stores, yard sales, office supply companies that were closing, and individuals through Craigslist, but in some cases they rented items.[128][133] Early 1980s seating and office furniture were difficult to acquire in large quantities, as furniture from that decade was not highly collected, other than high-end pieces by designers, and Totten said the decade marked the beginning of the era of "mass disposability". As a result, he drew from the 1960s and 1970s for certain sets, such as Bosworth's office and the Clark home. Old family photos provided by Totten and other crew members adorned certain sets to give the impression of the characters having extended family, while Totten's children drew the refrigerator art seen in the Clarks' kitchen.[133] For old photos of Gordon and Donna, the crew reused Polaroids of McNairy and Bishé that had been taken on the set of Argo from their portrayal of a married couple in the 1970s.[83] Prior to the second season, additional crew members were hired for the production design team to help with their extensive workload.[133]

The architecture and design of Atlanta posed a challenge to the production design staff for achieving period accuracy. Bernstein said, "it's a new city. There are not a lot of buildings from the 1970s and 1980s."[134] Totten said that locations that still existed from that period had been remodeled in the 1990s or 2000s and no longer had 1980s decor or color palettes, thus requiring filming locations to be re-dressed.[133] Storefronts and restaurants were particularly difficult, as small details such as carpeting, window frames, lighting fixtures, chair upholstery patterns, and bathroom fixtures needed to be retrofitted.[128] The season two set for the house that headquartered Mutiny, Cameron's start-up company, was designed to mimic the homes found in the Lakewood neighborhood of Dallas. Modeled after a single-story American Craftsman–style home that was popular in the 1920s, the set's design featured hardwood floors, ample trim moldings, built-in shelving painted white, and curved kitchen woodwork.[141] For Mutiny's move to California in the third season, Stearns wanted their new office's set design to evoke the early days of Silicon Valley when startup companies operated out of older buildings. The set was designed as a converted fruit-packing warehouse with brick walls and large windows.[142]

 
A Commodore 64 computer on display at Living Computers: Museum + Labs, which loaned equipment for use as props in the series

At the series's onset, many of the vintage computer props were obtained on eBay or from private collectors through Craigslist.[31][128] One such prop was the original Apple Macintosh, which had become a collector's item and was rare.[128] Many props were also borrowed from the Rhode Island Computer Museum.[48] The Cardiff Giant portable PC depicted on screen was specially built for the series from molded plastic and was partially functional, as the production staff wanted to ensure the design was "consistent with the visionary thinking of the time and was not sci-fi", according to Freilich.[128] Totten said that in order to build 40 Commodore 64 PC workstations for the Mutiny set in season two, "hundreds of different eBay purchases" were required, since the PCs, monitors, and peripherals all had to be obtained separately.[111][133] One of the series's Atlanta-based technical advisors built the complex network of telephone lines and modems that hung on a wall of the Mutiny house set.[133] From season two onwards, the series's staff collaborated with Living Computers: Museum + Labs in Seattle to obtain vintage equipment. One prop that could not be sourced was an IBM 3033 mainframe computer, requiring a replica to be built in consultation with Living Computers using original plans from IBM's archives.[111][142] Obtaining period accurate corporate signage and logos was a challenge for the staff, as many tech companies had gone out of business or had become part of large conglomerates over the years.[128]

Staff sought out 1980s artwork from antique stores, thrift shops, and online; works with legible artist signatures were submitted to a clearing company, which attempted to obtain approvals from the artists or their estates to use the works on screen. Some art vendors had the artists' contact information, allowing the buyers to deal with them directly. The production designers also rented pieces from local galleries that were able to sign releases on the artists' behalves. Near the end of the first season, Totten began using a local vendor called Elk Creative to digitally create custom paintings in the style of 1970s and 1980s mass-produced corporate art.[133]

Freilich said that the early 1980s fashion was "a little bland, a beige time", and that as a result, vintage clothing stores did not carry much merchandise from the period. The wardrobe department ultimately obtained many articles of clothing from shops and rental houses in Los Angeles where inventory was more extensive.[128]

Music edit

 
Austrian musician Paul Haslinger, formerly of Tangerine Dream, composed the series's electronic original score.

The original score was composed by Austrian musician Paul Haslinger, formerly of German electronic music group Tangerine Dream from 1986 to 1990.[143] He secured the position on the series through his connection to its music supervisor, his friend Thomas Golubić. Having previously recorded music during the 1980s, Haslinger was drawn to Halt and Catch Fire as a second chance to write for the decade.[144] Rather than merely revive 1980s music, he instead wanted to draw from its moodiness,[145] and to combine his favorite retro sounds with modern-day elements.[144] Haslinger's score was electronic, making heavy use of synthesizers;[143] he used his original equipment and samples as well as virtual instruments, creating a blend of "analog and digital sounds from that era and [his] own sound design".[146] He eschewed explicit musical themes for each character to avoid sounding "hokey". Instead, he tried to write for the subtext or underlying tension of scenes.[144] Starting with the third season, Haslinger strove to pare down his compositions, often starting with fifteen tracks of audio before scaling down to five. He also incorporated more influences from beyond the 1980s, such as the works of Giorgio Moroder.[147] A compilation of tracks from the first three seasons was released on CD and vinyl through Lakeshore Records on September 16, 2016.[148] A second volume followed on vinyl, CD, and digital services on April 5, 2019.[149]

Golubić and his team at the firm SuperMusicVision handled music licensing,[119] creating a soundtrack of album-oriented rock, college rock, new wave, and 1980s punk.[118] Golubić said that his team sought to license lesser-known tracks, believing the use of obvious 1980s hits would be "kitschy" and not within the series's budget; explaining their approach, he said, "We want to immerse people in that time period, not distract them".[31][150] The music supervisors were engaged by the writers early in their creative process in an attempt to better integrate music into the series.[151] Golubić and his team started by compiling playlists of songs that were evocative of the show's period setting, before attempting to secure licensing deals.[117] They also curated playlists for each of the main characters after discussing them and their backstories.[152] Golubić said of the process, "This is how we informed ourselves of the world that the characters live in."[151] The playlists were sent to the actors to help them prepare for their roles,[150] and were used by the producers, writers, and editors as a reference for developing the story.[152] For example, Joe was seen as a "futurist looking forward" embodied by acts ahead of their time such as Gary Numan, the Cars, and Wire,[151][153] while Gordon was interpreted as someone whose musical tastes did not evolve past 1970s acts such as Steely Dan and Boz Scaggs due to his preoccupation with work.[151][153] AMC partnered with music streaming service Spotify to share the character playlists online and to promote them on amctv.com and the network's "Story Sync" second screen platform.[150]

Punk rock played a prominent role in the characterization of Cameron, frequently playing through her headphones on-screen or non-diegetically to represent her temperament as a rebellious loner. The scene in which she enters the Cardiff Electric offices for her first day of work is soundtracked by the Clash's "The Magnificent Seven", whose lyrics about the "futility of the capitalist grind underscor[e] her ambivalence about the job", according to Pitchfork's Judy Berman.[154] After she founds Mutiny, the company offices are frequently heard playing punk, post-punk, and alternative rock,[29] which Berman said represented Cameron's growing influence in the tech industry.[154] Towards the end of the series, punk music is used in the characterization of the Clarks' teenage daughters. The rebellious, troublemaker Joanie enjoys Shonen Knife, and Haley listens to PJ Harvey and riot grrrl bands while coming to terms with being queer.[154]

Among the tracks licensed for use in the series were "Red Eyes" by the War on Drugs,[155] "Velouria" by Pixies, "So Far Away" by Dire Straits, a cover of Joy Division's "She's Lost Control" by the Raveonettes,[154] "Mercy Street" by Peter Gabriel,[117] and in the closing sequence of the series finale, Gabriel's "Solsbury Hill".[138]

Title sequence edit

The opening title sequence was created by the design studio Elastic, with creative direction from Antibody. The sequence depicts an electrical signal racing across a neon-red digital landscape, leaving a trail as it travels. Along the way it passes digitally distressed images of the main cast members, before it completes its journey to light up an LED indicator.[156] Lead animator Raoul Marks said the signal was depicted "allegorically to illustrate the competing forces driving young tech entrepreneurs towards a new technological dawn".[157]

The animators were tasked with creating an "abstract and symbolic" sequence "about the computer era that was about people, not machines". The sequence evolved from the animators' initial pitch to the showrunners to depict the "birth of an idea". The artists' first inspiration was to show a lightbulb turning on, a common visual metaphor for a "bright idea", and consequently they sought to show the journey of a signal to light up the bulb. During the extended storyboarding process, art director Eddy Herringson toyed with geometric shapes inspired by Saul Bass art, retro video games, and sex education films; sequence director Patrick Clair said the team "bounced between digital sperm to missile command and back—all in 8-bit." After several iterations, they replaced the lightbulb with an LED indicator to better evoke the computer era. In the initial pitch, the artists depicted competing signals that ended up disintegrating or being left behind, but these elements were scaled back. The team took artistic license with the appearance of electric and digital signals in the sequence. Due to the need to show the signal in a state of constant motion from shot to shot, precise animation and cuts between shots were required. Serif fonts were used for the credits and were inspired by the mature, classical typography and conservative layout design of personal computing advertisements from the 1980s. The color scheme, inspired by high-saturation 4-bit color computer graphics, was dominated by an "iridescent red that never peaked beyond hot magenta".[156]

To give the title sequence a human element, images of the main cast members were incorporated. Rather than show "beauty shots" of the actors, the animators heavily edited images of them in a glitch art style. Marks "de-rezzed" the character images with Adobe Photoshop by selecting rectangular sections and using the software's average color feature on each; Marks said the process gave each portrait an "interesting facial approximation". Afterwards, the images were built into 3D models, although the artists did not want a "fully immersive 3D scene" but rather one that still had "more depth than just a graphic". Since the series's story was about "people putting pressure on themselves, and risking self-destruction through their own ambition", the artists wanted to depict them "decaying, breaking under the pressure of velocity and self-destruction". They achieved this by streaking debris, digital artifacts, and facial details away from the portraits in horizontal lines; Marks likened the effect to a person "re-entering the atmosphere from orbit but in a digital world".[156]

The opening theme was composed by Danish electronic musician Trentemøller. Marks described the theme as "straddl[ing] the line between contemporary electronica and more retro-analog" sounds. The theme was provided late in the process of creating the title sequence.[156]

Series synopsis edit

SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
110June 1, 2014 (2014-06-01)August 3, 2014 (2014-08-03)
210May 31, 2015 (2015-05-31)August 2, 2015 (2015-08-02)
310August 21, 2016 (2016-08-21)October 11, 2016 (2016-10-11)
410August 19, 2017 (2017-08-19)October 14, 2017 (2017-10-14)

First season edit

In 1983, Joe MacMillan joins Cardiff Electric, where he enlists the help of Gordon Clark to reverse engineer the BIOS of an IBM PC and reconstruct its assembly language code. Company owner Nathan Cardiff and vice president John Bosworth confront the two when the company is sued by IBM for copyright infringement. After Joe reveals that he told IBM about the project, Cardiff Electric is forced to legitimize it and enter the personal computing business. Joe heads the project to build an IBM clone, with Gordon leading the hardware team. Needing a software engineer, Joe recruits Cameron Howe to write the BIOS in a "clean room". For their PC, ultimately named the "Cardiff Giant", Joe's goal is for it to be twice the speed at half the cost of IBM's PC, but much of the company does not buy into his vision or trust him. He further alienates himself from Cardiff and Bosworth after IBM responds by aggressively undercutting Cardiff Electric, resulting in layoffs, and after he upsets a potential investor.

Despite her suspicions of Joe, Cameron begins an on-again, off-again relationship with him. Gordon's wife, Donna, is wary of his involvement in the project, but she eventually contributes to it, first by giving Gordon her idea for a double-sided printed circuit board, and then by recovering lost data from Cameron's computer (a data loss event faked by Joe). Gordon brokers a deal for discounted liquid crystal displays through his father-in-law's connection with a Japanese company. After finishing the BIOS, Cameron is promoted to head of the software engineering team and designs a user-friendly operating system (OS) intended to draw in the user. Joe's ex-lover Simon, an industrial designer, designs the case for the PC. Initially hesitant about the project, Bosworth comes around but is denied further funding by Cardiff. With Cameron's help, Bosworth embezzles money to sustain the project but is arrested as the company office is raided by the FBI. Having smuggled out the Giant prototype, Gordon convinces the others to proceed with their plan to present at the COMDEX trade show.

At COMDEX, the team are shocked to discover the "Slingshot", a copycat of the Giant, being presented by the Clarks' neighbor (a former Cardiff Electric employee) and Donna's former manager from Texas Instruments (TI). In order to undercut the Slingshot and make the Giant commercially viable, Gordon removes Cameron's OS and the supporting hardware. When Joe supports the decision, a heartbroken Cameron leaves him. Joe and Gordon present the downgraded Giant at COMDEX and secure their first order, but it is a hollow victory for the team. After witnessing a demonstration of the Apple Macintosh at the conference, Joe becomes disillusioned with the Giant. Cameron quits Cardiff Electric and poaches most of the software engineers to form an online gaming startup company called Mutiny. After Donna leaves TI, she accepts an offer from Cameron to join Mutiny. The Cardiff Electric team celebrates the completion of the Giant, but Joe sets fire to the truck containing the first shipment and disappears, leaving Gordon to run the company.

Second season edit

Cardiff Electric is sold to a conglomerate in 1985, earning Gordon a six-figure settlement but Joe nothing. Eager to start anew, Joe gets engaged to his girlfriend Sara and goes to work at Westgroup Energy, an oil firm where her father, Jacob Wheeler, is CEO. Starting in data entry, Joe spots an opportunity to use their mainframe computers for time-sharing and takes over the department. Meanwhile, Donna and Cameron are chaotically running Mutiny in a rented house with their developers. Cameron hires a paroled Bosworth to be a manager, as well as one of Mutiny's subscribers, Tom, to be a game designer; she and Tom begin dating. Gordon writes a computer program, "Sonaris", intended to map Mutiny's network, but it inadvertently acts as malware. To make up for his mistake, Gordon agrees to an arrangement with Joe for Mutiny to be Westgroup's first time-sharing client at a discount in exchange for Gordon configuring the mainframes. Mutiny subsequently thrives, due in part to their new "Community" chat rooms conceived by Donna. Preoccupied with work, Donna keeps an abortion secret from Gordon, and he hides his toxic encephalopathy diagnosis from her.

At Jacob's request, Joe raises Mutiny's rates, much to Cameron's chagrin, but Donna and Joe negotiate a compromise contingent on Mutiny meeting certain benchmarks. One of them is porting their software to the AT&T UNIX PC, which they unsuccessfully fake during a demo for Joe. Impressed by their ingenuity, Joe convinces Jacob to make an acquisition offer to Mutiny, but after realizing Jacob would corrupt the startup's vision, Joe convinces Cameron to reject it. He decides to quit Westgroup and after marrying Sara, plans to move them to California. Gordon admits his medical diagnosis to Donna and begins stress therapy after his condition worsens following the failure of his homebuilt computer business. Tom and Cameron write a first-person shooter game, but on the night of its planned launch, Westgroup replaces Mutiny's service on their network with a copycat, "WestNet". Joe denies involvement, but the Mutiny staff disbelieve him. Cameron and Donna sell their game to sustain the company, causing Tom to break up with Cameron and quit Mutiny. Cameron emotionally manipulates Joe in order to run the Sonaris malware on a Westgroup computer, crippling their network during Joe's presentation of WestNet at a shareholders meeting.

Sara annuls her marriage to Joe, while Jacob is scapegoated for the WestNet fiasco and fired. After Gordon admits to an affair, Donna gives him an ultimatum: he must purchase and renovate a mainframe in California for Mutiny, move their family there with the company, and take a job with them; he agrees. Having transitioned from games to an online community, Mutiny departs for California. Gordon writes Joe an antivirus program in hopes of helping Westgroup, but Joe uses it instead to pitch a venture capitalist. He invites Gordon to join the endeavor but is refused. Gordon is furious to learn later that Joe has received $10 million in funding for a new company in the San Francisco Bay Area, MacMillan Utility.

Third season edit

In 1986, Mutiny launches its mainframe and surpasses 100,000 users. Gordon is involved in a copyright infringement lawsuit against Joe. After noticing that Mutiny's chat feature is facilitating user-to-user transactions, Donna and Cameron are inspired to build an online trading feature and begin pitching venture capitalists. One of them, Diane Gould, helps Mutiny acquire a competitor, Swap Meet. Underappreciated Mutiny programmer Ryan Ray quits, and after being inspired by Joe's presentation of MacMillan Utility's no-cost antivirus software, Citadel, he convinces Joe to hire him.

The Swap Meet–Mutiny merger causes friction, as Cameron is resistant to making her code compatible with Swap Meet's and wants to fire their founders. Ryan is disconcerted to learn MacMillan Utility plans to charge users for Citadel. To keep it free, Joe enlists Ryan in a special project to find another revenue stream. After Ryan maps the ARPANET, they spot potential in the NSFNET, a backbone network not yet approved for commercial use. The two build their own regional network at MacMillan Utility, but after spending millions of the company's money and making a handshake deal with the NSFNET in defiance of the company's board of directors, Joe is stripped of his executive powers. As a result, he declares in a deposition that he stole Citadel from Gordon.

Cameron's and Donna's relationship deteriorates; Cameron unilaterally fires the Swap Meet founders, and the women clash on how to implement credit card transactions and whether to undertake an initial public offering (IPO) after receiving a $20 million acquisition offer. Cameron wants to delay the IPO to continue developing Mutiny but is outvoted by Donna, Diane, Bosworth, and Gordon; feeling betrayed, she leaves the company and decides to move to Japan with Tom after they reconcile and marry. The Mutiny IPO dramatically underperforms expectations. Gordon and Joe preserve the NSFNET deal with Gordon heading MacMillan Utility. After Ryan illegally releases Citadel's source code and becomes a fugitive from the FBI, Joe steps away from the project to keep it alive. Months later, Ryan shows up at Joe's apartment and is dismayed to learn his legal options. The next morning, Joe discovers that Ryan has killed himself; his suicide note warns how people will use the connectedness of computer networks to hurt each other.

By 1990, Mutiny has folded. The Clarks are amicably divorced. Donna is a partner at Diane's VC firm, while Gordon is running the regional network. Joe is working in his apartment. Bosworth is retired and living with Diane. Cameron is a successful video game developer for Atari. While promoting her game Space Bike IV at COMDEX, she reconnects with Joe and sleeps with him. They, along with Donna, Gordon, and Tom, meet at the former Mutiny office to discuss Donna's memo about the fledgling World Wide Web. Joe proposes building a web browser, and everyone but Tom is receptive; he and Joe have a physical altercation, halting the meetings. Cameron tells Donna she cannot work with her; Donna grudgingly leaves as Gordon, Joe, and Cameron prepare to start their new venture.

Fourth season edit

Over three years, Gordon and Joe run the internet service provider (ISP) CalNect, and Joe logs website URLs. Working from Japan, Cameron fails to complete a web browser for them before they are beaten to market by Mosaic. When CalNect's backbone provider MCI declines to offer them more bandwidth, Gordon and Joe realize MCI is forming its own ISP and sell CalNect. Cameron's cerebral role-playing game, Pilgrim, performs poorly in focus groups and is put on hold by Atari after a negative review. While visiting California, she tells Joe that Tom is divorcing her; she and Joe rekindle a romance. At the VC firm AGGEK, Donna sets up an incubator for a medical database indexing company called Rover to pivot them into web indexing. In debt, Bosworth unretires to oversee the project.

After Gordon's teenage daughter Haley builds a website from Joe's directory of URLs, they form a new startup called Comet to develop it into a human-curated web directory. Donna is surprised to learn her daughter is working on a competing search engine. As Comet grows, Rover's algorithm proves substandard; Bosworth approaches Cameron to ask for help improving the algorithm, which she obliges. Rover's sudden success results in Series A funding but Donna is suspicious. During her ensuing argument with Bosworth about the subject, he suffers a heart attack. At the hospital, Donna realizes Cameron's involvement and tells her to stay out of her life. Cameron admits to Joe her role in helping his competition.

Facing an intellectual property ownership conflict, Donna fires Rover's head programmer but refuses to purchase the rights to Cameron's algorithm, leading to Diane removing her from the project; Cameron signs away the algorithm without compensation. A financier, Alexa, provides Cameron with funding to work independently. When Haley's school grades begin slipping, Gordon tells her she must take time off from Comet, leading to her storming out. Bosworth admits to Diane that he is in debt; the two marry. After Donna opines on the importance of retaining visitors to their sites longer, Gordon is inspired to relaunch Comet as a web portal, which Joe excitedly agrees to. Before they can begin, Gordon dies from a stroke. His friends and family gather to grieve and clean out his house; Cameron and Donna reconcile.

Months later, while preparing for the relaunch of Comet, Joe and Cameron receive a beta copy of the yet-to-be released browser Netscape Navigator. They discover a link to Yahoo! on its toolbar as the default search provider and realize that Comet is doomed. After one final night together, they break up. Joe sells Comet, and AGGEK sells Rover's algorithm. Diane retires and is succeeded at the firm by Donna, who renames it "Symphonic Ventures" and revamps their work culture. Cameron ends her professional relationship with Alexa. Preparing to leave California, Cameron stops at Donna's house to say goodbye but stays to try to recover Haley's school project from her crashed hard drive. Donna and Cameron discuss the prospect of working together again. Later that evening, Donna hosts a cocktail party for women in tech before visiting the former Mutiny office with Cameron. The following morning, as they leave a diner, Donna has an epiphany and tells Cameron, "I have an idea". Joe returns home to Armonk, New York, to become a humanities teacher.

Themes edit

Failure and reinvention edit

Cantwell and Rogers wanted Halt and Catch Fire to explore what it meant to be considered a success or a failure. Rogers said they were interested in the pejorative connotation that the term "loser" carries in American culture, and they sought to redefine how success could be measured beyond binary terms to give their characters more humanity.[90] By the final season, the characters realize "everything isn't about one singular victory professionally or personally".[158] The creators wanted to tell the stories of unsung innovators,[159] since, as Cantwell put it, historical narratives tended to overlook the "millions of people in obscurity who did most of the heavy lifting, only to have somebody step in and get the credit".[160] He said that they intended the series's fictional characters and companies to "exist plausibly within the cracks of history",[100] but since the series follows historical reality,[161] the protagonists are predestined to lose out to real-life competitors.[162] Although the characters prosper financially and attain professional accomplishments,[158] they never find lasting success or transform their industry like they set out to.[163] Describing how their protagonists were fated to fail, Cantwell said, "We know that our characters are not going to be the ones with the Wikipedia articles written about them, but what's fun about our story is, we can somehow still get excited about their excitement, because they're in the fog of war and they don't know what's coming."[20]

In response to their failures, the characters are forced to undergo transformations, both personal and professional. Cantwell called reinvention a major theme of the series, saying: "tech is about failing fast and changing quickly. That felt like it gave us license to do that."[164] Laura Hudson of Wired said, "The cycle of passion, loss of control, and hard reboot runs through not just every business endeavor but nearly every relationship on the show." Regarding the unsuccessful ventures and a failed marriage depicted on the show, she said, "It's easy to call these failures, but they're more like iterations in the lifelong experiment of trial and error that people hope can lead them closer to what they really want, and closer to themselves."[165] Poniewozik, writing for The New York Times, said the series "was more interested in failure as a condition of human growth" and that from its perspective, failure "is not the end; it's how people level up."[30]

Interpersonal relationships and ambition edit

The characters' professional ambitions frequently result in them making decisions at the expense of their personal relationships.[166] David Sims of The Atlantic said, "[The characters'] conflicts often hinge on their struggles to communicate—which is made all the more ironic by the fact that they're laying the groundwork for a world where everyone can speak to each other instantly, despite being more polarized than ever."[10] Lisco said a "seminal theme" of the show was "the euphoria and the cost of going after your dreams in life".[167] Chris Cabin of Collider called the series one in which "connections are often compromised in the name of ambition and vision".[29] Vanity Fair's Laura Bradley said that as each of the series's characters "followed their ambitions, competing ruthlessly to get to an unseen top of the food chain", they alternated between collaborating and "stabb[ing] each other in the back".[168]

In the pilot episode, Joe tells Gordon: "Computers aren't the thing. They're the thing that gets us to the thing".[169] Many critics found it to be a defining phrase of the series, highlighting how technology is ultimately less important than the connections it can forge between people.[14][165][170] Philip Cosores of Consequence of Sound compared the phrase to a lesson he believed the characters had learned: "that it wasn't really important what they created or what they innovated. What was important was that it brought them together over and over again, and that they all made each other better."[171] Joe Reid of Decider said that the characters' stories illustrated that "their successes, their failures, and their might-have-been regrets were never, in the end, as important as the mere fact that they made the decision to work together in the first place".[172] Hudson said that the series's most "radical message" was that "Human beings are the signal, and everything else is just noise."[165]

Feminism edit

The series explores themes of feminism,[173] sexism,[174] and gender roles.[175] Rogers said that the creators were able to "examine modern issues through a period lens" by depicting sexism in the 1980s that was still present 30 years later.[174] Through Cameron's and Donna's professional experiences in computing, the series delves into how people in leadership positions can be perceived differently based on their gender. Emily St. James of Vox said: "Every decision anybody makes is driven, on some level, by emotion. But when the person making that decision is a woman in the workplace, on Halt and Catch Fire, as in life, it's all too easy to write off that decision for being 'emotional.'" In the second season, the creators placed Cameron and Donna into situations similar to ones that Joe and Gordon faced in the first season, as they wanted to contrast the other characters' distrust of the female partnership with their reactions to the male one.[176] According to Cantwell, the 1980s were a time when computers were being marketed as "toys for boys" at the expense of appealing to women;[48] Bishé, an advocate of women entering STEM fields, said that the proportion of women who received computer science degrees had declined in the years following the series's period setting (37 percent in 1984, compared to 18 percent in 2012).[177] Cantwell and Rogers were interested in exploring how the computing industry began to slowly push women out in the mid-1980s,[176] and they depicted it through Cameron's and Donna's encounters with sexist behavior of male venture capitalists.[114][178]

Cantwell and Rogers were annoyed by the common trope of women being accessories to male storylines in television dramas, and wanted Cameron and Donna to be "formidable engineers and formidable people in their own right".[173] Though both feminists, the characters have different values due to their ten-year age difference; Donna has an unentitled view of feminism due to the struggles her generation went through, while Cameron fails to "recognize her own femaleness" and takes for granted the benefits she enjoys due to the efforts of Donna's generation. Davis said that Donna and Cameron represented the stories of second- and third-wave feminism, respectively.[114][173] The depiction of their business partnership was regarded by critics as easily passing the Bechdel test, which measures female representation in fiction.[179][180]

Distribution edit

Premiere and initial broadcast edit

The pilot was screened at the South by Southwest festival on March 8, 2014.[181] Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak moderated a panel discussion with Cantwell and Rogers at the festival, and called the pilot "very realistic".[82] From May 19–31, the pilot was available to stream on AMC's Tumblr page and AMC.com,[182] and through video on demand and TV Everywhere services;[183] it was marketed as the first TV series to premiere on Tumblr and the first time AMC had partnered with a social media service to debut a new show.[182] In the two weeks before its television premiere, the episode received "hundreds of thousands of plays", according to AMC president Charlie Collier.[184] The network held private screenings of the pilot for employees of technology companies such as Apple, Twitter, Google, and Dropbox, as well as for Tumblr "influencers" at the company's New York headquarters.[182] A premiere was held at the ArcLight Hollywood theatre in Los Angeles on May 21.[185]

The series made its television debut on Sunday, June 1, 2014, in the 10 p.m. ET timeslot, replacing Mad Men, whose mid-season finale had aired the week prior for its final season.[186] The pilot episode of Halt and Catch Fire was the only one distributed to critics for review, an uncommon practice for new series, which usually make multiple episodes available upon premiering.[187]

Season two premiered on May 31, 2015, and concluded on August 2.[188]

Prior to the third season's official two-hour premiere on Tuesday, August 23, 2016,[189] AMC aired the season's first episode early on Sunday, August 21, at 11 p.m. ET, in the second half of a two-hour timeslot that had been allocated to Talking Dead.[190]

AMC renewed Halt and Catch Fire for a fourth and final season of ten episodes on October 10, 2016.[191] The final season began with a two-hour premiere on August 19, 2017,[3] and concluded with a two-hour series finale on October 14.

International distribution edit

Halt and Catch Fire was distributed internationally by eOne Television[192] as one of the first series covered by a 2013 agreement with AMC to distribute the network's original scripted programming.[193] The distributor licensed the series to Canal+ in France; C More in Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Finland; HBO Nordic in Scandinavia; TV 2 in Norway; and D.B.S Satellite Services in Israel.[194] In August 2014, AMC announced that the series would be among the network's first original series to air on their recently rebranded international TV channels in Asia, Europe, and Latin America.[195] The series premiered in Singapore in March 2015.[196] That same month, the CBS AMC Networks EMEA Channels Partnership, a joint venture between AMC Networks International Zone and CBS Studios International, announced that the series would be broadcast in Poland on CBS Europa starting April 12; this marked the first time that CBS Europa would air first-run content.[197] Halt and Catch Fire premiered in Australia on June 23, 2015, on Showcase.[198]

Home media and streaming edit

The first season was released on DVD (region 1) and Blu-ray (region A) on May 5, 2015.[199] The second season was released on DVD in region 1 on August 9, 2016.[200]

Season one was made available on AMC On Demand and AMC.com from March 26 to April 7, 2015, before its release on Netflix on April 8.[201] It was also made available on Amazon Video in the UK and Germany.[202] In December 2017, the final season was released on Netflix, making the entire series available on the service.[203] On May 1, 2020, a licensing deal between AMC and ViacomCBS took effect to make Pluto TV the exclusive no-cost, ad-supported streaming partner for older AMC content; Halt and Catch Fire was one of the network's series covered by the agreement.[204] In September 2020, AMC announced an agreement with ad-supported streaming service IMDb TV to offer the network's programming; Halt and Catch Fire was one of several original series planned for a dedicated channel called "AMC: Presents".[205] A similar "AMC Presents" ad-supported channel, featuring network content such as Halt and Catch Fire, was announced for the Samsung TV Plus streaming service in December 2020,[206] and for Plex's "Live TV" streaming in March 2021.[207] All four seasons of the show became available for streaming on SBS On Demand in Australia in June 2021.[208] After departing Netflix in December 2021, the series was added to the AMC+ streaming service, with each full season released weekly in subsequent weeks.[209]

Reception edit

Critical response edit

Season Critical response
Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic
1 76% (49 reviews) 69/100 (31 reviews)
2 91% (23 reviews) 73/100 (8 reviews)
3 96% (23 reviews) 83/100 (12 reviews)
4 100% (27 reviews) 92/100 (8 reviews)

First season edit

The first season received favorable reviews from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the first season received an average score of 69, based on 31 reviews.[210] According to review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the first season holds a 76% approval rating with an average score of 7.2/10, based on 49 reviews; the site's consensus said, "A refreshingly well-acted period drama, Halt and Catch Fire convincingly portrays the not-too-distant past."[211] Reviewing the pilot, Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe was intrigued by the possibility that the series would "be able to delve beneath the surface of its milieu". He highlighted the "distinctive visual style", focus on "material that has not already been done to death elsewhere on TV", and the "pair of unfamiliar and interesting lead actors".[32] Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter called the opening episode a "triumphant pilot with excellent writing, impressive acting and a noteworthy cinematic visual style". Although skeptical about how the show would evolve, Goodman said, "It's a premise with possibilities and could be AMC's best offering of the post-classics (Breaking Bad, Mad Men) era."[212] Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times said that although the pilot "doesn't hit the gloriously high bar set by the opening episode of Mad Men, it is provocative and promising nonetheless."[131]

Reviewing several episodes, Chris Cabin of Slant Magazine said "the show's creators choose to tailor the series to focus on the enigmatic MacMillan, which might explain why Halt and Catch Fire comes off as overtly coy and more than a little aimless". The review called the show "a hungry anticipation for what machines can and will do, but it only has a cursory interest in the complex humans that built them."[213] Alan Sepinwall of HitFix believed the series was derivative of others and analogized this assessment to the show's plotline of reverse engineering the IBM PC, calling Halt and Catch Fire "a series that has not only been reverse-engineered from past cable drama hits, but that seems acutely aware of that fact."[17] Emily St. James of The A.V. Club echoed these sentiments, writing that the pilot "feels like the network trying to reverse engineer... its success with Mad Men". St. James, though, said that "the pilot moves with a kind of confidence that's hard to fake" and praised Campanella's "intriguing direction".[18] Joanne Ostrow of The Denver Post called it a "dreary imitation" of Mad Men in which "the brooding, secretive loner guy was a tad too familiar, yet not as moving as that earlier slick-suited version". She liked the stories of the male leads and the progression of the female characters but said that "Pace's excellent performance was not enough to make the show rewarding".[19] Colin McGuire of PopMatters said that the season was "not perfect" and accurately reflected that it had been written by two newcomers to television. He noted, however, the "worthwhile cast that did far more than enough to bring the occasionally spotty narrative to life" and said, "The groundwork for something special is there, imperfections and all."[214]

Second season edit

The second season received strong reviews, with many critics noting the series's improvement over its first season. At Metacritic, the season received an average review score of 73 out of 100, based on 8 reviews.[215] According to Rotten Tomatoes, the second season holds a 91% approval rating with an average score of 8.3/10, based on 23 reviews; the site's critical consensus said, "Halt and Catch Fire version 2.0 has received some upgrades and improvements, including a welcome focus on its female leads."[216] Sepinwall praised the acting, writing, and directing of season two, and noted that one of his frustrations with the first season, the downplaying of Donna and Cameron, was resolved: "Now it's essentially Halt and Catch Fire 2.0, with all the bugs worked out so that it can function exactly as it first promised." Sepinwall summed up the season's changes by saying, "Those who stayed patient with Halt season 1, or those who come to the show now that the quality has gone up significantly, will be rewarded."[217] Andy Greenwald of Grantland called season two a "hard reboot" that was exponentially better. He praised the emphasis placed on the female leads, Davis's performance, and how it reframed the male leads, while noting that the focus on Mutiny "inject[ed] the show with the jittery, caffeinated energy of a start-up".[179] Willa Paskin of Slate said that the series was able to successfully pivot by shifting focus to a startup setting and to Cameron and Donna, the latter of whom Paskin said "has blossomed into a character with ambitions all her own". Commenting on the season's exploration of issues facing working women, Paskin wrote, "what is so satisfying about its treatment of sexism... is not the extent to which the sexism conforms to our expectations, but that the women involved do not."[8] Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker called season two "such a startling upgrade of the first that it begs for technological metaphors". She said that the chemistry between Donna and Cameron "is looser, releasing the show from the burdens of its gloomy forerunners", and that the marriage between Gordon and Donna felt nuanced. Nussbaum said the series was best at being "a platform for a fascinating, buried period of history" that provided "oddly profound meditations on the nature of originality in the digital age, nested within relationship talk".[218] James Poniewozik of Time said the show "remade and refocused itself in its second season" by focusing on the Cameron–Donna partnership and that "it now has a compelling subject". Poniewozik said, "true to Moore's Law, it has become magnitudes better."[57]

Several publications ranked the second season among the best television series of 2015 on their end-of-year lists. The Atlantic and James Poniewozik of The New York Times shortlisted it,[219][220] while it was ranked: first by Slate;[221] fifth-best by RogerEbert.com;[222] eighth-best by Vox;[223] and 23rd-best by Rolling Stone.[224]

Third season edit

The third season received critical acclaim. At Metacritic, the season has an average review score of 83 out of 100, based on 12 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim".[225] According to Rotten Tomatoes, the third season holds a 96% approval rating with an average score of 8.6/10, based on 23 reviews; the site's critical consensus said, "Halt and Catch Fire finds its footing in an optimistic third season that builds on the fascinating relationship between a pair of emerging protagonists."[226] David Sims of The Atlantic said Halt and Catch Fire was "one of TV's most elegantly crafted shows", "the best drama on television", and the most underrated. Sims praised the series for creating emotional investment in the characters' ideas, for its depiction of teamwork and the act of creation, and for using "[Joe] MacMillan to satirize the Jobsian cult of personality that defines so much of the tech world".[227] St. James, writing for Vox, said, "This is the rare recent TV drama that's both as good as it is and as optimistic as it is." She praised Cantwell and Rogers for continued character development and highlighted the series for leading the movement of what she called "empathy dramas".[115] Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter called out the Donna–Cameron partnership as the highlight of the show, writing, "There's nothing like it on TV." He praised the lead actors' performances and the nuanced characters, and called Halt and Catch Fire "one of TV's best-directed shows".[228] Maureen Ryan of Variety called the series "both a retro pleasure and a forward-looking gem" that was bolstered by its performances, soundtrack, and individual episode story arcs. Ryan said the characters' failed attempts to connect with each other resonated because of the series's "compassionate approach to its core characters".[229] Jen Chaney of Vulture said the third season "covers familiar thematic ground while remaining a very good period piece that traces the rise of digital technology and simultaneously uses it as a metaphor to explore its characters' frailties". Chaney said the series earned its "should-watch status" through its cast, use of restraint, and depiction of characters on the verge of technological breakthroughs.[230] Poniewozik, writing for The New York Times, said the season "makes its past future feel dewy and new" and that despite some initial slow pacing, "The character dynamics are solid... and the '80s details continue to be spot on."[45] Hank Stuever of The Washington Post said, "The show's bugs and glitches also persist, but, if nothing else, Halt and Catch Fire has become an above-average specimen of 'slow television,' should you want such a thing in your life." The review said that the season "survives—and arguably thrives" on the Donna–Cameron storyline, but that it still struggled with Joe's character.[231]

Many publications ranked the third season among the best television series of 2016 on their end-of-year lists. The Atlantic shortlisted it,[232] while it was ranked: first by Vox;[233] third-best by Willa Paskin and June Thomas of Slate;[234] fourth-best by Consequence of Sound and Sonia Saraiya of Variety;[235][236] sixth-best by RogerEbert.com and The A.V. Club;[237][238] seventh-best by The Ringer;[239] ninth-best by Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter;[240] and tenth-best by Paste.[241]

Fourth season edit

The fourth season received critical acclaim, and the strongest reviews of any season of the series. At Metacritic, the season has an average review score of 92 out of 100, based on 8 reviews.[242] According to Rotten Tomatoes, the fourth season holds a 100% approval rating with an average score of 9.5/10, based on 27 reviews; the site's critical consensus said, "Halt and Catch Fire's character-driven drama culminates in an optimistic ode to the early internet age that's bound to stand the test of time."[243] Michael Roffman of Consequence of Sound called the fourth season "a victory lap for everyone who championed the show from the very beginning". He said the series's refusal to guarantee the characters' success "doesn't just make for great television, but great characters, and those characters are partly why Halt has staved off its own demise."[244] Jeff Jensen of Entertainment Weekly said the show had overcome "a sputtering start to become a luminous drama", praising Cantwell and Rogers for progressing "from aping the antihero playbook to refining it" and for making "incredibly compelling and unique" characters. He concluded his review by calling the series "an urgent story of rehumanization for a cold, wired culture".[245] Eric Thurm of The Verge called the show "the best depiction of technological innovation on television", lauding the "truly formidable" cast and the show's visual style for "charg[ing] meetings, coding sessions, or a group of people standing in front of a whiteboard with creative potential".[162] St. James commended the series's ability to create nostalgia for the early days of the Web and said it was one of the few dramas that was able to "stay nimble and sharp" by "find[ing] endless new iterations of the characters it already has".[246] In her end-of-year rankings of the best series, St. James said the season's final four episodes "were as emotionally overwhelming as anything [she's] ever seen on television".[247] J.M. Suarez of PopMatters said the season "never sacrifices nuance and thoughtfulness for twists or attempts to outdo itself," calling the show "confident enough to let its characters succeed and fail without having to spell out who's right and wrong".[248] Sims said the fourth season "succeeds by making its tech narrative not a dry history lesson, but rather a battle of wills between four very flawed, compelling characters, each possessed of the kinds of manic ambition and tendency toward self-destruction that make for the best television drama".[50] Alex Cranz of Gizmodo called the fourth season "easily one of the best seasons of a television show ever produced",[249] while Brian Grubb of Uproxx similarly called it "one of the best seasons of television [he's] ever seen".[250]

Many publications ranked the fourth season among the best television series of 2017 on their end-of-year lists. The New York Times, The Atlantic, Vox, and The Philadelphia Inquirer shortlisted it.[247][251][252][253] The series was ranked: second-best by Consequence of Sound and The Hollywood Reporter's Daniel Fienberg;[254][255] third-best by Uproxx's Alan Sepinwall,[256] Variety's Sonya Saraiya,[257] and RogerEbert.com's Brian Tallerico;[258] fourth-best on TVLine's list of dramas;[259] fifth-best by The A.V. Club,[260] Forbes,[261] Slate,[262] and Vulture's Jen Chaney;[263] sixth-best by The Oregonian;[264] seventh-best by IndieWire and The Ringer;[265][266] ninth-best by Paste;[267] 13th-best by Rolling Stone;[268] and 39th-best by The Guardian.[269] According to Metacritic, Halt and Catch Fire's fourth season was the 17th-highest-ranked series of 2017, based on critics' end-of-year lists.[270]

Viewership ratings edit

The premiere episode drew 1.2 million viewers according to Nielsen data, 433,000 of them in the 18–49 age demographic.[271] At the time, it was the least-watched drama series premiere in AMC's modern history,[272] and was the only episode of the series to surpass one million viewers during its initial broadcast.[138] The first season drew modest overall viewership, averaging 760,000 viewers per episode, and a 0.3 rating in the 18–49 age demographic for live plus same-day viewings.[273] When accounting for time shifting via digital video recorders (DVRs), the season averaged 1.3 million viewers per episode in live plus 7-day viewings; 606,000 of them were ages 18–49,[274][275] making Halt and Catch Fire among the "most upscale dramas on ad-supported television" behind Mad Men and The Good Wife, according to AMC. Despite the low overall ratings, the network renewed the show in August 2014 for a second season of ten episodes. AMC's president Charlie Collier said, "We have a history of demonstrating patience through the early seasons of new shows, betting on talent and building audience over time."[275]

The second-season premiere drew 659,000 viewers, 262,000 of whom were ages 18–49. Compared to the first-season premiere, this marked a 45% drop in overall viewership and a 39% drop in the 18–49 demographic.[276] The season finale was watched by 485,000 viewers.[277] Despite the critical acclaim that season two garnered, viewership declined overall. The season averaged 520,000 viewers per episode and a 0.2 rating in the 18–49 age demographic in live plus same-day viewings.[192][273] When accounting for time shifting, the season averaged 865,000 viewers per episode in live plus 3-day viewings and just under one million in live plus 7-day viewings.[129] Still, AMC renewed the series in October 2015 for a ten-episode third season. Stillerman said, "The critical momentum was a big part of the decision."[278] The Tuesday premiere of the third season drew just 385,000 same-day viewers.[279]

Halt and Catch Fire : U.S. viewers per episode (thousands)
SeasonEpisode numberAverage
12345678910
11190970765844575718832627549574764
2659494452451543558499497588485523
3367339397312324280307366407287339
4340340270344313354322327394394340
Audience measurement performed by Nielsen Media Research[280][281][282][283]

Awards and nominations edit

Year Award Category Nominee(s) Result Ref.
2014 Satellite Awards Best Television Series – Drama Halt and Catch Fire Nominated [284]
Best Actor – Television Series Drama Lee Pace Nominated
Critics' Choice Television Awards Most Exciting New Series Halt and Catch Fire Won [285]
2015 Casting Society of America's Artios Awards Outstanding Achievement in Casting – Television Pilot – Drama
  • Sharon Bialy
  • Sherry Thomas
  • Lisa Mae Fincannon (location casting)
  • Craig Fincannon (location casting)
  • Allison Bader (associate)
  • Jen Ingulli (associate)
Nominated [286]
Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Main Title Design
  • Patrick Clair (creative director)
  • Raoul Marks (animator)
  • Eddy Herringson (designer)
  • Paul Sangwoo Kim (typographer)
  • AMC
Nominated [287]
SXSW Film Design Awards Excellence in Title Design Patrick Clair Nominated [288]
Hollywood Post Alliance Awards Outstanding Sound – Television
  • Susan Cahill (supervising sound editor)
  • Keith Rogers (re-recording mixer)
  • Scott Weber (re-recording mixer)
  • Jane Boegel (dialogue editor)
  • Mark Cleary (sound effects editor)
  • Kevin McCullough (sound effects editor)
  • NBC Universal Studio Post
for episode: "SETI"
Nominated [289]
2017 Guild of Music Supervisors Awards Best Music Supervision in a Television Drama
for season 3
Nominated [290]
2018 Motion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Awards Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Dialogue and ADR for Episodic Short Form Broadcast Media
  • Susan Cahill (supervising sound editor)
  • Sara Bencivenga (supervising ADR editor)
  • Jane Boegel (dialogue editor)
for episode: "So It Goes"
Nominated [291]
Peabody Awards Entertainment honoree
  • AMC Studios
  • Gran Via Productions
for Halt and Catch Fire
Nominated [292]
Women's Image Network Awards Actress Drama Series Kerry Bishé Nominated [293]
Drama Series Halt and Catch Fire
for episode: "NeXT"
Won [294]
2019 Guild of Music Supervisors Awards Best Music Supervision in a Television Drama
  • Thomas Golubić
  • Yvette Metoyer
for season 4
Nominated [295]

Legacy edit

Halt and Catch Fire appeared on several rankings of 21st century television series. Thrillist called it the best TV series to air all of its episodes in the 2010s; writer Esther Zuckerman said: "perhaps more than any other show that began during this decade, Halt and Catch Fire captured the agony of trying to navigate a world where it's easier and easier to hide behind a computer screen. In documenting the beginning of the boom that brought us to where we are, [Cantwell and Rogers] created characters who reflected universal anxieties through their longing."[296] Emily St. James of Vox ranked it 5th on her list of the shows that best explained the 2010s, saying the series "had the power to transport viewers back to a world where computers could unite people rather than divide them, where the internet held promise and not destruction. The show's most beautiful optimism was that we might be able to return to that world someday."[297] Time named it one of their top 10 TV series of the 2010s, saying, "In the past decade, as we've suffered the consequences of a tech sector that can seem devoid of human insight and empathy, Halt dared to imagine an alternate history of the industry in which those qualities mattered most."[298] The Hollywood Reporter ranked it the 7th-best TV series of the decade, with Daniel Fienberg saying of it: "Driven by a commitment to character, Halt and Catch Fire gained more and more emotional heft with each passing season and every tear I shed in the final three or four episodes felt completely earned."[299] Consequence of Sound ranked the series 10th on their list of the decade's best; Michael Roffman said, "As [the characters] endured, so did the show, and that bizarre negotiation of fiction and reality certainly elevated our feelings towards the characters and the series."[300] Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert.com, which placed the series 12th on its list of the decade's best, called it "one of the best character studies of the decade" and said "no show was smarter than this one when it comes to chronicling what success (and failure) does to personal relationships".[301]

In its critical assessment of 2010s television, Vulture included Halt and Catch Fire in its section of "Indisputable Classics" and said, "Observant, replete with unexpected and great soundtrack choices, and blessed with four lead actors... who made every scene sing, Halt and Catch Fire was never flashy, and that made it a rare, special creation."[302] The show was ranked 14th on IndieWire's list of the best TV shows of the 2010s; Libby Hill said that it dissected how "friends, lovers, and partners find ways to build things and, too often, tear them apart".[303] Rolling Stone placed the series 18th on its list of the decade's 50 best TV shows; Alan Sepinwall said that "Halt quickly left the knockoff accusations behind and transformed into its own incredibly moving story" after it emphasized the Donna and Cameron characters and made "their partnership the series' emotional centerpiece".[304] USA Today ranked it the 24th-best series of the decade, saying, "No TV show earns the most-improved award more than 'Halt'", while opining that it "found its voice" once it focused on the friendship between Cameron and Donna.[305] The A.V. Club ranked the series 29th on its list of the 100 best shows of the decade, saying that it was in "the pantheon of great but underseen series that'll hopefully find greater appreciation years after the fact".[306] Halt and Catch Fire also appeared on end-of-decade lists of the best TV shows published by Uproxx,[307] Collider,[308] and Paste.[309]

In 2022, Rolling Stone placed Halt and Catch Fire 55th on its revised list of "The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time"; the list was compiled from 46 ballots submitted by actors, writers, producers, and critics.[310] The Hollywood Reporter's 2023 list of the 50 greatest shows of the 21st century ranked the series in 17th place, highlighting the final season for paying off the "three previous seasons of deep emotional investment".[311] In 2021, BBC Culture ranked Halt and Catch Fire 50th on its list of the 100 greatest TV series of the 21st century; the list was based on a poll of 206 TV experts, comprising critics, journalists, and industry figures from 43 countries.[312] The Guardian ranked Halt and Catch Fire 79th on its list of the 100 best TV shows of the 21st century.[313] For The New York Times' list of "The 20 Best Dramas Since The Sopranos", the series was included in a section of "The Toughest Omissions"; James Poniewozik called it "one of TV's best stories about work, the medium through which its characters communicate, fall apart and come together again".[314]

Two fourth-season episodes were ranked among the best TV episodes of the 2010s; BuzzFeed News included "Goodwill" on its list of the top 25 episodes,[315] and Film School Rejects ranked "Ten of Swords" 23rd on its list of the top 50.[316]

In 2024, the ATX Television Festival will host a panel discussion to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Halt and Catch Fire's premiere, with the producers and cast members as participants.[317]

References edit

  1. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (July 26, 2013). "TCA: AMC Picks Up 'Halt & Catch Fire' & 'Turn' To Series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  2. ^ "AMC Drama 'Halt and Catch Fire' to Bow June 1 After 'Mad Men' Finale". Variety. March 5, 2014. Retrieved March 5, 2014.
  3. ^ a b Shapiro, Marissa (June 27, 2017). "Premiere Date for the Final Season Revealed -- Watch a New Teaser". AMC.com. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  4. ^ Roots, Kimberly (June 1, 2014). "Halt and Catch Fire: Does AMC's New Drama Compute?". TVLine. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  5. ^ a b c d e Darling, Cary (May 31, 2014). "AMC does Dallas, and Fort Worth, in 'Halt and Catch Fire'". Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  6. ^ Labrecque, Jeff (June 1, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire': If Don Draper and Walter White met in 1983". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  7. ^ Doyle, John (May 31, 2014). "Brace yourself for a great, Old West-style computer drama". The Globe and Mail. p. R10. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c Paskin, Willa (May 28, 2015). "The Perfect Pivot". Slate. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  9. ^ Herman, Alison (October 15, 2017). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Was Moving to the End". The Ringer. Retrieved December 25, 2017.
  10. ^ a b c Sims, David (October 11, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire's Sad Ballad of the Future". The Atlantic. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Collins, Sean T. (August 23, 2016). "How Halt and Catch Fire Became the Underdog Success of the Peak TV Era". Esquire. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  12. ^ Collins, Sean T. (June 30, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Recap: Who's Your Daddy?". Rolling Stone. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  13. ^ a b Woo, Kelly (October 14, 2017). "'Halt and Catch Fire' series finale postmortem: The creators on bringing it full circle". Yahoo!. Retrieved July 14, 2019.
  14. ^ a b Gault, Matthew (December 22, 2017). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Is the New 'The Wire'". Motherboard. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  15. ^ Darling, Cary (May 30, 2014). "Heavy-handed new AMC series has potential". Winnipeg Free Press. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  16. ^ a b Mitchell, Jim (July 13, 2015). "Cowboys of the Silicon Prairie". The Sydney Morning Herald. p. 4. Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  17. ^ a b Sepinwall, Alan (July 28, 2014). "Review: AMC's 'Halt and Catch Fire' nears end of season 1". HitFix. Retrieved May 19, 2018.
  18. ^ a b St. James, Emily (May 30, 2014). "Halt And Catch Fire tries to reverse engineer Mad Men". The A.V. Club. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  19. ^ a b Ostrow, Joanne (July 31, 2014). "'Catch Fire' never did; 'Silicon Valley' clicked". The Denver Post. p. E2. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
  20. ^ a b c Herman, Alison (August 17, 2017). "How 'Halt and Catch Fire' Evolved Into Prestige TV's Only Worthy Successor". The Ringer. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  21. ^ a b c d St. James, Emily (August 4, 2015). "Halt and Catch Fire's creators hope you think they're 'the worst writers in the world'". Vox. Retrieved August 25, 2018.
  22. ^ Perkins, Dennis (September 30, 2017). "Halt And Catch Fire finds its heart, and breaks ours". The A.V. Club. Retrieved May 22, 2019.
  23. ^ Bradley, Laura (August 18, 2017). "How Halt and Catch Fire Became the Most Human Drama on TV". Vanity Fair. Retrieved May 22, 2019.
  24. ^ Jung, E. Alex (October 14, 2017). "Lee Pace on Joe MacMillan's Fate in the Halt and Catch Fire Series Finale". Vulture. Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  25. ^ Elber, Lynn (May 30, 2014). "Sex, lies and PCs in '80s computer world drama". Associated Press. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
  26. ^ Tate, Gabriel (June 24, 2015). "Lee Pace interview: 'Halt and Catch Fire is about people, not computers'". The Guardian. Retrieved January 14, 2019.
  27. ^ Peisner, David (June 19, 2014). "Tales of the Silicon Prairie". Rolling Stone. No. 1211. p. 30. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  28. ^ Robertson, Adi (May 28, 2015). "Gaming the system: Halt and Catch Fire's fun, slightly unfocused second season". The Verge. Retrieved April 22, 2020.
  29. ^ a b c Cabin, Chris (August 23, 2016). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Season 3 Review: Mutiny Faces Growth, Earthquakes, and Joe MacMillan". Collider. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  30. ^ a b c Poniwozik, James (October 16, 2017). "Failure Is an Art Form". The New York Times (New York ed.). sec. C, p. 1. Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  31. ^ a b c d e f g h i Yarm, Mark (May 30, 2014). "Halt and Catch Fire Gets the '80s PC Revolution Perfectly Right. Here's How". Wired. Retrieved December 25, 2017.
  32. ^ a b Gilbert, Matthew (May 30, 2014). "The promise of Halt and Catch Fire". The Boston Globe. p. 18G. Retrieved June 10, 2014.
  33. ^ Korbelik, Jeff (June 1, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire' more than computer building". Lincoln Journal Star. p. D4. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  34. ^ Manjoo, Farhad (June 1, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Recap: Can Geekiness Be Entertaining?". The New York Times. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  35. ^ Kelly, Christopher (June 2014). "Scoot McNairy catches fire". Texas Monthly. Vol. 42, no. 6. pp. 40+. Retrieved January 31, 2020.
  36. ^ Wallace, Rachel (August 23, 2016). "Catching up with Scoot McNairy". DuJour. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  37. ^ Dickie, George (August 25, 2017). . Statesboro Herald. sec. Beyond Basic TV, p. 23. Archived from the original on April 11, 2022. Retrieved February 19, 2019.
  38. ^ Fienberg, Daniel (June 1, 2014). "Interview: Scoot McNairy on 'Halt and Catch Fire'". Uproxx. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  39. ^ Machkovech, Sam (May 22, 2014). "Review: Halt and Catch Fire reverse-engineers pop culture". Ars Technica. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  40. ^ a b Gagne, Ken (July 11, 2014). "Review: Halt and Catch Fire adds sizzle to PC history". Computerworld. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  41. ^ a b Poniewozik, James (August 3, 2015). "Halt and Catch Fire Became the Next Mad Men When It Stopped Trying to Be". Time. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  42. ^
    • Perkins, Dennis (July 19, 2015). "Halt And Catch Fire: 'Limbo'". The A.V. Club. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
    • Perkins, Dennis (August 30, 2016). "Searching for security strikes sparks on an electric Halt And Catch Fire". The A.V. Club. Retrieved April 13, 2020.
  43. ^ Kokalitcheva, Kia (September 7, 2016). "Startup Tensions Swirl in AMC's 'Halt and Catch Fire'". Fortune. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  44. ^ Perkins, Dennis (August 23, 2016). "Ominously, Halt And Catch Fire's Joe MacMillan addiction resurfaces". The A.V. Club. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  45. ^ a b Poniewozik, James (August 23, 2016). "Rebooting the Dawn of Silicon Valley". The New York Times. p. C1. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  46. ^ Chaney, Jen (August 25, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire Is Confident As Hell in Season Four". Vulture. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  47. ^ a b Ng, Philiana (June 1, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Creators Pledge Tale of 'Combustive' Egos and the Anti-Skyler White". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  48. ^ a b c d e f Sirois, Justin (September 22, 2015). "Gamer's Grammar: An interview with one of the creators of 'Halt and Catch Fire'". Baltimore City Paper. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  49. ^ Rao, Priya (May 30, 2014). "Mackenzie Davis Likens Her Hair in Halt and Catch Fire 'to Donald Trump's'". Vanity Fair. Retrieved September 29, 2019.
  50. ^ a b Sims, David (August 22, 2017). "It's Not Too Late for Halt and Catch Fire". The Atlantic. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  51. ^ Doyle, John (May 29, 2015). "John Doyle: Stop and watch: Halt and Catch Fire". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved April 23, 2020.
  52. ^ Bell, Shavonne (June 12, 2014). "Halt and Catch Fire Q&A – Mackenzie Davis (Cameron Howe)". AMC.com. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  53. ^ "'Halt And Catch Fire' Explores What It Was Like For Women In '80s Tech". WBUR-FM. May 29, 2015. Retrieved February 2, 2020.
  54. ^ Duncan, Fiona (Winter 2014). "Mackenzie Davis". Catalogue. No. 8. pp. 8–17. Retrieved January 23, 2023.
  55. ^ St. James, Emily (October 15, 2017). "I loved AMC's Halt and Catch Fire. I can't wait for you to love it too". Vox. Retrieved February 6, 2020.
  56. ^ Perkins, Dennis (September 16, 2017). "There's only a metaphorical way out on a tangled Halt And Catch Fire". The A.V. Club. Retrieved April 15, 2020.
  57. ^ a b Poniewozik, James (May 28, 2015). "Review: Halt and Catch Fire Works the Bugs Out in Version 2.0". Time. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  58. ^ a b c Bonaime, Ross (May 21, 2015). "Toby Huss Talks Halt and Catch Fire, and Embracing the Darkness". Paste. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  59. ^ Baylis, Sheila Cosgrove (June 8, 2015). "Halt and Catch Fire recap: New Coke". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 15, 2020.
  60. ^ O'Neill, Phelim (October 12, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire: not Mad Men in the 80s, but so much better". The Guardian. Retrieved December 25, 2017.
  61. ^ a b Crowder, Courtney (May 28, 2014). "Bishe adds smarts to 'Fire' role". Chicago Tribune. sec. Arts+Entertainment, pp. 1, 5. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  62. ^ Schwartz, Ryan (March 29, 2017). "Peak TV Treasure: Halt and Catch Fire". TVLine. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  63. ^ Lowry, Brian (May 27, 2014). "'Fire' Starter Feels a Little Bit Floppy Driven". Variety. Vol. 324, no. 3. p. 68. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  64. ^ Fienberg, Daniel (June 8, 2014). "Interview: 'Halt and Catch Fire' star Kerry Bishé on not being a wet blanket wife". Uproxx. Retrieved April 15, 2019.
  65. ^ Collis, Clark (April 21, 2015). . Entertainment Weekly. Archived from the original on October 5, 2017. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  66. ^ "Kerry Bishé: Halt And Catch Science". NPR. August 4, 2017. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  67. ^ Sims, David (August 4, 2015). "Halt and Catch Fire: A Show on the Edge of Greatness". The Atlantic. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  68. ^ Terry, Josh (August 22, 2016). "General Electricity: 'Halt and Catch Fire' Season 3 is another solid upgrade for TV's most underrated show". Chicago Tribune. sec. Redeye, p. 14. Retrieved April 15, 2020.
  69. ^ Surrey, Miles (August 16, 2017). "'Halt and Catch Fire' resets for final season by making one of its leads the villain". Mic. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  70. ^ Renner, Ethan (June 2, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire' premiere recap, 'I/O'". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  71. ^ Gallaga, Omar L. (October 22, 2017). "'Halt and Catch Fire' showed humanity of early Texas tech". Austin American-Statesman. pp. F3–F4. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  72. ^ a b Eakin, Marah (August 3, 2015). "Toby Huss on King Of The Hill, Reno 911!, and his time in the Pete And Pete pajamas". The A.V. Club. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  73. ^ O'Neal, Sean (September 4, 2019). "How Toby Huss Became Hollywood's Favorite Fake Texan". Texas Monthly. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  74. ^ Coffin, Lesley (August 23, 2016). "Interview: Actor Toby Huss on Season Three of Halt and Catch Fire". TheYoungFolks.com. Retrieved September 23, 2019.
  75. ^ Snetiker, Marc (October 11, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire creators talk time jump, final season". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  76. ^ Collins, Sean T. (August 21, 2017). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Season Premiere Recap: Live and Let Dial-Up". Decider. Retrieved December 25, 2017.
  77. ^ Agard, Chancellor (August 19, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire premiere recap: 'So It Goes' / 'Signal to Noise'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  78. ^ a b c Snetiker, Marc (July 25, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire: Matthew Lillard joins season 3". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  79. ^ Stanhope, Kate (March 11, 2016). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Adds 'Hundred-Foot Journey' Star for Season 3 (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  80. ^ a b Petski, Denise (June 9, 2017). "'Halt And Catch Fire': Anna Chlumsky Set To Recur In Fourth & Final Season". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved June 21, 2017.
  81. ^ a b c d e Galas, Marjorie (March 17, 2014). . Variety 411. Archived from the original on April 5, 2014. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  82. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tone, Joe (May 15–21, 2014). "The Unlikely Engineering of Halt and Catch Fire". Dallas Observer. Vol. 34, no. 20. pp. 11–17. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  83. ^ a b c d e Johans, Jen (November 16, 2021). "S2: E49 - Halt and Catch Fire with Christopher Cantwell (Co-Creator/Showrunner)". Watch with Jen (Podcast). Retrieved June 24, 2023 – via RSS.com.
  84. ^ Borrelli, Christopher (May 28, 2014). "The Full Nerdy: The tech developer, newly fleshed out on TV, is having a moment". Chicago Tribune. section Arts+Entertainment, pp. 1, 4.
  85. ^ a b Montini, Laura (May 30, 2014). "Tech War: AMC's New Show Reveals the Scrappy Roots of PCs". Inc. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  86. ^ a b Lambert, Molly (May 27, 2015). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Cocreators Chris Rogers and Chris Cantwell". The Lambert Account (Podcast). Retrieved November 4, 2018 – via Grantland.
  87. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l
    • Kurp, Josh (October 11, 2016). "A 'Halt And Catch Fire' Co-Creator Details The Show's History In A Revealing Tweetstorm". Uproxx. Retrieved August 18, 2018.
    • Cantwell, Christopher [@ifyoucantwell] (October 11, 2016). "Jan 2011: @CCR & I began writing #HaltandCatchFire. Wrote the first 8 pgs of Joe walking down an IBM hallway at my DTLA apt on 7th & Spring" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  88. ^ a b c d Palmer, Lisa (June 20, 2015). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Co-Creators Chris Rogers and Chris Cantwell: How We Made It in Hollywood". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  89. ^ a b c Jensen, Todd Aaron (June 20, 2014). "The IT Crowd". Writers Guild of America West. Retrieved June 28, 2023.
  90. ^ a b c d e O'Falt, Chris (June 20, 2018). "'Halt And Catch Fire' Creators Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C. Rogers". IndieWire Filmmaker Toolkit (Podcast). Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  91. ^ a b Andreeva, Nellie (November 27, 2012). "AMC Orders Period Drama Pilots From Craig Silverstein/Barry Josephson, Mark Johnson". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  92. ^ Snierson, Dan (July 26, 2013). "AMC greenlights drama series 'Halt & Catch Fire' and 'Turn'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  93. ^ Goldberg, Lesley (February 26, 2013). "'Pushing Daisies' Alum Lee Pace to Star in AMC's '80s Computer Drama". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  94. ^ Goldberg, Lesley (March 4, 2013). "'Argo' Actor to Co-Star in AMC's '80s Computer Drama". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  95. ^ a b Goldberg, Lesley (March 12, 2013). "Kerry Bishe to Reteam With 'Argo' Co-Star in AMC's '80s Computer Drama". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  96. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (March 21, 2013). "Kevin Dunn Upped To Regular On 'Veep', David Wilson Barnes Joins AMC Pilot 'Halt'". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 16, 2018.
  97. ^ Sepinwall, Alan (October 14, 2017). "The 'Halt And Catch Fire' Series Finale Is A Perfect Idea Perfectly Realized". Uproxx. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  98. ^ Wagmeister, Elizabeth (February 19, 2015). "AMC's 'Halt and Catch Fire' Adds Two Cast Members for Season 2". Variety. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  99. ^ Patten, Dominic (February 2, 2015). "AMC's 'Halt & Catch Fire' Adds James Cromwell". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  100. ^ a b c d McHenry, Jackson (August 23, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire's Creators on Moving the Show to San Francisco and Why the '80s Are Big on TV". Vulture. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
  101. ^ Jung, E. Alex (July 26, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire's Mackenzie Davis and Kerry Bishé Get the Same Pay As Their Male Co-stars for the Final Season". Vulture. Retrieved August 5, 2018.
  102. ^ Goldberg, Lesley (October 8, 2015). "AMC's 'Halt and Catch Fire' Renewed for Season 3 With New Showrunners". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  103. ^ Andreeva, Nellie (July 30, 2013). "Jonathan Lisco Inks Overall Deal With AMC". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  104. ^ a b Miller, Liz Shannon (May 30, 2015). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Showrunner Jonathan Lisco on Season 2 Changes and Joe's 'Fluid Sexuality'". IndieWire. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  105. ^ Rozeman, Mark (June 1, 2015). "Coding the Human Condition: Halt & Catch Fire Showrunner Jonathan Lisco on the Sophomore Season". Paste. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  106. ^ Fienberg, Daniel (June 7, 2014). "Interview: 'Halt and Catch Fire' showrunner Jonathan Lisco on the TV tech zeitgeist and more". HitFix. Retrieved June 9, 2018.
  107. ^ Adalian, Josef (October 8, 2015). "Why AMC Renewed Halt and Catch Fire for a Third Season Despite Its Dismal Ratings". Vulture. Retrieved June 3, 2018.
  108. ^ Ausiello, Michael (October 8, 2015). "Halt and Catch Fire Scores Season 3 Renewal Amid Showrunner Switch". TVLine. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  109. ^ Villarreal, Yvonne (May 25, 2014). "The PC revolution". Los Angeles Times. p. S4. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  110. ^ Bell, Shavonne (June 5, 2014). "Halt and Catch Fire Q&A – Scoot McNairy (Gordon Clark)". AMC.com. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  111. ^ a b c d e McCracken, Harry (August 27, 2016). "Welcome To 1986: Inside 'Halt And Catch Fire's' High-Tech Time Machine". Fast Company. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  112. ^ Conner, Cheryl (May 29, 2014). "Lessons In Tech And Business: AMC's New 'Halt And Catch Fire'". Forbes. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  113. ^ Lewis, Evan (July 25, 2015). "How Real Is Halt and Catch Fire's Take on 1980s Computer Technology?". TV Insider. Retrieved February 2, 2020.
  114. ^ a b c Jung, E. Alex (August 14, 2017). "Mackenzie Davis Answers the Tough Questions". Vulture. Retrieved May 28, 2018.
  115. ^ a b c d St. James, Emily (August 23, 2016). "AMC's Halt and Catch Fire is set in tech's past. But it just might be TV's future". Vox. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  116. ^ Weintraub, Steve "Frosty" (August 19, 2017). "Lee Pace on 'Halt and Catch Fire' Season 4 and the 'Perfect' Series Finale". Collider. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  117. ^ a b c d e f Adams, Erik (October 14, 2017). "The creators of Halt And Catch Fire walk us through their series' emotional conclusion". The A.V. Club. Retrieved July 29, 2018.
  118. ^ a b c Adams, Erik (August 17, 2017). "Halt And Catch Fire's cast and creators on getting great while no one was looking". The A.V. Club. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  119. ^ a b c d e Yakas, Ben (August 21, 2017). "Interview: 'Halt And Catch Fire' Creators Embrace The '90s In Season Four". LAist. from the original on September 9, 2018. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  120. ^ a b Schilling, Dave (August 22, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire: on the set of the best show on TV (that no one is watching)". The Guardian. Retrieved August 26, 2018.
  121. ^ a b c d e Greenwald, Andy (October 12, 2016). "Ep. 85: 'The Andy Greenwald Podcast' With Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C. Rogers". The Watch (Podcast). Retrieved August 19, 2018 – via The Ringer.
  122. ^ a b c d e St. James, Emily (October 12, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire's creators on why their '80s tech drama couldn't avoid the internet forever". Vox. Retrieved June 13, 2018.
  123. ^ a b Adams, Erik (October 11, 2016). "Halt And Catch Fire showrunners talk season finale: 'It scared us, and it felt bold'". The A.V. Club. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  124. ^ a b c d Weintraub, Steve "Frosty" (August 26, 2017). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Creators Talk Final Season and How the Series Came Together". Collider. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
  125. ^ Agard, Chancellor (August 18, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire producers preview the fulfilling, celebratory final season". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved September 23, 2018.
  126. ^ Christopher Cantwell [@ifyoucantwell] (May 6, 2023). "In 2017, WGA negotiations with the AMPTP got to a point where a strike authorization vote was called. It was an extremely strong turn-out. We were in the midst of writing the final season of Halt and Catch Fire" (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  127. ^ a b Laughlin, Jamie (May 7, 2013). "AMC Needed Centennial Liquor's Neon Tex for its New Pilot, So it Gave Him a Makeover". Dallas Observer. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
  128. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Bunish, Christine (October–November 2014). "Halt and Catch Atlanta". Oz Magazine. pp. 29–33. Retrieved September 21, 2020.
  129. ^ a b Littleton, Cynthia (October 8, 2015). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Renewed For Season 3 By AMC". Variety. Retrieved July 22, 2018.
  130. ^ Hagey, Keach (May 30, 2014). "AMC Bets on Payoff From Original Shows". The Wall Street Journal. Vol. 263, no. 125. p. B4. Retrieved July 22, 2018.
  131. ^ a b McNamara, Mary (May 30, 2014). "AMC plays well with tech 'Fire'". Los Angeles Times. pp. D1, D7. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  132. ^ a b Solomon, Dan (May 22, 2014). "'Halt And Catch Fire' Showrunner Jonathan Lisco On Making Computers Interesting With Complex Characters". Fast Company. Retrieved June 5, 2018.
  133. ^ a b c d e f g h i
    • Kate (July 9, 2015). "An Interview with Halt and Catch Fire Set Decorator Lance Totten". Mirror80. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
    • Kate (July 30, 2015). "A Halt and Catch Fire Interview with Lance Totten – Part 2". Mirror80. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  134. ^ a b c Ho, Rodney (May 31, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire,' set in 1983 Texas, filmed in Atlanta". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. D2. Retrieved August 22, 2018.
  135. ^ Brett, Jennifer (December 7, 2013). "New AC pilot now shooting in Atlanta". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. D2.
  136. ^ Brett, Jennifer (May 31, 2014). "Late artist's work to be featured on AMC show". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. D2.
  137. ^ . Atlanta Business Chronicle. January 13, 2015. Archived from the original on July 29, 2015. Retrieved July 2, 2023.
  138. ^ a b c St. James, Emily (October 17, 2017). "The delicate art of the TV series finale". Vox. Retrieved June 6, 2018.
  139. ^ Marotta, Jenna (August 31, 2017). "Catching Kerry Bishé". Backstage. Vol. 58, no. 35. pp. 14–17. Retrieved March 8, 2020.
  140. ^ Ho, Rodney (August 13, 2018). "'Lodge 49' is a quirky, low-key AMC character drama". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. p. D1. Retrieved August 23, 2018.
  141. ^ Walljasper, Matt (May 21, 2015). "Behind the Scenes of AMC's 'Halt and Catch Fire'". Atlanta. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  142. ^ a b Hank, Melissa (August 29, 2016). . Canada.com. Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved April 8, 2018.
  143. ^ a b Vehling, Aaron (December 2, 2017). "Is It Really Over Already?: Talking About 'Halt and Catch Fire' With Composer Paul Haslinger". Vehlinggo.com. Retrieved August 26, 2018.
  144. ^ a b c Houston, Shannon M. (June 1, 2014). "Catching Up With Halt And Catch Fire Composer Paul Haslinger". Paste. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  145. ^ Appelo, Tim (June 24, 2014). "A Tangerine Dream Conquers Television". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  146. ^ Roffman, Michael; Blackard, Cap (July 15, 2014). "Paul Haslinger: Halt and Score Fire". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  147. ^ Hutchinson, Sean (August 23, 2016). "Electronica's Triumphant Cinematic Return". Inverse. Retrieved August 26, 2018.
  148. ^ Roffman, Michael (August 24, 2016). "Stream: Paul Haslinger's exceptional Halt and Catch Fire score". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  149. ^ Aubrich, Wess (April 2, 2019). . The 405. Archived from the original on May 8, 2019. Retrieved April 4, 2019.
  150. ^ a b c Gundersen, Edna (June 12, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire' playlists echo characters' personalities". USA Today. p. 3D. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  151. ^ a b c d Bryant, Adam (October 3, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire Q&A—Thomas Golubić (Music Supervisor)". AMC.com. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  152. ^ a b Payne, Jason (September 2017). . For All Nerds. Archived from the original on April 11, 2022. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  153. ^ a b Jung, E. Alex (August 3, 2015). "The Essence of Each Halt and Catch Fire Character Distilled Into a Single Song". Vulture. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  154. ^ a b c d Berman, Judy (October 13, 2017). "How 'Halt and Catch Fire' Used Punk Music to Empower Its Female Characters". Pitchfork. Retrieved September 9, 2018.
  155. ^ Leas, Ryan (July 31, 2014). "The Best Soundtrack Moments Of July 2014: Boyhood, Lucy, Halt And Catch Fire, & More". Stereogum. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
  156. ^ a b c d Landekic, Lola; Perkins, Will (June 3, 2014). "Halt and Catch Fire (2014)". Art of the Title. Interviewed by Ian Albinson. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  157. ^ Hurst, Adriene. . Maxon.net. Archived from the original on July 26, 2020. Retrieved November 3, 2021.
  158. ^ a b Agard, Chancellor (October 14, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire bosses break down the beautiful series finale". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 2, 2020.
  159. ^ Sepinwall, Alan (October 12, 2016). "The Creators Of 'Halt And Catch Fire' Discuss How It Evolved Into One Of TV's Best Shows". HitFix. Retrieved April 27, 2020.
  160. ^ Vineyard, Jennifer (October 14, 2017). "The 'Halt and Catch Fire' Showrunners on 'Redefining the Story of Losers'". The New York Times. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
  161. ^ VanArendonk, Kathryn (August 26, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire and Why It's So Hard to Tell Stories About Making Things". Vulture. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  162. ^ a b Thurm, Eric (August 18, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire is the perfect show about tech innovation". The Verge. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  163. ^ Thurm, Eric (October 16, 2017). "Farewell to Halt and Catch Fire, the best show that nobody watched". The Guardian. Retrieved April 8, 2020.
  164. ^ Keveney, Bill (October 13, 2017). "The series is ending, but it's never too late to appreciate AMC's 'Halt and Catch Fire'". USA Today. Retrieved April 30, 2020.
  165. ^ a b c Hudson, Laura (October 17, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire's Most Radical Message Wasn't About Computers". Wired. Retrieved April 8, 2020.
  166. ^ Cabin, Chris (May 29, 2015). "HALT AND CATCH FIRE Season 2 Review". Collider. Retrieved April 9, 2020.
  167. ^ Rozeman, Mark (June 1, 2015). "Coding the Human Condition: Halt & Catch Fire Showrunner Jonathan Lisco on the Sophomore Season". Paste. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  168. ^ Bradley, Laura (October 15, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire's Stunning Finale Proves It Was Brilliant from the Start". Vanity Fair. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
  169. ^ Agard, Chancellor (October 14, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire finale recap: 'Search' / 'Ten of Swords'". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
  170. ^
    • Rivera, Joshua (October 16, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire Should Be the Next TV Show You Binge". GQ. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
    • Schwartz, Ryan (October 14, 2017). "Halt and Catch Fire Series Finale: EP Breaks Down Joe's Journey Towards Humanity, Cameron and Donna 2.0". TVLine. Retrieved April 10, 2020.
    • Brennan, Matt (October 13, 2017). "Joe & Gordon & Donna & Cameron: Halt and Catch Fire and the Romance of Work". Paste. Retrieved April 20, 2020.
  171. ^ Roffman, Michael; Cosores, Philip; Colburn, Randall; et al. (October 30, 2017). "Top TV Episodes of the Month: Curb Your Enthusiasm, Stranger Things, and Mindhunter". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  172. ^ Reid, Joe (December 14, 2017). "The 10 Best TV Episodes of 2017". Decider. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  173. ^ a b c Palmer, Lisa (May 29, 2015). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Boss on Season 2 Reboot, Tackling Feminism and the Future". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  174. ^ a b Kokalitcheva, Kia (July 10, 2016). "How AMC's 'Halt and Catch Fire' Celebrates Women's Contributions to Computing". Forbes. Retrieved April 20, 2020.
  175. ^ Saraiya, Sonya (June 8, 2015). "The radical notion that women can pursue their own grand TV destinies: 'Halt and Catch Fire' finds its voice by focusing on women in tech". Salon. Retrieved April 20, 2020.
  176. ^ a b St. James, Emily (August 2, 2015). "What Halt and Catch Fire understands about men and women that few other shows do". Vox. Retrieved April 8, 2020.
  177. ^ Keveney, Bill (August 24, 2016). "Kerry Bishe is no engineer, but 'Halt' star represents well". USA Today. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  178. ^ Fraser, Emma (August 29, 2016). "Lipstick Ambition: 'Halt and Catch Fire' Dresses for Success". Observer. Retrieved April 8, 2020.
  179. ^ a b Greenwald, Andy (May 28, 2015). "Hard Reboot: The Excellent Season 2 Makeover of 'Halt and Catch Fire'". Grantland. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
  180. ^
    • Shipley, Diane (May 9, 2017). "Down with tech bros! It's time for TV's female nerd revolution". The Guardian. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
    • Collins, Sean T. (June 22, 2015). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Recap: Trapped in the Closet". Rolling Stone. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
    • Travers, Ben (August 22, 2016). "Review: 'Halt and Catch Fire' Season 3 Laughs in the Face of Its Doubters". Indiewire. Retrieved April 7, 2020.
  181. ^ "AMC Sets June Premiere Date For Drama Series 'Halt And Catch Fire'". Deadline Hollywood. March 5, 2014. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  182. ^ a b c Spangler, Todd (May 19, 2014). "AMC Previews 'Halt and Catch Fire' TV Series on Yahoo's Tumblr". Variety. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  183. ^ Ross, L.A. (May 19, 2014). "AMC Sneaks 'Halt and Catch Fire' as First-Ever Tumblr TV Series Premiere". TheWrap. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  184. ^ "AMC's 'Halt And Catch Fire' Attracts 1.2 Million To Network Opening". Deadline Hollywood. June 2, 2014. Retrieved August 2, 2023.
  185. ^ "Must Attend". Variety. Vol. 324, no. 2. May 19, 2014. p. 80.
  186. ^ "AMC Drama 'Halt and Catch Fire' to Bow June 1 After 'Mad Men' Finale". Variety. March 5, 2014. Retrieved December 30, 2019.
  187. ^ Sepinwall, Alan (June 1, 2014). "Series premiere review: 'Halt and Catch Fire' – 'I/O'". Uproxx. Retrieved April 20, 2018.
  188. ^ Kondolojy, Amanda (March 26, 2015). . TV by the Numbers (Press release). Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  189. ^ Roots, Kimberly (June 30, 2016). "Date for Halt and Catch Fire's Two-Hour Season 3 Premiere Set at AMC". TVLine. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  190. ^ Mitovich, Matt Webb (August 21, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire Gets Secret Sunday Sneak Peek Ahead of Tuesday Premiere". TVLine. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  191. ^ Holloway, Daniel (October 10, 2016). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Renewed for Fourth and Final Season at AMC". Variety. Retrieved October 10, 2016.
  192. ^ a b Andreeva, Nellie (October 8, 2015). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Renewed For Season 3 By AMC With The Series Creators As New Showrunners". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved June 10, 2018.
  193. ^ Tartaglione, Nancy (September 5, 2013). "EOne, AMC Networks Ink Multi-Year International Output Deal For Scripted Series". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved May 11, 2020.
  194. ^ Clarke, Steve (April 7, 2014). "eOne strikes AMC deals". Broadcast. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  195. ^ "AMC Networks Re-Brands MGM Channel As 'AMC'" (Press release). AMC Networks. August 4, 2014. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  196. ^ Lui, John (April 9, 2015). "Making keyboard-tapping exciting". The Straits Times. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  197. ^ "CBS Europa Exclusively Premieres the Acclaimed AMC Original Drama Series 'Halt and Catch Fire' on 12th April at 21:00 CET" (Press release). AMC Networks. March 25, 2015. Retrieved January 1, 2020.
  198. ^ CharlesP (June 1, 2015). . Foxtel. Archived from the original on July 16, 2019. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  199. ^ Lambert, David (February 24, 2015). . TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on February 25, 2015. Retrieved February 25, 2015.
  200. ^ Lambert, David (May 16, 2016). . TVShowsOnDVD.com. Archived from the original on August 22, 2016. Retrieved August 9, 2016.
  201. ^ "'Halt and Catch Fire' Dials Up Season Two on Sunday, May 31 at 10:00 P.M. ET/PT". AMC (Press release). March 26, 2015. Retrieved May 28, 2015.
  202. ^ "Season 2 of 'Halt and Catch Fire' for Amazon Prime Instant Video UK" (Press release). Advanced Television. March 31, 2015. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  203. ^ Spelling, Claire (December 14, 2017). "Rejoice, AMC Fans! 'Halt and Catch Fire' Season 4 Is Now Streaming On Netflix". Decider.com. Retrieved December 15, 2017.
  204. ^ Spangler, Todd (April 30, 2020). "'The Walking Dead' Past Seasons, Other AMC Networks Shows to Stream Free on Pluto TV". Variety. Retrieved May 4, 2020.
  205. ^ Hayes, Dade (September 11, 2020). "'The Walking Dead Universe Experience' Makes IMDb TV Its Exclusive Streaming Home". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved September 14, 2020.
  206. ^ Steinberg, Brian (December 9, 2020). "AMC Networks Launches Two Streaming Outlets for Samsung Smart TVs". Variety. Retrieved December 14, 2020.
  207. ^ "AMC Live TV Channels Now Streaming for Free on Plex" (Press release). Plex. GlobeNewswire. March 3, 2021. Retrieved March 9, 2021.
  208. ^ "Top new series in June 2021". SBS. June 10, 2021. Retrieved June 11, 2023.
  209. ^ "How the 'Succession' finale will go down: Our character-by-character theories". Los Angeles Times. December 10, 2021. Retrieved December 22, 2021.
  210. ^ "Halt and Catch Fire – Season 1 Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved May 31, 2014.
  211. ^ "Halt and Catch Fire: Season 1 (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  212. ^ Goodman, Tim (May 27, 2014). "'Halt and Catch Fire': TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  213. ^ Cabin, Chris (June 23, 2014). "Review: Halt and Catch Fire: Season One". Slant Magazine. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  214. ^ McGuire, Colin (August 19, 2014). "In Defense of a Second Season for 'Halt and Catch Fire'". PopMatters. Retrieved November 19, 2018.
  215. ^ "Halt and Catch Fire – Season 2 Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved May 31, 2015.
  216. ^ "Halt and Catch Fire: Season 2". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  217. ^ Sepinwall, Alan (May 28, 2015). "Review: 'Halt and Catch Fire' upgrades in a big way for season 2". HitFix. Retrieved May 31, 2015.
  218. ^ Nussbaum, Emily (August 10–17, 2015). "Clone Club". The New Yorker. Vol. 91, no. 23. p. 78. Retrieved June 15, 2018.
  219. ^ Sims, David (December 21, 2015). "The Best Television Shows of 2015". The Atlantic. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  220. ^ Poniewozik, James; Hale, Mike; Genzlinger, Neil (December 13, 2015). "Of Spies, Techies and Lost Souls". The New York Times. p. 16. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  221. ^ Paskin, Willa (December 10, 2015). "The Top 10 TV Shows of 2015". Slate. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  222. ^ Tallerico, Brian (December 28, 2015). "The Best TV of 2015". RogerEbert.com. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  223. ^ St. James, Emily (December 21, 2015). "Best TV shows 2015: from Mad Men to Jessica Jones". Vox. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  224. ^ Sheffield, Rob (December 2, 2015). "25 Best TV Shows of 2015". Rolling Stone. Retrieved August 24, 2018.
  225. ^ "Halt and Catch Fire – Season 3 Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved August 22, 2016.
  226. ^ "Halt and Catch Fire: Season 3". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 26, 2021.
  227. ^ Sims, David (August 23, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire Is TV's Most Underrated Drama". The Atlantic. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  228. ^ Fienberg, Daniel (August 23, 2016). "'Halt and Catch Fire' Season 3: TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved September 14, 2021.
  229. ^ Ryan, Maureen (August 22, 2016). "TV Review: 'Halt and Catch Fire' Season 3". Variety. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  230. ^ Chaney, Jen (August 22, 2016). "Halt and Catch Fire Is Still a Very Good Period Piece in Season Three". Vulture. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  231. ^ Stuever, Hank (August 23, 2016). "'Halt and Catch Fire' moseys on to California". The Washington Post. pp. C1–C2. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  232. ^ Sims, David (December 20, 2016). "The Best Television Shows of 2016". The Atlantic. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  233. ^ St. James, Emily (December 21, 2017). "Best TV shows 2016: from O.J. Simpson to Atlanta to Samantha Bee". Vox. Retrieved June 23, 2018.
  234. ^
    • Paskin, Willa (December 9, 2016). "The Top 10 TV Shows of 2016". Slate. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
    • Thomas, June (December 20, 2016). "The TV Club, 2016". Slate. Retrieved November 2, 2019.
  235. ^
halt, catch, fire, series, halt, catch, fire, american, period, drama, television, series, created, christopher, cantwell, christopher, rogers, aired, cable, network, united, states, from, june, 2014, october, 2017, spanning, four, seasons, episodes, depicts, . Halt and Catch Fire is an American period drama television series created by Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C Rogers It aired on the cable network AMC in the United States from June 1 2014 to October 14 2017 spanning four seasons and 40 episodes 1 2 It depicts a fictionalized insider s view of the personal computer revolution of the 1980s and the early days of the World Wide Web in the early 1990s 3 The show s title refers to computer machine code instruction Halt and Catch Fire HCF the execution of which would cause the computer s central processing unit to cease meaningful operation and in an exaggeration catch fire 4 Halt and Catch FireGenrePeriod dramaCreated byChristopher Cantwell Christopher C RogersStarringLee Pace Scoot McNairy Mackenzie Davis Kerry Bishe Toby Huss Aleksa PalladinoTheme music composerTrentemollerComposerPaul HaslingerCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons4No of episodes40 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersChristopher Cantwell Christopher C Rogers Jonathan Lisco Mark Johnson Melissa BernsteinProduction locationAtlanta GeorgiaCinematographyEvans Brown Nelson Cragg Jeffrey JurCamera setupSingle cameraRunning time41 54 minutesProduction companiesAMC Studios Gran Via Productions Lockjaw Productions 320 Sycamore Sic Semper TyrannisOriginal releaseNetworkAMCReleaseJune 1 2014 2014 06 01 October 14 2017 2017 10 14 In season one the fictional company Cardiff Electric makes its first foray into personal computing with a project to build an IBM PC clone led by entrepreneur Joe MacMillan Lee Pace with the help of computer engineer Gordon Clark Scoot McNairy and prodigy programmer Cameron Howe Mackenzie Davis Seasons two and three shift focus to a startup company the online community Mutiny headed by Cameron and Gordon s wife Donna Kerry Bishe while Joe ventures out on his own The fourth and final season focuses on competing web search engines involving all the principal characters Halt and Catch Fire marked the first jobs that Cantwell and Rogers had in the television industry They wrote the pilot hoping to use it to secure jobs as writers but they instead landed their own series with AMC The initial inspiration for the series was drawn from Cantwell s childhood in the Dallas Fort Worth area located within northern Texas s Silicon Prairie where his father worked as a software salesman The creators subsequently researched the contributions of Texan firms to the emerging personal computing industry during the 1980s Self produced by the network and mostly filmed in the Atlanta Georgia area the series is set in the Silicon Prairie for its first two seasons and Silicon Valley for its latter two 5 6 Halt and Catch Fire experienced low viewership ratings throughout its run with only the first episode surpassing one million viewers for its initial broadcast The series debuted to generally favorable reviews though many critics initially found it derivative of other series such as Mad Men In each subsequent season the series grew in acclaim and by the time it concluded critics considered it among the greatest shows of the 2010s In 2022 Rolling Stone ranked it the 55th greatest television series of all time based on a poll of 46 actors writers producers and critics Contents 1 Premise 2 Cast and characters 2 1 Main 2 2 Recurring 3 Production 3 1 Conception and development history 3 2 Casting 3 3 Showrunners 3 4 Pre production and research 3 5 Writing 3 6 Filming 3 7 Production design 3 8 Music 3 9 Title sequence 4 Series synopsis 4 1 First season 4 2 Second season 4 3 Third season 4 4 Fourth season 5 Themes 5 1 Failure and reinvention 5 2 Interpersonal relationships and ambition 5 3 Feminism 6 Distribution 6 1 Premiere and initial broadcast 6 2 International distribution 6 3 Home media and streaming 7 Reception 7 1 Critical response 7 1 1 First season 7 1 2 Second season 7 1 3 Third season 7 1 4 Fourth season 7 2 Viewership ratings 7 3 Awards and nominations 7 4 Legacy 8 References 9 External linksPremise editTaking place over a period of more than ten years Halt and Catch Fire depicts a fictionalized insider s view of the personal computer revolution of the 1980s and the early days of the World Wide Web in the early 1990s The series begins in 1983 just as IBM is cornering the personal computer market with the IBM PC Entrepreneur Joe MacMillan joins Cardiff Electric a fictional Dallas based mainframe software company and has a vision of building a revolutionary computer to challenge IBM For the project he enlists the help of computer engineer Gordon Clark and prodigy programmer Cameron Howe Taking advantage of the open architecture of the IBM PC the characters reverse engineer its BIOS and set out to build a clone called the Giant but obstacles both internal and external threaten to derail the project Halt and Catch Fire follows the protagonists endeavors in the computing industry their shifting partnerships and competitive relationships and the personal costs of pursuing their professional ambitions Cast and characters editMain edit nbsp Lee Pace portrayed Joe MacMillan Lee Pace as Joe MacMillan an entrepreneur and former IBM sales executive who joins Cardiff Electric and instigates a project to reverse engineer the IBM PC 7 Joe is a charismatic slick talking businessman and a tech visionary obsessed with pursuing the next big thing 8 9 despite lacking technical skills 10 Owing to his original conception as an antihero 11 Joe uses manipulative tactics in his endeavors 8 12 bending people to his will to get what he wants 13 He is portrayed as an enigmatic figure with a dark backstory 14 having left IBM under mysterious circumstances 15 The Sydney Morning Herald described Joe as an acutely damaged man underneath the slick suits bravado and motivational speak 16 while Pace said his character was hiding behind a persona 11 Critics compared Joe to the Mad Men character Don Draper 17 18 19 In subsequent seasons Joe is humbled by his professional failures and how his actions affect other people and as he comes to terms with his behavior he becomes a more empathetic character 20 21 22 23 Pace said that Joe s bisexuality was a reflection of the character being a mutable person a questioner and a disrupter and someone who doesn t feel limitations 24 The idea for the character was inspired by co creator Christopher Cantwell s father who was a software salesman For Joe s personality Pace recalled corporate raiders and that kind of spirit of 80s excess upon reading the pilot 25 and he took inspiration from real life figures Steve Jobs Ivan Boesky and Michael Milken as well as the fictional characters Patrick Bateman and Gordon Gekko 16 26 27 Later in the series Joe initiates projects involving time sharing 28 antivirus software MacMillan Utility 29 the NSFNET computer network 10 and a search engine Comet 30 nbsp Scoot McNairy portrayed Gordon Clark Scoot McNairy as Gordon Clark a computer engineer at Cardiff Electric who Joe recruits to reverse engineer the IBM PC and lead the Giant s hardware team After the failure of the Symphonic a computer he built with his wife Donna years earlier 31 Gordon gave up on his dreams and retreated to a dead end job before having his ambitions reignited by Joe 32 33 Farhad Manjoo of The New York Times likened Gordon to Breaking Bad s protagonist Walter White calling him apparently brilliant but underutilized in his job and smugly depressive about his lot in life 34 Cantwell said the creators cast McNairy in the role because they wanted an actor who could be a nebbish with his shoulders shrunken in but then also reveal himself unexpectedly to be a budding alpha male 35 Despite not having a background in computing McNairy related to his character as a fellow tinkerer and builder drawing from his interest in fixing engines radios and air conditioners and his experience in carpentry 36 37 McNairy built the foundation of his character on having a chip on his shoulder and something to prove which were personality traits he came across from researching computer engineers of the past 38 Critics also compared Gordon s working dynamic with Joe to that of Steve Wozniak with Steve Jobs two co founders of Apple Computer 39 40 41 Gordon s talents are frequently undercut by poor decisions and bad luck 42 as well as his deteriorating mental state due to toxic encephalopathy the result of extended exposure to lead solder 43 Dennis Perkins of The A V Club called him Halt s tragic hero the dreamer without the necessary piece to ever truly succeed 44 In subsequent seasons Gordon works at Mutiny 45 runs the CalNect Internet service provider 46 and co founds the Comet search engine 30 nbsp Mackenzie Davis portrayed Cameron Howe Mackenzie Davis as Cameron Howe born Catherine Howe a computer programming prodigy who is recruited from a university by Joe to join Cardiff Electric and write the Giant s BIOS 40 47 The creators made the character female and a punk because they wanted to depict someone who was disruptive to the 1980s corporate culture of the tech industry while her interest in video games was meant to signify the coming generation and technology 48 Davis said that her character doesn t fit into this male dominated computer world nor does she fit into the idea of feminine beauty of Texas and the South with her androgynous appearance 49 A video game designer 50 Cameron later forms her own startup company the online gaming service Mutiny and partners with Donna to run it 51 To prepare for the role Davis drew from prior experience writing HTML in a high school class 52 and she watched online programming courses from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology while trying to get into the mindset of a college student 53 She also researched the history of women s roles in the tech industry as well as early hackers such as phone phreakers 54 Her character was inspired by people such as Sierra On Line game designer Roberta Williams Centipede designer Dona Bailey and pioneering programmers Grace Hopper and Ada Lovelace 48 Cameron is anti social 55 and finds the truest expression of herself through her work 56 James Poniewozik called her an idealist who saw computing as art the machines could have personality could inspire emotion could be a place to play 57 Filling the void left by her father s death during the Vietnam War Cameron s frequent co worker John Bosworth becomes a father figure to her 58 59 After Mutiny she goes to work for Atari and develops the successful Space Bike game series 60 Kerry Bishe as Donna Clark nee Emerson a computer engineer at Texas Instruments 61 After a failed attempt to build a computer with her husband Gordon years earlier 31 Donna put her dreams on hold to focus on raising their two daughters 61 62 and she has misgivings about him getting involved in the Giant s development 63 To dispel the notion that her character was merely the disapproving wet blanket wife in a television drama Bishe was adamant that she be able to adroitly disassemble and fix the children s Speak amp Spell in the series pilot hinting at the depth of her character 64 Donna is eventually enlisted by Gordon to aid Cardiff Electric with the development of the Giant 65 Contrasting with her character s technical expertise Bishe described herself as a Luddite and in preparing for the role she did not find it necessary to understand the way the computers work but rather to understand the people that understand the way computers work 66 The backstory and first initials of Gordon and Donna were references to Gary and Dorothy Kildall the married couple who founded Digital Research and whose CP M operating system was displaced after IBM s introduction of DOS 31 After Gordon s pursuit of his dreams in the first season Donna takes the opportunity to pursue her own ambitions when she joins Mutiny to co manage the company with Cameron 41 There she reluctantly becom es den mother to Mutiny s nerdy employees 67 her pragmatism contrasting with Cameron s manic work style 68 Donna grows into a savvy businesswoman and after Mutiny she joins a venture capital firm culminating her evolution from unfulfilled sidekick to cutthroat Silicon Valley executive 69 Like Cameron Donna was partially inspired by Williams Bailey Hopper and Lovelace 48 nbsp Toby Huss portrayed John Bosworth Toby Huss as John Bos Bosworth the senior vice president of Cardiff Electric who hires Joe 70 John is a back slapping businessman known for his folksy good ol boy charm 71 In the first season he represents the established Texas American capitalist patriarchy according to Huss 72 and is positioned as an antagonist to the other characters building the Giant 11 Huss said the creators initially envisioned the character as an older sedentary kind of conservative Republican Texas guy 58 but they decided to shift course for the character after Huss gave an unexpectedly energetic performance in his audition 11 The writers subsequently wrote to what Rogers called a really surprising warmth and vulnerability that Huss brought to the character 48 as well as his unexpected chemistry with Davis during their scenes together 11 John subsequently becomes a father figure to Cameron having neglected his own family over the years due to his job 58 Huss based his character partly on his uncle Tom who he described as a no nonsense Houston oilman and he developed John s accent by blending the speaking styles of his Iowan father and his Montanan uncle 73 74 Amidst the changing landscape of the technology industry John grapples with how to adapt to avoid becoming a dinosaur aging out of the business 75 In the process he becomes more open minded and acknowledges the brilliance of the young developers and their innovations 72 After Cardiff Electric he is hired by Cameron to provide managerial experience at Mutiny 76 and later by Donna to oversee the search engine Rover 77 Aleksa Palladino as Sara Wheeler season 2 a freelance journalist and Joe s romantic partner Recurring edit Morgan Hinkleman seasons 1 3 and Kathryn Newton seasons 3 4 as Joanie Clark the older daughter of Gordon and Donna Alana Cavanaugh seasons 1 3 and Susanna Skaggs season 4 as Haley Clark the younger daughter of Gordon and Donna August Emerson as Malcolm Lev Levitan seasons 1 3 a programmer for Cardiff Electric and later Mutiny Cooper Andrews as Yo Yo Engberk seasons 1 3 a programmer for Cardiff Electric and later Mutiny David Wilson Barnes as Dale Butler seasons 1 4 Joe s former IBM colleague Randy Havens as Stan season 1 2 a Cardiff Electric employee Graham Beckel as Nathan Cardiff seasons 1 2 the owner of Cardiff Electric Annette O Toole as Susan Emerson seasons 1 2 Donna s mother Mike Pniewski as Barry Shields seasons 1 2 Cardiff Electric s lawyer Scott Michael Foster as Hunt Whitmarsh season 1 Donna s manager at Texas Instruments John Getz as Joe MacMillan Sr season 1 Joe s father who works for IBM Bianca Malinowski as Debbie season 1 Bosworth s secretary at Cardiff Electric Eric Goins as Larry seasons 1 2 a Cardiff Electric employee Justin Randell Brooke as Dave seasons 1 3 a programmer for Mutiny Pete Burris as Ed seasons 1 2 a Cardiff Electric employee Mark O Brien as Tom Rendon seasons 2 4 a programmer for Mutiny and Cameron s boyfriend James Cromwell as Jacob Wheeler season 2 Sara s father and the CEO of Westgroup Gabriel Manak as Arki seasons 2 3 a programmer for Mutiny Nick Pupo as Carl seasons 2 3 a programmer for Mutiny Joshua Hoover as Bodie seasons 2 3 a programmer for Mutiny J Elijah Cho as Wonderboy seasons 2 3 a programmer for Mutiny Annabeth Gish as Diane Gould seasons 3 4 78 a venture capitalist who becomes involved with Mutiny Manish Dayal as Ryan Ray season 3 79 a programmer at Mutiny and later at MacMillan Utility who becomes Joe s protege Matthew Lillard as Ken Diebold season 3 78 an executive at MacMillan Utility Sasha Morfaw as Tanya Reese season 4 an AGGEK employee Charlie Bodin as Trip Kisker III season 4 an AGGEK employee Anna Chlumsky as Katie Herman season 4 80 a Comet employee and Gordon s girlfriend Molly Ephraim as Alexa Vonn season 4 Cameron s financier for an independent projectProduction editConception and development history edit Halt and Catch Fire was created by Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C Rogers who met while working at the Walt Disney Company Cantwell s online movie company was acquired by Disney and he was moved into its marketing department while Rogers was hired by Cantwell s team to manage Disney s editorial program for social media After a year of working together they learned that they had each graduated from screenwriting programs in college Cantwell from the University of Southern California as an undergraduate student and Rogers from the University of California Los Angeles as a graduate student 81 Rogers referred to himself and Cantwell as dream deferred writers 82 In August 2010 they agreed to partner as screenwriters For their first collaboration Rogers helped Cantwell with creating a television adaptation of his film screenplay Very Prepared Men a story about a secret society of the ultra wealthy 83 82 Rogers shared the script with Chris Huvane a former colleague from Conde Nast who had become a talent manager at Management 360 Huvane and his coworker Jennifer Graham offered to represent Cantwell and Rogers 83 while urging them to produce another script they could use as a staffing sample Since the managers thought it was unlikely a network would option a script from first time writers their intent was to use the sample script to land Cantwell and Rogers entry level writing positions in the industry The managers advised them to write something in which they were personally invested 82 nbsp The original IBM Personal Computer The real life attempts to reverse engineer it inspired the series s pilot Cantwell and Rogers initially discussed men under pressure stories like Glengarry Glen Ross although they did not want their subjects to be doctors or police officers believing them to be well trod territory in television 47 As they brainstormed Cantwell recalled his childhood 82 in 1982 when he was just six weeks old his family moved from Elgin Illinois to Plano Texas so his father could take a job as a systems software salesman for UCCEL Corp 82 84 85 During his childhood Cantwell had been unaware of Texas s role in the personal computer revolution of the 1980s but after speaking to his father and researching the era with Rogers they learned how the Silicon Prairie of Dallas Fort Worth in which Plano is located became a secondary technology hub behind California s Silicon Valley 82 Companies in the Silicon Prairie included Texas Instruments Electronic Data Systems Tandy and RadioShack while elsewhere in Texas Dell in Austin and Compaq in Houston were also prominent players in the PC industry 5 81 Executive producer Jonathan Lisco said Texas was viewed by a lot of people at the time per our research as sort of a catch basin for people who had not succeeded in Silicon Valley On the other hand there was a lot of wonderful tech going on here 5 Cantwell said that he and Rogers were intrigued by the lesser known players and settings of the tech industry We wanted to find the place you didn t know Silicon Valley Boston New York IBM Microsoft all those stories and companies have been exploited dramatically to great effect 81 In their research Cantwell and Rogers came across stories of computer engineers at Compaq taking risks by attempting to reverse engineer the IBM PC 82 86 The duo conceived the pilot for Halt and Catch Fire in January 2011 31 The first eight pages of the script followed their protagonist Joe MacMillan at IBM 87 In May Cantwell quit his job at Disney 87 though Rogers remained until the future of their project was assured 82 Cantwell and Rogers finished the draft of their pilot in the summer of 2011 87 Their agents liked the script but were not optimistic about selling it 88 After a few unproductive meetings Cantwell and Rogers turned their attention to writing film scripts 89 one of them called The Knoll about the assassination of John F Kennedy appeared on the Black List of popular unproduced screenplays 82 88 At the end of that summer Cantwell and Rogers asked their agent again to shop the Halt and Catch Fire pilot to television networks 89 leading to meetings with HBO and Showtime that were mostly introductory in nature 88 In late October 87 they met with AMC by which point Cantwell had been out of work for five months and was quickly diminishing his savings He and Rogers were surprised to find that the AMC executives had a copy of their script at the meeting One of them Ben Davis said We were really interested in trying to tap into that world into the spirit of innovation and the tech world specifically I loved the idea that it took place in Dallas and that I didn t hear Steve Jobs or Bill Gates name It approached it from the backdoor instead of straight ahead 82 After a second meeting with Cantwell and Rogers on December 5 2011 AMC optioned the script the following day 82 87 To continue to develop the project AMC brought in Gran Via Productions Mark Johnson and Melissa Bernstein who were producing the network s hit drama series Breaking Bad at the time 90 They helped Cantwell and Rogers refine the pilot and create a 20 page pitch document which Rogers said they worked on day and night 89 The creators called Johnson and Bernstein their advocates with the network 90 In March 2012 Cantwell learned that AMC would not make a decision about the project until autumn by that point he and his wife had depleted their savings 87 In April Cantwell and Rogers presented Halt and Catch Fire at AMC s annual pilot script showcase dubbed the Bake Off network executives opted to keep the project in consideration 91 On October 23 2012 Cantwell and Rogers pitched the network on how they envisioned Halt and Catch Fire as a potential series 87 The network ordered a pilot the following month 91 The project was Cantwell s and Rogers s first jobs in the television industry 88 Cantwell said The first writers room we walked into was our own 31 In July 2013 the network announced a series order of 10 episodes 92 Casting edit In February 2013 it was announced that Lee Pace had been cast in the lead role of Joe MacMillan and Mackenzie Davis in a co starring role as Cameron Howe 93 Actors that were considered for the role of Joe included David Harbour Ryan Phillippe and Wes Bentley The role of Cameron took the longest to cast with actors such as Dakota Johnson and Brie Larson auditioning for it After Davis s screen test the creators were convinced they had found the perfect person to portray her 83 In March it was announced that Scoot McNairy had been cast as Gordon Clark and Kerry Bishe as Gordon s wife Donna 94 95 it was a reunion for the two actors who had played a married couple in the film Argo a year prior 95 Actors that auditioned for the role of Gordon included Jimmi Simpson and Jason Mantzoukas while Karen Gillan was considered for the role of Donna During the casting process McNairy emailed the creators to tell them how the pilot s story resonated with him as he grew up in Dallas and his father had been a salesman 83 Also in March David Wilson Barnes was cast as Dale Butler 96 Barnes was initially credited among the main cast in the pilot episode but his character was written out after just two episodes when the story went in a different direction 97 For season two Aleksa Palladino joined the cast as a regular while James Cromwell and Mark O Brien joined as recurring characters 98 99 For season three Manish Dayal was cast as Ryan Ray an Indian American computer programmer native to San Francisco Cantwell and Rogers created the character to match the change in demographic after the series s setting shifted to Northern California 100 Matthew Lillard and Annabeth Gish were also cast in recurring roles 78 For season four Kathryn Newton and Susanna Skaggs were cast to play teenaged versions of the Clarks daughters and Anna Chlumsky joined in a supporting role 80 Prior to the fourth season AMC addressed the gender pay gap among its four leads by giving Davis and Bishe salary raises to match what Pace and McNairy were earning Davis and Bishe were relatively unknown when they signed their original deals at lower salaries Davis was earning the minimum rate at the time Their characters were given more screen time beginning with the second season but the actresses did not feel they were being equitably compensated for their work Before Davis and Bishe could renegotiate with AMC the network gave them unsolicited raises 101 Showrunners edit nbsp Producer Jonathan Lisco served as the series showrunner for the first two seasons Due to Cantwell s and Rogers s inexperience AMC chose to hire someone more experienced in television to be the series s showrunner 102 As part of a two year deal with AMC Jonathan Lisco was selected for the role in July 2013 having just concluded three seasons as executive producer on the television drama series Southland 103 Lisco was impressed by the script for the Halt and Catch Fire pilot but initially was unconvinced that he was best suited for the showrunner role He did not view himself as a technophile and wondered if there would be enough stakes in the bits and the bytes 104 saying the subject matter did not dramatically blow your hair back 105 The network helped change his mind by telling him the series could not be exclusively about technology and that they believed he could help them delve deep into the characters to create stakes Lisco felt an immediate creative connection with Cantwell and Rogers upon meeting them and sensing they had a strong vision for the series he signed on as showrunner 104 106 Leasing office space in Studio City Los Angeles Lisco helped Cantwell and Rogers through the process of assessing and hiring writers 82 Lisco stepped down as showrunner after the second season to work on the TNT television series Animal Kingdom Joel Stillerman AMC s president of original programming and development called Lisco s departure completely amicable 107 Cantwell and Rogers took over as showrunners prior to the third season 108 Rogers called Lisco the duo s mentor saying He kept us creatively involved and really showed us the ropes and we felt like it was a master class in how to run a room both in terms of getting a great story out of people and in terms of being a really good and decent and fair person in what can sometimes be a brutal industry 100 Pre production and research edit For research the production staff and cast consulted Robert X Cringely s documentary Triumph of the Nerds and read the books Steve Jobs by Walter Isaacson The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder 109 110 The Nudist on the Late Shift by Po Bronson and The Silicon Boys by David A Kaplan 111 The series had at least three technical advisors 85 Industry veteran Carl Ledbetter who worked at IBM AT amp T Consumer Products and Sun Microsystems reviewed early scripts for authenticity 112 He also wrote sample computer code that appeared on screen 111 and helped operate props on set he controlled lights on a breadboard from underneath a table and hand fed printouts through a dot matrix printer 31 After the series s focus shifted to networking and proto Internet services for the second season the producers relied more on the expertise of Bill Louden who founded the GEnie online service for General Electric in 1985 and designed games and computer programs for CompuServe The producers also sought out journalists such as Paul Carroll who covered the tech industry in the 1980s for The Wall Street Journal 113 Due to the production schedule the actors did not have formal table reads of the scripts Instead they organized their own gathering at Pace s house on weekends to prepare dinner drink wine and discuss the scripts and their characters Davis said of the cast dinners it was really nice because you got to hear other people s point of views about your character 11 114 For the third season Pace Davis and McNairy lived together in a rented house in Atlanta 115 with Toby Huss joining them for the fourth season 116 The arrangement helped foster a camaraderie among the cast members 115 Writing edit Each season the writers strove to use up their story fast rather than save the most dramatic moments for later 117 Rogers said that the uncertainty of the series s fate from season to season reinforced a hold nothing back mindset in the storytelling 118 They aimed to advance the plot quickly enough that it would not be predictable Rogers described their approach We want to put ourselves into corners and ask ourselves to write out of them 117 To avoid depicting binary relationships between the characters of either getting along or fighting the writers attempted to change the dynamics between the characters often by creating new pairings on screen to interact with one another 119 Cantwell and Rogers originally intended to use the pilot to land writing jobs on series they already liked Consequently they wrote it to emulate the difficult men dramas that inspired them to get into television shows that included The Sopranos The Wire and Breaking Bad Joe MacMillan was written in the pilot as a traditional antihero with the world organized around him Once the series was picked up and the staff began writing subsequent episodes they found what Rogers called a writers groove and changed their approach We figured out what was our voice as opposed to the voice that felt like it was emulating the shows we liked 11 Rogers acknowledged that he and Cantwell were initially inexperienced as writers but said that they were careful enough to lay these little grenades into each character that the writers could later explode to evolve the characters beyond their archetypes 90 Bishe said that when the cast signed onto the series they believed it would be a slick corporate thriller but over time it evolved into an ensemble based real human drama 115 120 Cantwell said the dynamic between Joe and Gordon in the first season was inspired by his father s experience in software sales in the 1980s Cantwell s father pitched to clients on sales calls while the software engineer he would bring along would explain the technical details 86 In the second season the series s narrative began to focus on the partnership of Donna and Cameron in their startup company the online gaming service Mutiny 121 Rogers said the technology of the time period seemed to point to this proto internet connectivity and that as actors Bishe and Davis deserved more attention 21 Cantwell said that the staff did not consciously refocus the show around the female characters but rather it naturally developed that way as they sought to create compelling and earned stories for each of those characters based on where they left them in season one 121 Rogers said the first season partnership between Joe and Gordon was dominated by egos a need to prove themselves and a lack of mutual respect They did not want to repeat that dynamic in the Donna Cameron partnership and instead created a bedrock on which a friendship could be built The theme of connectivity was incorporated into the season as an exploration of whether technology brings us closer together or pushes us apart as well as what the characters motivations were for their involvement in the industry The second season also isolated Joe and Gordon somewhat from the main storylines to reflect an absence of connection 21 Cantwell and Rogers liked making viewers think they were the worst writers in the world for about five minutes by creating familiar situations only to subvert expectations with the end result 21 Between the second and third seasons all of the series s writers departed to work on their own projects requiring Cantwell and Rogers to build a new writing staff 90 122 The creators rented a house in Joshua Tree National Park for three days in October 2015 and discussed how they wanted to plot out the season s story 122 121 They wanted to reach the advent of the World Wide Web in 1990 which they considered an exciting setting and a natural destination for the series However doing so would have required them to advance the plot by four years from the end of season two 121 They thought they still had so much story left on the table at the end of season two with the characters arrival in California in 1986 that they did not want to skip over with a time jump 123 Ultimately instead of choosing one of the two approaches they decided to incorporate both of them the majority of the season takes place in 1986 before making a time jump to 1990 for the final two episodes 122 121 With the new setting in Silicon Valley Cantwell and Rogers wanted to explore if the characters who had demonstrated their potential in Texas could really pull it off once they re in the big leagues 100 One of their themes for season three was people with the right idea at the wrong time who failed due to market or technology forces not aligning 123 Heading into the fourth season Cantwell and Rogers knew it would be the series s final one giving them the opportunity to write a conclusion on their own terms 124 In researching the tech industry following the inception of the World Wide Web in 1990 they found that there was not a lot of major business investments or huge development in the web for several years due to its nascency 119 124 As a result they created another time jump in the series s storytelling The opening sequence in the season s first episode shows the passage of more than three years and was meant to depict the characters in stasis waiting for the technology world to catch on 119 In the final season Cantwell and Rogers wanted the characters to grapple with the existential question of whether their continued pursuits of the next big idea could ever make them feel whole and whether they could break free from the constant cycle of reinvention 20 125 As the season was being written in 2017 a potential strike by the Writers Guild of America loomed Fearing an abrupt end to their series Cantwell and Rogers proposed alternate plans to their writing staff for how the show could be written to a conclusion quicker After receiving pushback from the writers that it would undermine their strike Cantwell and Rogers abandoned any such plans in solidarity the strike ultimately did not occur 126 The creators decided to kill off a major character during the season but did not plan in advance when it would occur Eventually they plotted it into the seventh episode allowing them to dedicate the eighth episode to the characters grief before incorporating it into the two part finale in which they wrapped up the series s remaining plot threads 117 Filming edit nbsp AMC paid to restore a neon sign of Big Tex in Dallas for the filming of the pilot 127 Halt and Catch Fire was produced in house by AMC Studios 5 Although the series was set in Dallas and Silicon Valley it was primarily filmed in and around Atlanta Georgia 81 where the studio has infrastructure and crew due to state tax incentives that are favorable to filming 5 The writing staff however was based in Los Angeles 31 Many crew members who worked on another Atlanta based AMC series The Walking Dead were borrowed during its offseason to work on Halt and Catch Fire The series was shot using Arri Alexa cameras with dailies being delivered by FotoKem Atlanta using their nextLAB system 128 The series had a budget that various sources estimated between 2 3 million per episode which Variety said was on the lower end of cable TV dramas 129 130 The pilot was directed by Juan Jose Campanella 131 and produced over six weeks from April to May 2013 87 It was primarily shot on location in the Atlanta area although one set was used as Joe s condominium 81 128 Additionally as part of a one day shoot in Dallas in May 87 AMC paid to restore a 50 foot tall neon sign of Big Tex located at a former Centennial Liquors store 127 For the series s visual appearance the producers initially took inspiration from the 1970s films All the President s Men The Parallax View and The Conversation according to producer Jeff Freilich 120 After the series was picked up several scenes from the pilot episode were re shot 132 133 Lisco said that the staff wanted to make the tone a little more jagged a little more ambiguous by giving Cameron more edge and by exploring whether Joe is a visionary or a fraud 132 After the series order the staff decided that the production facility housing Joe s condo set was too far away from other locations where the crew would need to shoot As a result they partnered with Mark Henderson Daniel Minchew and Glenn Murer who built the Atlanta Filmworks sound stage in a converted facility that previously served as a DuPont plant and a dog food factory The space comprised two adjacent 20 000 square foot 1 900 m2 warehouses and a 17 000 square foot 1 600 m2 production office The soundproofed Studio A measuring 110 by 200 by 42 feet 34 by 61 by 13 m housed the set for Cardiff Electric s corporate offices which occupied 9 000 square feet 840 m2 Studio B was initially envisioned as a flex space for set construction but ended up being used for filming as well housing the set for Joe s condo among others As a result several enhancements were made to the studio for the second season such as quieter heaters and additional lighting 128 First season filming locations nbsp Cobb Galleria Centre nbsp American Cancer Society Center nbsp Plaza Theatre nbsp Georgia State Capitol Production on the remaining nine episodes of the first season began in October 2013 and lasted until May 2014 87 The weather was uncharacteristically cold and snowy for Atlanta complicating outdoor shoots and suspending production for a few days Location scouting was carried out by location manager Ryan Schaetzle to find settings that would not be anachronistic and would require the least amount of modification to match the period setting Strategic framing of shots was also used to avoid anachronisms 128 as was computer generated imagery to turn an Urban Outfitters location into a rug store 134 Scenes set at a Las Vegas hotel hosting COMDEX attendees in the season s penultimate episode were filmed at the American Cancer Society Center in downtown Atlanta 128 Other first season shooting locations included the Cobb Galleria Centre Chops Lobster Bar 135 Northside Tavern the Plaza Theatre the Georgia State Capitol 136 an office building near The Weather Channel s headquarters and a brick ranch style house in Conyers 134 Production on season two lasted from October 2014 to May 2015 87 with filming commencing in January 2015 137 The staff dismantled all of the first season sets except for the Clark family house 124 a decision Cantwell said was made to force the series to reinvent itself and to parallel the reinvention common within the technology industry 118 Production on season three took place from November 2015 to August 2016 87 Due to the shift in setting from Dallas to California that season the producers hired a new director of photography Evans Brown to give the series a sunnier look 122 Despite the setting change production of the series remained in the Atlanta area with the exception of two scenes from that season that were shot near the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco 122 The fourth season s first episode opens with a sequence edited to appear to be a one shot that covers three years of story The sequence was conceived by Campanella and filmed over two days requiring several hairstyle and wardrobe changes to the actors 124 For the series finale Ten of Swords Donna s and Cameron s diner scene in the closing moments of the episode was filmed at the Waffle House Museum 138 Donna s idea at the end of the scene is never revealed but the producers ensured that each camera shot in the diner showed an analog aspect of life for which there would be a future digital innovation 13 117 After production on the series wrapped in late July 2017 139 the crew transitioned to a new AMC television series Lodge 49 within a week 140 Production design edit The series s production designers were Chris Brown 128 Craig Stearns 111 and Ola Maslik 119 Set decorator Lance Totten said the 1980s cliches of the whole neon pastels and shoulder pad vibe were not prevalent until 1986 and that he focused on the design period of 1978 1983 at the series s onset To identify period accurate lighting fixtures televisions telephones kitchenware and curtains he consulted back issues of Texas Homes and D Magazine old Sears and J C Penney catalogues the Interiors books by English designer Terence Conran and the Malls Across America collection of photographs by Michael Galinsky Due to the difficulty of finding decor items with brass finishes Totten often resorted to reproducing the look with gold paint or brass spray paint specially ordered from Krylon Other heavily sought after items included lamp shades with pleats and tapered or bell shapes furniture with clean linear lines and upholstery on the arms legs and feet and metal constructed props instead of plastic 133 The set designers purchased from thrift shops antique stores yard sales office supply companies that were closing and individuals through Craigslist but in some cases they rented items 128 133 Early 1980s seating and office furniture were difficult to acquire in large quantities as furniture from that decade was not highly collected other than high end pieces by designers and Totten said the decade marked the beginning of the era of mass disposability As a result he drew from the 1960s and 1970s for certain sets such as Bosworth s office and the Clark home Old family photos provided by Totten and other crew members adorned certain sets to give the impression of the characters having extended family while Totten s children drew the refrigerator art seen in the Clarks kitchen 133 For old photos of Gordon and Donna the crew reused Polaroids of McNairy and Bishe that had been taken on the set of Argo from their portrayal of a married couple in the 1970s 83 Prior to the second season additional crew members were hired for the production design team to help with their extensive workload 133 The architecture and design of Atlanta posed a challenge to the production design staff for achieving period accuracy Bernstein said it s a new city There are not a lot of buildings from the 1970s and 1980s 134 Totten said that locations that still existed from that period had been remodeled in the 1990s or 2000s and no longer had 1980s decor or color palettes thus requiring filming locations to be re dressed 133 Storefronts and restaurants were particularly difficult as small details such as carpeting window frames lighting fixtures chair upholstery patterns and bathroom fixtures needed to be retrofitted 128 The season two set for the house that headquartered Mutiny Cameron s start up company was designed to mimic the homes found in the Lakewood neighborhood of Dallas Modeled after a single story American Craftsman style home that was popular in the 1920s the set s design featured hardwood floors ample trim moldings built in shelving painted white and curved kitchen woodwork 141 For Mutiny s move to California in the third season Stearns wanted their new office s set design to evoke the early days of Silicon Valley when startup companies operated out of older buildings The set was designed as a converted fruit packing warehouse with brick walls and large windows 142 nbsp A Commodore 64 computer on display at Living Computers Museum Labs which loaned equipment for use as props in the series At the series s onset many of the vintage computer props were obtained on eBay or from private collectors through Craigslist 31 128 One such prop was the original Apple Macintosh which had become a collector s item and was rare 128 Many props were also borrowed from the Rhode Island Computer Museum 48 The Cardiff Giant portable PC depicted on screen was specially built for the series from molded plastic and was partially functional as the production staff wanted to ensure the design was consistent with the visionary thinking of the time and was not sci fi according to Freilich 128 Totten said that in order to build 40 Commodore 64 PC workstations for the Mutiny set in season two hundreds of different eBay purchases were required since the PCs monitors and peripherals all had to be obtained separately 111 133 One of the series s Atlanta based technical advisors built the complex network of telephone lines and modems that hung on a wall of the Mutiny house set 133 From season two onwards the series s staff collaborated with Living Computers Museum Labs in Seattle to obtain vintage equipment One prop that could not be sourced was an IBM 3033 mainframe computer requiring a replica to be built in consultation with Living Computers using original plans from IBM s archives 111 142 Obtaining period accurate corporate signage and logos was a challenge for the staff as many tech companies had gone out of business or had become part of large conglomerates over the years 128 Staff sought out 1980s artwork from antique stores thrift shops and online works with legible artist signatures were submitted to a clearing company which attempted to obtain approvals from the artists or their estates to use the works on screen Some art vendors had the artists contact information allowing the buyers to deal with them directly The production designers also rented pieces from local galleries that were able to sign releases on the artists behalves Near the end of the first season Totten began using a local vendor called Elk Creative to digitally create custom paintings in the style of 1970s and 1980s mass produced corporate art 133 Freilich said that the early 1980s fashion was a little bland a beige time and that as a result vintage clothing stores did not carry much merchandise from the period The wardrobe department ultimately obtained many articles of clothing from shops and rental houses in Los Angeles where inventory was more extensive 128 Music edit nbsp Austrian musician Paul Haslinger formerly of Tangerine Dream composed the series s electronic original score The original score was composed by Austrian musician Paul Haslinger formerly of German electronic music group Tangerine Dream from 1986 to 1990 143 He secured the position on the series through his connection to its music supervisor his friend Thomas Golubic Having previously recorded music during the 1980s Haslinger was drawn to Halt and Catch Fire as a second chance to write for the decade 144 Rather than merely revive 1980s music he instead wanted to draw from its moodiness 145 and to combine his favorite retro sounds with modern day elements 144 Haslinger s score was electronic making heavy use of synthesizers 143 he used his original equipment and samples as well as virtual instruments creating a blend of analog and digital sounds from that era and his own sound design 146 He eschewed explicit musical themes for each character to avoid sounding hokey Instead he tried to write for the subtext or underlying tension of scenes 144 Starting with the third season Haslinger strove to pare down his compositions often starting with fifteen tracks of audio before scaling down to five He also incorporated more influences from beyond the 1980s such as the works of Giorgio Moroder 147 A compilation of tracks from the first three seasons was released on CD and vinyl through Lakeshore Records on September 16 2016 148 A second volume followed on vinyl CD and digital services on April 5 2019 149 Golubic and his team at the firm SuperMusicVision handled music licensing 119 creating a soundtrack of album oriented rock college rock new wave and 1980s punk 118 Golubic said that his team sought to license lesser known tracks believing the use of obvious 1980s hits would be kitschy and not within the series s budget explaining their approach he said We want to immerse people in that time period not distract them 31 150 The music supervisors were engaged by the writers early in their creative process in an attempt to better integrate music into the series 151 Golubic and his team started by compiling playlists of songs that were evocative of the show s period setting before attempting to secure licensing deals 117 They also curated playlists for each of the main characters after discussing them and their backstories 152 Golubic said of the process This is how we informed ourselves of the world that the characters live in 151 The playlists were sent to the actors to help them prepare for their roles 150 and were used by the producers writers and editors as a reference for developing the story 152 For example Joe was seen as a futurist looking forward embodied by acts ahead of their time such as Gary Numan the Cars and Wire 151 153 while Gordon was interpreted as someone whose musical tastes did not evolve past 1970s acts such as Steely Dan and Boz Scaggs due to his preoccupation with work 151 153 AMC partnered with music streaming service Spotify to share the character playlists online and to promote them on amctv com and the network s Story Sync second screen platform 150 Punk rock played a prominent role in the characterization of Cameron frequently playing through her headphones on screen or non diegetically to represent her temperament as a rebellious loner The scene in which she enters the Cardiff Electric offices for her first day of work is soundtracked by the Clash s The Magnificent Seven whose lyrics about the futility of the capitalist grind underscor e her ambivalence about the job according to Pitchfork s Judy Berman 154 After she founds Mutiny the company offices are frequently heard playing punk post punk and alternative rock 29 which Berman said represented Cameron s growing influence in the tech industry 154 Towards the end of the series punk music is used in the characterization of the Clarks teenage daughters The rebellious troublemaker Joanie enjoys Shonen Knife and Haley listens to PJ Harvey and riot grrrl bands while coming to terms with being queer 154 Among the tracks licensed for use in the series were Red Eyes by the War on Drugs 155 Velouria by Pixies So Far Away by Dire Straits a cover of Joy Division s She s Lost Control by the Raveonettes 154 Mercy Street by Peter Gabriel 117 and in the closing sequence of the series finale Gabriel s Solsbury Hill 138 Title sequence edit The opening title sequence was created by the design studio Elastic with creative direction from Antibody The sequence depicts an electrical signal racing across a neon red digital landscape leaving a trail as it travels Along the way it passes digitally distressed images of the main cast members before it completes its journey to light up an LED indicator 156 Lead animator Raoul Marks said the signal was depicted allegorically to illustrate the competing forces driving young tech entrepreneurs towards a new technological dawn 157 The animators were tasked with creating an abstract and symbolic sequence about the computer era that was about people not machines The sequence evolved from the animators initial pitch to the showrunners to depict the birth of an idea The artists first inspiration was to show a lightbulb turning on a common visual metaphor for a bright idea and consequently they sought to show the journey of a signal to light up the bulb During the extended storyboarding process art director Eddy Herringson toyed with geometric shapes inspired by Saul Bass art retro video games and sex education films sequence director Patrick Clair said the team bounced between digital sperm to missile command and back all in 8 bit After several iterations they replaced the lightbulb with an LED indicator to better evoke the computer era In the initial pitch the artists depicted competing signals that ended up disintegrating or being left behind but these elements were scaled back The team took artistic license with the appearance of electric and digital signals in the sequence Due to the need to show the signal in a state of constant motion from shot to shot precise animation and cuts between shots were required Serif fonts were used for the credits and were inspired by the mature classical typography and conservative layout design of personal computing advertisements from the 1980s The color scheme inspired by high saturation 4 bit color computer graphics was dominated by an iridescent red that never peaked beyond hot magenta 156 To give the title sequence a human element images of the main cast members were incorporated Rather than show beauty shots of the actors the animators heavily edited images of them in a glitch art style Marks de rezzed the character images with Adobe Photoshop by selecting rectangular sections and using the software s average color feature on each Marks said the process gave each portrait an interesting facial approximation Afterwards the images were built into 3D models although the artists did not want a fully immersive 3D scene but rather one that still had more depth than just a graphic Since the series s story was about people putting pressure on themselves and risking self destruction through their own ambition the artists wanted to depict them decaying breaking under the pressure of velocity and self destruction They achieved this by streaking debris digital artifacts and facial details away from the portraits in horizontal lines Marks likened the effect to a person re entering the atmosphere from orbit but in a digital world 156 The opening theme was composed by Danish electronic musician Trentemoller Marks described the theme as straddl ing the line between contemporary electronica and more retro analog sounds The theme was provided late in the process of creating the title sequence 156 Series synopsis editMain article List of Halt and Catch Fire episodes SeasonEpisodesOriginally airedFirst airedLast aired110June 1 2014 2014 06 01 August 3 2014 2014 08 03 210May 31 2015 2015 05 31 August 2 2015 2015 08 02 310August 21 2016 2016 08 21 October 11 2016 2016 10 11 410August 19 2017 2017 08 19 October 14 2017 2017 10 14 First season edit In 1983 Joe MacMillan joins Cardiff Electric where he enlists the help of Gordon Clark to reverse engineer the BIOS of an IBM PC and reconstruct its assembly language code Company owner Nathan Cardiff and vice president John Bosworth confront the two when the company is sued by IBM for copyright infringement After Joe reveals that he told IBM about the project Cardiff Electric is forced to legitimize it and enter the personal computing business Joe heads the project to build an IBM clone with Gordon leading the hardware team Needing a software engineer Joe recruits Cameron Howe to write the BIOS in a clean room For their PC ultimately named the Cardiff Giant Joe s goal is for it to be twice the speed at half the cost of IBM s PC but much of the company does not buy into his vision or trust him He further alienates himself from Cardiff and Bosworth after IBM responds by aggressively undercutting Cardiff Electric resulting in layoffs and after he upsets a potential investor Despite her suspicions of Joe Cameron begins an on again off again relationship with him Gordon s wife Donna is wary of his involvement in the project but she eventually contributes to it first by giving Gordon her idea for a double sided printed circuit board and then by recovering lost data from Cameron s computer a data loss event faked by Joe Gordon brokers a deal for discounted liquid crystal displays through his father in law s connection with a Japanese company After finishing the BIOS Cameron is promoted to head of the software engineering team and designs a user friendly operating system OS intended to draw in the user Joe s ex lover Simon an industrial designer designs the case for the PC Initially hesitant about the project Bosworth comes around but is denied further funding by Cardiff With Cameron s help Bosworth embezzles money to sustain the project but is arrested as the company office is raided by the FBI Having smuggled out the Giant prototype Gordon convinces the others to proceed with their plan to present at the COMDEX trade show At COMDEX the team are shocked to discover the Slingshot a copycat of the Giant being presented by the Clarks neighbor a former Cardiff Electric employee and Donna s former manager from Texas Instruments TI In order to undercut the Slingshot and make the Giant commercially viable Gordon removes Cameron s OS and the supporting hardware When Joe supports the decision a heartbroken Cameron leaves him Joe and Gordon present the downgraded Giant at COMDEX and secure their first order but it is a hollow victory for the team After witnessing a demonstration of the Apple Macintosh at the conference Joe becomes disillusioned with the Giant Cameron quits Cardiff Electric and poaches most of the software engineers to form an online gaming startup company called Mutiny After Donna leaves TI she accepts an offer from Cameron to join Mutiny The Cardiff Electric team celebrates the completion of the Giant but Joe sets fire to the truck containing the first shipment and disappears leaving Gordon to run the company Second season edit Cardiff Electric is sold to a conglomerate in 1985 earning Gordon a six figure settlement but Joe nothing Eager to start anew Joe gets engaged to his girlfriend Sara and goes to work at Westgroup Energy an oil firm where her father Jacob Wheeler is CEO Starting in data entry Joe spots an opportunity to use their mainframe computers for time sharing and takes over the department Meanwhile Donna and Cameron are chaotically running Mutiny in a rented house with their developers Cameron hires a paroled Bosworth to be a manager as well as one of Mutiny s subscribers Tom to be a game designer she and Tom begin dating Gordon writes a computer program Sonaris intended to map Mutiny s network but it inadvertently acts as malware To make up for his mistake Gordon agrees to an arrangement with Joe for Mutiny to be Westgroup s first time sharing client at a discount in exchange for Gordon configuring the mainframes Mutiny subsequently thrives due in part to their new Community chat rooms conceived by Donna Preoccupied with work Donna keeps an abortion secret from Gordon and he hides his toxic encephalopathy diagnosis from her At Jacob s request Joe raises Mutiny s rates much to Cameron s chagrin but Donna and Joe negotiate a compromise contingent on Mutiny meeting certain benchmarks One of them is porting their software to the AT amp T UNIX PC which they unsuccessfully fake during a demo for Joe Impressed by their ingenuity Joe convinces Jacob to make an acquisition offer to Mutiny but after realizing Jacob would corrupt the startup s vision Joe convinces Cameron to reject it He decides to quit Westgroup and after marrying Sara plans to move them to California Gordon admits his medical diagnosis to Donna and begins stress therapy after his condition worsens following the failure of his homebuilt computer business Tom and Cameron write a first person shooter game but on the night of its planned launch Westgroup replaces Mutiny s service on their network with a copycat WestNet Joe denies involvement but the Mutiny staff disbelieve him Cameron and Donna sell their game to sustain the company causing Tom to break up with Cameron and quit Mutiny Cameron emotionally manipulates Joe in order to run the Sonaris malware on a Westgroup computer crippling their network during Joe s presentation of WestNet at a shareholders meeting Sara annuls her marriage to Joe while Jacob is scapegoated for the WestNet fiasco and fired After Gordon admits to an affair Donna gives him an ultimatum he must purchase and renovate a mainframe in California for Mutiny move their family there with the company and take a job with them he agrees Having transitioned from games to an online community Mutiny departs for California Gordon writes Joe an antivirus program in hopes of helping Westgroup but Joe uses it instead to pitch a venture capitalist He invites Gordon to join the endeavor but is refused Gordon is furious to learn later that Joe has received 10 million in funding for a new company in the San Francisco Bay Area MacMillan Utility Third season edit In 1986 Mutiny launches its mainframe and surpasses 100 000 users Gordon is involved in a copyright infringement lawsuit against Joe After noticing that Mutiny s chat feature is facilitating user to user transactions Donna and Cameron are inspired to build an online trading feature and begin pitching venture capitalists One of them Diane Gould helps Mutiny acquire a competitor Swap Meet Underappreciated Mutiny programmer Ryan Ray quits and after being inspired by Joe s presentation of MacMillan Utility s no cost antivirus software Citadel he convinces Joe to hire him The Swap Meet Mutiny merger causes friction as Cameron is resistant to making her code compatible with Swap Meet s and wants to fire their founders Ryan is disconcerted to learn MacMillan Utility plans to charge users for Citadel To keep it free Joe enlists Ryan in a special project to find another revenue stream After Ryan maps the ARPANET they spot potential in the NSFNET a backbone network not yet approved for commercial use The two build their own regional network at MacMillan Utility but after spending millions of the company s money and making a handshake deal with the NSFNET in defiance of the company s board of directors Joe is stripped of his executive powers As a result he declares in a deposition that he stole Citadel from Gordon Cameron s and Donna s relationship deteriorates Cameron unilaterally fires the Swap Meet founders and the women clash on how to implement credit card transactions and whether to undertake an initial public offering IPO after receiving a 20 million acquisition offer Cameron wants to delay the IPO to continue developing Mutiny but is outvoted by Donna Diane Bosworth and Gordon feeling betrayed she leaves the company and decides to move to Japan with Tom after they reconcile and marry The Mutiny IPO dramatically underperforms expectations Gordon and Joe preserve the NSFNET deal with Gordon heading MacMillan Utility After Ryan illegally releases Citadel s source code and becomes a fugitive from the FBI Joe steps away from the project to keep it alive Months later Ryan shows up at Joe s apartment and is dismayed to learn his legal options The next morning Joe discovers that Ryan has killed himself his suicide note warns how people will use the connectedness of computer networks to hurt each other By 1990 Mutiny has folded The Clarks are amicably divorced Donna is a partner at Diane s VC firm while Gordon is running the regional network Joe is working in his apartment Bosworth is retired and living with Diane Cameron is a successful video game developer for Atari While promoting her game Space Bike IV at COMDEX she reconnects with Joe and sleeps with him They along with Donna Gordon and Tom meet at the former Mutiny office to discuss Donna s memo about the fledgling World Wide Web Joe proposes building a web browser and everyone but Tom is receptive he and Joe have a physical altercation halting the meetings Cameron tells Donna she cannot work with her Donna grudgingly leaves as Gordon Joe and Cameron prepare to start their new venture Fourth season edit Over three years Gordon and Joe run the internet service provider ISP CalNect and Joe logs website URLs Working from Japan Cameron fails to complete a web browser for them before they are beaten to market by Mosaic When CalNect s backbone provider MCI declines to offer them more bandwidth Gordon and Joe realize MCI is forming its own ISP and sell CalNect Cameron s cerebral role playing game Pilgrim performs poorly in focus groups and is put on hold by Atari after a negative review While visiting California she tells Joe that Tom is divorcing her she and Joe rekindle a romance At the VC firm AGGEK Donna sets up an incubator for a medical database indexing company called Rover to pivot them into web indexing In debt Bosworth unretires to oversee the project After Gordon s teenage daughter Haley builds a website from Joe s directory of URLs they form a new startup called Comet to develop it into a human curated web directory Donna is surprised to learn her daughter is working on a competing search engine As Comet grows Rover s algorithm proves substandard Bosworth approaches Cameron to ask for help improving the algorithm which she obliges Rover s sudden success results in Series A funding but Donna is suspicious During her ensuing argument with Bosworth about the subject he suffers a heart attack At the hospital Donna realizes Cameron s involvement and tells her to stay out of her life Cameron admits to Joe her role in helping his competition Facing an intellectual property ownership conflict Donna fires Rover s head programmer but refuses to purchase the rights to Cameron s algorithm leading to Diane removing her from the project Cameron signs away the algorithm without compensation A financier Alexa provides Cameron with funding to work independently When Haley s school grades begin slipping Gordon tells her she must take time off from Comet leading to her storming out Bosworth admits to Diane that he is in debt the two marry After Donna opines on the importance of retaining visitors to their sites longer Gordon is inspired to relaunch Comet as a web portal which Joe excitedly agrees to Before they can begin Gordon dies from a stroke His friends and family gather to grieve and clean out his house Cameron and Donna reconcile Months later while preparing for the relaunch of Comet Joe and Cameron receive a beta copy of the yet to be released browser Netscape Navigator They discover a link to Yahoo on its toolbar as the default search provider and realize that Comet is doomed After one final night together they break up Joe sells Comet and AGGEK sells Rover s algorithm Diane retires and is succeeded at the firm by Donna who renames it Symphonic Ventures and revamps their work culture Cameron ends her professional relationship with Alexa Preparing to leave California Cameron stops at Donna s house to say goodbye but stays to try to recover Haley s school project from her crashed hard drive Donna and Cameron discuss the prospect of working together again Later that evening Donna hosts a cocktail party for women in tech before visiting the former Mutiny office with Cameron The following morning as they leave a diner Donna has an epiphany and tells Cameron I have an idea Joe returns home to Armonk New York to become a humanities teacher Themes editFailure and reinvention edit Cantwell and Rogers wanted Halt and Catch Fire to explore what it meant to be considered a success or a failure Rogers said they were interested in the pejorative connotation that the term loser carries in American culture and they sought to redefine how success could be measured beyond binary terms to give their characters more humanity 90 By the final season the characters realize everything isn t about one singular victory professionally or personally 158 The creators wanted to tell the stories of unsung innovators 159 since as Cantwell put it historical narratives tended to overlook the millions of people in obscurity who did most of the heavy lifting only to have somebody step in and get the credit 160 He said that they intended the series s fictional characters and companies to exist plausibly within the cracks of history 100 but since the series follows historical reality 161 the protagonists are predestined to lose out to real life competitors 162 Although the characters prosper financially and attain professional accomplishments 158 they never find lasting success or transform their industry like they set out to 163 Describing how their protagonists were fated to fail Cantwell said We know that our characters are not going to be the ones with the Wikipedia articles written about them but what s fun about our story is we can somehow still get excited about their excitement because they re in the fog of war and they don t know what s coming 20 In response to their failures the characters are forced to undergo transformations both personal and professional Cantwell called reinvention a major theme of the series saying tech is about failing fast and changing quickly That felt like it gave us license to do that 164 Laura Hudson of Wired said The cycle of passion loss of control and hard reboot runs through not just every business endeavor but nearly every relationship on the show Regarding the unsuccessful ventures and a failed marriage depicted on the show she said It s easy to call these failures but they re more like iterations in the lifelong experiment of trial and error that people hope can lead them closer to what they really want and closer to themselves 165 Poniewozik writing for The New York Times said the series was more interested in failure as a condition of human growth and that from its perspective failure is not the end it s how people level up 30 Interpersonal relationships and ambition edit The characters professional ambitions frequently result in them making decisions at the expense of their personal relationships 166 David Sims of The Atlantic said The characters conflicts often hinge on their struggles to communicate which is made all the more ironic by the fact that they re laying the groundwork for a world where everyone can speak to each other instantly despite being more polarized than ever 10 Lisco said a seminal theme of the show was the euphoria and the cost of going after your dreams in life 167 Chris Cabin of Collider called the series one in which connections are often compromised in the name of ambition and vision 29 Vanity Fair s Laura Bradley said that as each of the series s characters followed their ambitions competing ruthlessly to get to an unseen top of the food chain they alternated between collaborating and stabb ing each other in the back 168 In the pilot episode Joe tells Gordon Computers aren t the thing They re the thing that gets us to the thing 169 Many critics found it to be a defining phrase of the series highlighting how technology is ultimately less important than the connections it can forge between people 14 165 170 Philip Cosores of Consequence of Sound compared the phrase to a lesson he believed the characters had learned that it wasn t really important what they created or what they innovated What was important was that it brought them together over and over again and that they all made each other better 171 Joe Reid of Decider said that the characters stories illustrated that their successes their failures and their might have been regrets were never in the end as important as the mere fact that they made the decision to work together in the first place 172 Hudson said that the series s most radical message was that Human beings are the signal and everything else is just noise 165 Feminism edit The series explores themes of feminism 173 sexism 174 and gender roles 175 Rogers said that the creators were able to examine modern issues through a period lens by depicting sexism in the 1980s that was still present 30 years later 174 Through Cameron s and Donna s professional experiences in computing the series delves into how people in leadership positions can be perceived differently based on their gender Emily St James of Vox said Every decision anybody makes is driven on some level by emotion But when the person making that decision is a woman in the workplace on Halt and Catch Fire as in life it s all too easy to write off that decision for being emotional In the second season the creators placed Cameron and Donna into situations similar to ones that Joe and Gordon faced in the first season as they wanted to contrast the other characters distrust of the female partnership with their reactions to the male one 176 According to Cantwell the 1980s were a time when computers were being marketed as toys for boys at the expense of appealing to women 48 Bishe an advocate of women entering STEM fields said that the proportion of women who received computer science degrees had declined in the years following the series s period setting 37 percent in 1984 compared to 18 percent in 2012 177 Cantwell and Rogers were interested in exploring how the computing industry began to slowly push women out in the mid 1980s 176 and they depicted it through Cameron s and Donna s encounters with sexist behavior of male venture capitalists 114 178 Cantwell and Rogers were annoyed by the common trope of women being accessories to male storylines in television dramas and wanted Cameron and Donna to be formidable engineers and formidable people in their own right 173 Though both feminists the characters have different values due to their ten year age difference Donna has an unentitled view of feminism due to the struggles her generation went through while Cameron fails to recognize her own femaleness and takes for granted the benefits she enjoys due to the efforts of Donna s generation Davis said that Donna and Cameron represented the stories of second and third wave feminism respectively 114 173 The depiction of their business partnership was regarded by critics as easily passing the Bechdel test which measures female representation in fiction 179 180 Distribution editPremiere and initial broadcast edit The pilot was screened at the South by Southwest festival on March 8 2014 181 Apple co founder Steve Wozniak moderated a panel discussion with Cantwell and Rogers at the festival and called the pilot very realistic 82 From May 19 31 the pilot was available to stream on AMC s Tumblr page and AMC com 182 and through video on demand and TV Everywhere services 183 it was marketed as the first TV series to premiere on Tumblr and the first time AMC had partnered with a social media service to debut a new show 182 In the two weeks before its television premiere the episode received hundreds of thousands of plays according to AMC president Charlie Collier 184 The network held private screenings of the pilot for employees of technology companies such as Apple Twitter Google and Dropbox as well as for Tumblr influencers at the company s New York headquarters 182 A premiere was held at the ArcLight Hollywood theatre in Los Angeles on May 21 185 The series made its television debut on Sunday June 1 2014 in the 10 p m ET timeslot replacing Mad Men whose mid season finale had aired the week prior for its final season 186 The pilot episode of Halt and Catch Fire was the only one distributed to critics for review an uncommon practice for new series which usually make multiple episodes available upon premiering 187 Season two premiered on May 31 2015 and concluded on August 2 188 Prior to the third season s official two hour premiere on Tuesday August 23 2016 189 AMC aired the season s first episode early on Sunday August 21 at 11 p m ET in the second half of a two hour timeslot that had been allocated to Talking Dead 190 AMC renewed Halt and Catch Fire for a fourth and final season of ten episodes on October 10 2016 191 The final season began with a two hour premiere on August 19 2017 3 and concluded with a two hour series finale on October 14 International distribution edit Halt and Catch Fire was distributed internationally by eOne Television 192 as one of the first series covered by a 2013 agreement with AMC to distribute the network s original scripted programming 193 The distributor licensed the series to Canal in France C More in Denmark Norway Sweden and Finland HBO Nordic in Scandinavia TV 2 in Norway and D B S Satellite Services in Israel 194 In August 2014 AMC announced that the series would be among the network s first original series to air on their recently rebranded international TV channels in Asia Europe and Latin America 195 The series premiered in Singapore in March 2015 196 That same month the CBS AMC Networks EMEA Channels Partnership a joint venture between AMC Networks International Zone and CBS Studios International announced that the series would be broadcast in Poland on CBS Europa starting April 12 this marked the first time that CBS Europa would air first run content 197 Halt and Catch Fire premiered in Australia on June 23 2015 on Showcase 198 Home media and streaming edit The first season was released on DVD region 1 and Blu ray region A on May 5 2015 199 The second season was released on DVD in region 1 on August 9 2016 200 Season one was made available on AMC On Demand and AMC com from March 26 to April 7 2015 before its release on Netflix on April 8 201 It was also made available on Amazon Video in the UK and Germany 202 In December 2017 the final season was released on Netflix making the entire series available on the service 203 On May 1 2020 a licensing deal between AMC and ViacomCBS took effect to make Pluto TV the exclusive no cost ad supported streaming partner for older AMC content Halt and Catch Fire was one of the network s series covered by the agreement 204 In September 2020 AMC announced an agreement with ad supported streaming service IMDb TV to offer the network s programming Halt and Catch Fire was one of several original series planned for a dedicated channel called AMC Presents 205 A similar AMC Presents ad supported channel featuring network content such as Halt and Catch Fire was announced for the Samsung TV Plus streaming service in December 2020 206 and for Plex s Live TV streaming in March 2021 207 All four seasons of the show became available for streaming on SBS On Demand in Australia in June 2021 208 After departing Netflix in December 2021 the series was added to the AMC streaming service with each full season released weekly in subsequent weeks 209 Reception editCritical response edit Season Critical response Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic 1 76 49 reviews 69 100 31 reviews 2 91 23 reviews 73 100 8 reviews 3 96 23 reviews 83 100 12 reviews 4 100 27 reviews 92 100 8 reviews First season edit The first season received favorable reviews from critics At Metacritic which assigns a rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications the first season received an average score of 69 based on 31 reviews 210 According to review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes the first season holds a 76 approval rating with an average score of 7 2 10 based on 49 reviews the site s consensus said A refreshingly well acted period drama Halt and Catch Fire convincingly portrays the not too distant past 211 Reviewing the pilot Matthew Gilbert of The Boston Globe was intrigued by the possibility that the series would be able to delve beneath the surface of its milieu He highlighted the distinctive visual style focus on material that has not already been done to death elsewhere on TV and the pair of unfamiliar and interesting lead actors 32 Tim Goodman of The Hollywood Reporter called the opening episode a triumphant pilot with excellent writing impressive acting and a noteworthy cinematic visual style Although skeptical about how the show would evolve Goodman said It s a premise with possibilities and could be AMC s best offering of the post classics Breaking Bad Mad Men era 212 Mary McNamara of the Los Angeles Times said that although the pilot doesn t hit the gloriously high bar set by the opening episode of Mad Men it is provocative and promising nonetheless 131 Reviewing several episodes Chris Cabin of Slant Magazine said the show s creators choose to tailor the series to focus on the enigmatic MacMillan which might explain why Halt and Catch Fire comes off as overtly coy and more than a little aimless The review called the show a hungry anticipation for what machines can and will do but it only has a cursory interest in the complex humans that built them 213 Alan Sepinwall of HitFix believed the series was derivative of others and analogized this assessment to the show s plotline of reverse engineering the IBM PC calling Halt and Catch Fire a series that has not only been reverse engineered from past cable drama hits but that seems acutely aware of that fact 17 Emily St James of The A V Club echoed these sentiments writing that the pilot feels like the network trying to reverse engineer its success with Mad Men St James though said that the pilot moves with a kind of confidence that s hard to fake and praised Campanella s intriguing direction 18 Joanne Ostrow of The Denver Post called it a dreary imitation of Mad Men in which the brooding secretive loner guy was a tad too familiar yet not as moving as that earlier slick suited version She liked the stories of the male leads and the progression of the female characters but said that Pace s excellent performance was not enough to make the show rewarding 19 Colin McGuire of PopMatters said that the season was not perfect and accurately reflected that it had been written by two newcomers to television He noted however the worthwhile cast that did far more than enough to bring the occasionally spotty narrative to life and said The groundwork for something special is there imperfections and all 214 Second season edit The second season received strong reviews with many critics noting the series s improvement over its first season At Metacritic the season received an average review score of 73 out of 100 based on 8 reviews 215 According to Rotten Tomatoes the second season holds a 91 approval rating with an average score of 8 3 10 based on 23 reviews the site s critical consensus said Halt and Catch Fire version 2 0 has received some upgrades and improvements including a welcome focus on its female leads 216 Sepinwall praised the acting writing and directing of season two and noted that one of his frustrations with the first season the downplaying of Donna and Cameron was resolved Now it s essentially Halt and Catch Fire 2 0 with all the bugs worked out so that it can function exactly as it first promised Sepinwall summed up the season s changes by saying Those who stayed patient with Halt season 1 or those who come to the show now that the quality has gone up significantly will be rewarded 217 Andy Greenwald of Grantland called season two a hard reboot that was exponentially better He praised the emphasis placed on the female leads Davis s performance and how it reframed the male leads while noting that the focus on Mutiny inject ed the show with the jittery caffeinated energy of a start up 179 Willa Paskin of Slate said that the series was able to successfully pivot by shifting focus to a startup setting and to Cameron and Donna the latter of whom Paskin said has blossomed into a character with ambitions all her own Commenting on the season s exploration of issues facing working women Paskin wrote what is so satisfying about its treatment of sexism is not the extent to which the sexism conforms to our expectations but that the women involved do not 8 Emily Nussbaum of The New Yorker called season two such a startling upgrade of the first that it begs for technological metaphors She said that the chemistry between Donna and Cameron is looser releasing the show from the burdens of its gloomy forerunners and that the marriage between Gordon and Donna felt nuanced Nussbaum said the series was best at being a platform for a fascinating buried period of history that provided oddly profound meditations on the nature of originality in the digital age nested within relationship talk 218 James Poniewozik of Time said the show remade and refocused itself in its second season by focusing on the Cameron Donna partnership and that it now has a compelling subject Poniewozik said true to Moore s Law it has become magnitudes better 57 Several publications ranked the second season among the best television series of 2015 on their end of year lists The Atlantic and James Poniewozik of The New York Times shortlisted it 219 220 while it was ranked first by Slate 221 fifth best by RogerEbert com 222 eighth best by Vox 223 and 23rd best by Rolling Stone 224 Third season edit The third season received critical acclaim At Metacritic the season has an average review score of 83 out of 100 based on 12 reviews indicating universal acclaim 225 According to Rotten Tomatoes the third season holds a 96 approval rating with an average score of 8 6 10 based on 23 reviews the site s critical consensus said Halt and Catch Fire finds its footing in an optimistic third season that builds on the fascinating relationship between a pair of emerging protagonists 226 David Sims of The Atlantic said Halt and Catch Fire was one of TV s most elegantly crafted shows the best drama on television and the most underrated Sims praised the series for creating emotional investment in the characters ideas for its depiction of teamwork and the act of creation and for using Joe MacMillan to satirize the Jobsian cult of personality that defines so much of the tech world 227 St James writing for Vox said This is the rare recent TV drama that s both as good as it is and as optimistic as it is She praised Cantwell and Rogers for continued character development and highlighted the series for leading the movement of what she called empathy dramas 115 Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter called out the Donna Cameron partnership as the highlight of the show writing There s nothing like it on TV He praised the lead actors performances and the nuanced characters and called Halt and Catch Fire one of TV s best directed shows 228 Maureen Ryan of Variety called the series both a retro pleasure and a forward looking gem that was bolstered by its performances soundtrack and individual episode story arcs Ryan said the characters failed attempts to connect with each other resonated because of the series s compassionate approach to its core characters 229 Jen Chaney of Vulture said the third season covers familiar thematic ground while remaining a very good period piece that traces the rise of digital technology and simultaneously uses it as a metaphor to explore its characters frailties Chaney said the series earned its should watch status through its cast use of restraint and depiction of characters on the verge of technological breakthroughs 230 Poniewozik writing for The New York Times said the season makes its past future feel dewy and new and that despite some initial slow pacing The character dynamics are solid and the 80s details continue to be spot on 45 Hank Stuever of The Washington Post said The show s bugs and glitches also persist but if nothing else Halt and Catch Fire has become an above average specimen of slow television should you want such a thing in your life The review said that the season survives and arguably thrives on the Donna Cameron storyline but that it still struggled with Joe s character 231 Many publications ranked the third season among the best television series of 2016 on their end of year lists The Atlantic shortlisted it 232 while it was ranked first by Vox 233 third best by Willa Paskin and June Thomas of Slate 234 fourth best by Consequence of Sound and Sonia Saraiya of Variety 235 236 sixth best by RogerEbert com and The A V Club 237 238 seventh best by The Ringer 239 ninth best by Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter 240 and tenth best by Paste 241 Fourth season edit The fourth season received critical acclaim and the strongest reviews of any season of the series At Metacritic the season has an average review score of 92 out of 100 based on 8 reviews 242 According to Rotten Tomatoes the fourth season holds a 100 approval rating with an average score of 9 5 10 based on 27 reviews the site s critical consensus said Halt and Catch Fire s character driven drama culminates in an optimistic ode to the early internet age that s bound to stand the test of time 243 Michael Roffman of Consequence of Sound called the fourth season a victory lap for everyone who championed the show from the very beginning He said the series s refusal to guarantee the characters success doesn t just make for great television but great characters and those characters are partly why Halt has staved off its own demise 244 Jeff Jensen of Entertainment Weekly said the show had overcome a sputtering start to become a luminous drama praising Cantwell and Rogers for progressing from aping the antihero playbook to refining it and for making incredibly compelling and unique characters He concluded his review by calling the series an urgent story of rehumanization for a cold wired culture 245 Eric Thurm of The Verge called the show the best depiction of technological innovation on television lauding the truly formidable cast and the show s visual style for charg ing meetings coding sessions or a group of people standing in front of a whiteboard with creative potential 162 St James commended the series s ability to create nostalgia for the early days of the Web and said it was one of the few dramas that was able to stay nimble and sharp by find ing endless new iterations of the characters it already has 246 In her end of year rankings of the best series St James said the season s final four episodes were as emotionally overwhelming as anything she s ever seen on television 247 J M Suarez of PopMatters said the season never sacrifices nuance and thoughtfulness for twists or attempts to outdo itself calling the show confident enough to let its characters succeed and fail without having to spell out who s right and wrong 248 Sims said the fourth season succeeds by making its tech narrative not a dry history lesson but rather a battle of wills between four very flawed compelling characters each possessed of the kinds of manic ambition and tendency toward self destruction that make for the best television drama 50 Alex Cranz of Gizmodo called the fourth season easily one of the best seasons of a television show ever produced 249 while Brian Grubb of Uproxx similarly called it one of the best seasons of television he s ever seen 250 Many publications ranked the fourth season among the best television series of 2017 on their end of year lists The New York Times The Atlantic Vox and The Philadelphia Inquirer shortlisted it 247 251 252 253 The series was ranked second best by Consequence of Sound and The Hollywood Reporter s Daniel Fienberg 254 255 third best by Uproxx s Alan Sepinwall 256 Variety s Sonya Saraiya 257 and RogerEbert com s Brian Tallerico 258 fourth best on TVLine s list of dramas 259 fifth best by The A V Club 260 Forbes 261 Slate 262 and Vulture s Jen Chaney 263 sixth best by The Oregonian 264 seventh best by IndieWire and The Ringer 265 266 ninth best by Paste 267 13th best by Rolling Stone 268 and 39th best by The Guardian 269 According to Metacritic Halt and Catch Fire s fourth season was the 17th highest ranked series of 2017 based on critics end of year lists 270 Viewership ratings edit The premiere episode drew 1 2 million viewers according to Nielsen data 433 000 of them in the 18 49 age demographic 271 At the time it was the least watched drama series premiere in AMC s modern history 272 and was the only episode of the series to surpass one million viewers during its initial broadcast 138 The first season drew modest overall viewership averaging 760 000 viewers per episode and a 0 3 rating in the 18 49 age demographic for live plus same day viewings 273 When accounting for time shifting via digital video recorders DVRs the season averaged 1 3 million viewers per episode in live plus 7 day viewings 606 000 of them were ages 18 49 274 275 making Halt and Catch Fire among the most upscale dramas on ad supported television behind Mad Men and The Good Wife according to AMC Despite the low overall ratings the network renewed the show in August 2014 for a second season of ten episodes AMC s president Charlie Collier said We have a history of demonstrating patience through the early seasons of new shows betting on talent and building audience over time 275 The second season premiere drew 659 000 viewers 262 000 of whom were ages 18 49 Compared to the first season premiere this marked a 45 drop in overall viewership and a 39 drop in the 18 49 demographic 276 The season finale was watched by 485 000 viewers 277 Despite the critical acclaim that season two garnered viewership declined overall The season averaged 520 000 viewers per episode and a 0 2 rating in the 18 49 age demographic in live plus same day viewings 192 273 When accounting for time shifting the season averaged 865 000 viewers per episode in live plus 3 day viewings and just under one million in live plus 7 day viewings 129 Still AMC renewed the series in October 2015 for a ten episode third season Stillerman said The critical momentum was a big part of the decision 278 The Tuesday premiere of the third season drew just 385 000 same day viewers 279 Halt and Catch Fire U S viewers per episode thousands Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org SeasonEpisode numberAverage1234567891011190970765844575718832627549574764265949445245154355849949758848552333673393973123242803073664072873394340340270344313354322327394394340Audience measurement performed by Nielsen Media Research 280 281 282 283 Awards and nominations edit Year Award Category Nominee s Result Ref 2014 Satellite Awards Best Television Series Drama Halt and Catch Fire Nominated 284 Best Actor Television Series Drama Lee Pace Nominated Critics Choice Television Awards Most Exciting New Series Halt and Catch Fire Won 285 2015 Casting Society of America s Artios Awards Outstanding Achievement in Casting Television Pilot Drama Sharon BialySherry ThomasLisa Mae Fincannon location casting Craig Fincannon location casting Allison Bader associate Jen Ingulli associate Nominated 286 Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Main Title Design Patrick Clair creative director Raoul Marks animator Eddy Herringson designer Paul Sangwoo Kim typographer AMC Nominated 287 SXSW Film Design Awards Excellence in Title Design Patrick Clair Nominated 288 Hollywood Post Alliance Awards Outstanding Sound Television Susan Cahill supervising sound editor Keith Rogers re recording mixer Scott Weber re recording mixer Jane Boegel dialogue editor Mark Cleary sound effects editor Kevin McCullough sound effects editor NBC Universal Studio Postfor episode SETI Nominated 289 2017 Guild of Music Supervisors Awards Best Music Supervision in a Television Drama Thomas GolubicYvette Metoyerfor season 3 Nominated 290 2018 Motion Picture Sound Editors Golden Reel Awards Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing Dialogue and ADR for Episodic Short Form Broadcast Media Susan Cahill supervising sound editor Sara Bencivenga supervising ADR editor Jane Boegel dialogue editor for episode So It Goes Nominated 291 Peabody Awards Entertainment honoree AMC StudiosGran Via Productionsfor Halt and Catch Fire Nominated 292 Women s Image Network Awards Actress Drama Series Kerry Bishe Nominated 293 Drama Series Halt and Catch Firefor episode NeXT Won 294 2019 Guild of Music Supervisors Awards Best Music Supervision in a Television Drama Thomas GolubicYvette Metoyerfor season 4 Nominated 295 Legacy edit Halt and Catch Fire appeared on several rankings of 21st century television series Thrillist called it the best TV series to air all of its episodes in the 2010s writer Esther Zuckerman said perhaps more than any other show that began during this decade Halt and Catch Fire captured the agony of trying to navigate a world where it s easier and easier to hide behind a computer screen In documenting the beginning of the boom that brought us to where we are Cantwell and Rogers created characters who reflected universal anxieties through their longing 296 Emily St James of Vox ranked it 5th on her list of the shows that best explained the 2010s saying the series had the power to transport viewers back to a world where computers could unite people rather than divide them where the internet held promise and not destruction The show s most beautiful optimism was that we might be able to return to that world someday 297 Time named it one of their top 10 TV series of the 2010s saying In the past decade as we ve suffered the consequences of a tech sector that can seem devoid of human insight and empathy Halt dared to imagine an alternate history of the industry in which those qualities mattered most 298 The Hollywood Reporter ranked it the 7th best TV series of the decade with Daniel Fienberg saying of it Driven by a commitment to character Halt and Catch Fire gained more and more emotional heft with each passing season and every tear I shed in the final three or four episodes felt completely earned 299 Consequence of Sound ranked the series 10th on their list of the decade s best Michael Roffman said As the characters endured so did the show and that bizarre negotiation of fiction and reality certainly elevated our feelings towards the characters and the series 300 Brian Tallerico of RogerEbert com which placed the series 12th on its list of the decade s best called it one of the best character studies of the decade and said no show was smarter than this one when it comes to chronicling what success and failure does to personal relationships 301 In its critical assessment of 2010s television Vulture included Halt and Catch Fire in its section of Indisputable Classics and said Observant replete with unexpected and great soundtrack choices and blessed with four lead actors who made every scene sing Halt and Catch Fire was never flashy and that made it a rare special creation 302 The show was ranked 14th on IndieWire s list of the best TV shows of the 2010s Libby Hill said that it dissected how friends lovers and partners find ways to build things and too often tear them apart 303 Rolling Stone placed the series 18th on its list of the decade s 50 best TV shows Alan Sepinwall said that Halt quickly left the knockoff accusations behind and transformed into its own incredibly moving story after it emphasized the Donna and Cameron characters and made their partnership the series emotional centerpiece 304 USA Today ranked it the 24th best series of the decade saying No TV show earns the most improved award more than Halt while opining that it found its voice once it focused on the friendship between Cameron and Donna 305 The A V Club ranked the series 29th on its list of the 100 best shows of the decade saying that it was in the pantheon of great but underseen series that ll hopefully find greater appreciation years after the fact 306 Halt and Catch Fire also appeared on end of decade lists of the best TV shows published by Uproxx 307 Collider 308 and Paste 309 In 2022 Rolling Stone placed Halt and Catch Fire 55th on its revised list of The 100 Greatest TV Shows of All Time the list was compiled from 46 ballots submitted by actors writers producers and critics 310 The Hollywood Reporter s 2023 list of the 50 greatest shows of the 21st century ranked the series in 17th place highlighting the final season for paying off the three previous seasons of deep emotional investment 311 In 2021 BBC Culture ranked Halt and Catch Fire 50th on its list of the 100 greatest TV series of the 21st century the list was based on a poll of 206 TV experts comprising critics journalists and industry figures from 43 countries 312 The Guardian ranked Halt and Catch Fire 79th on its list of the 100 best TV shows of the 21st century 313 For The New York Times list of The 20 Best Dramas Since The Sopranos the series was included in a section of The Toughest Omissions James Poniewozik called it one of TV s best stories about work the medium through which its characters communicate fall apart and come together again 314 Two fourth season episodes were ranked among the best TV episodes of the 2010s BuzzFeed News included Goodwill on its list of the top 25 episodes 315 and Film School Rejects ranked Ten of Swords 23rd on its list of the top 50 316 In 2024 the ATX Television Festival will host a panel discussion to commemorate the 10th anniversary of Halt and Catch Fire s premiere with the producers and cast members as participants 317 References edit Andreeva Nellie July 26 2013 TCA AMC Picks Up Halt amp Catch Fire amp Turn To Series Deadline Hollywood Retrieved November 2 2019 AMC Drama Halt and Catch Fire to Bow June 1 After Mad Men Finale Variety March 5 2014 Retrieved March 5 2014 a b Shapiro Marissa June 27 2017 Premiere Date for the Final Season Revealed Watch a New Teaser AMC com Retrieved November 10 2022 Roots Kimberly June 1 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Does AMC s New Drama Compute TVLine Retrieved June 11 2023 a b c d e Darling Cary May 31 2014 AMC does Dallas and Fort Worth in Halt and Catch Fire Fort Worth Star Telegram Retrieved January 26 2021 Labrecque Jeff June 1 2014 Halt and Catch Fire If Don Draper and Walter White met in 1983 Entertainment Weekly Retrieved November 2 2019 Doyle John May 31 2014 Brace yourself for a great Old West style computer drama The Globe and Mail p R10 Retrieved April 22 2020 a b c Paskin Willa May 28 2015 The Perfect Pivot Slate Retrieved November 2 2019 Herman Alison October 15 2017 Halt and Catch Fire Was Moving to the End The Ringer Retrieved December 25 2017 a b c Sims David October 11 2016 Halt and Catch Fire s Sad Ballad of the Future The Atlantic Retrieved April 9 2020 a b c d e f g Collins Sean T August 23 2016 How Halt and Catch Fire Became the Underdog Success of the Peak TV Era Esquire Retrieved May 28 2018 Collins Sean T June 30 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Recap Who s Your Daddy Rolling Stone Retrieved November 10 2022 a b Woo Kelly October 14 2017 Halt and Catch Fire series finale postmortem The creators on bringing it full circle Yahoo Retrieved July 14 2019 a b Gault Matthew December 22 2017 Halt and Catch Fire Is the New The Wire Motherboard Retrieved January 26 2021 Darling Cary May 30 2014 Heavy handed new AMC series has potential Winnipeg Free Press Retrieved November 10 2022 a b Mitchell Jim July 13 2015 Cowboys of the Silicon Prairie The Sydney Morning Herald p 4 Retrieved January 14 2019 a b Sepinwall Alan July 28 2014 Review AMC s Halt and Catch Fire nears end of season 1 HitFix Retrieved May 19 2018 a b St James Emily May 30 2014 Halt And Catch Fire tries to reverse engineer Mad Men The A V Club Retrieved September 14 2021 a b Ostrow Joanne July 31 2014 Catch Fire never did Silicon Valley clicked The Denver Post p E2 Retrieved November 19 2018 a b c Herman Alison August 17 2017 How Halt and Catch Fire Evolved Into Prestige TV s Only Worthy Successor The Ringer Retrieved November 4 2018 a b c d St James Emily August 4 2015 Halt and Catch Fire s creators hope you think they re the worst writers in the world Vox Retrieved August 25 2018 Perkins Dennis September 30 2017 Halt And Catch Fire finds its heart and breaks ours The A V Club Retrieved May 22 2019 Bradley Laura August 18 2017 How Halt and Catch Fire Became the Most Human Drama on TV Vanity Fair Retrieved May 22 2019 Jung E Alex October 14 2017 Lee Pace on Joe MacMillan s Fate in the Halt and Catch Fire Series Finale Vulture Retrieved January 14 2019 Elber Lynn May 30 2014 Sex lies and PCs in 80s computer world drama Associated Press Retrieved April 13 2020 Tate Gabriel June 24 2015 Lee Pace interview Halt and Catch Fire is about people not computers The Guardian Retrieved January 14 2019 Peisner David June 19 2014 Tales of the Silicon Prairie Rolling Stone No 1211 p 30 Retrieved November 10 2022 Robertson Adi May 28 2015 Gaming the system Halt and Catch Fire s fun slightly unfocused second season The Verge Retrieved April 22 2020 a b c Cabin Chris August 23 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Season 3 Review Mutiny Faces Growth Earthquakes and Joe MacMillan Collider Retrieved September 9 2018 a b c Poniwozik James October 16 2017 Failure Is an Art Form The New York Times New York ed sec C p 1 Retrieved December 1 2019 a b c d e f g h i Yarm Mark May 30 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Gets the 80s PC Revolution Perfectly Right Here s How Wired Retrieved December 25 2017 a b Gilbert Matthew May 30 2014 The promise of Halt and Catch Fire The Boston Globe p 18G Retrieved June 10 2014 Korbelik Jeff June 1 2014 Halt and Catch Fire more than computer building Lincoln Journal Star p D4 Retrieved April 14 2020 Manjoo Farhad June 1 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Recap Can Geekiness Be Entertaining The New York Times Retrieved November 10 2022 Kelly Christopher June 2014 Scoot McNairy catches fire Texas Monthly Vol 42 no 6 pp 40 Retrieved January 31 2020 Wallace Rachel August 23 2016 Catching up with Scoot McNairy DuJour Retrieved January 26 2021 Dickie George August 25 2017 Celebrity Q amp A Scoot McNairy of Halt and Catch Fire on AMC Statesboro Herald sec Beyond Basic TV p 23 Archived from the original on April 11 2022 Retrieved February 19 2019 Fienberg Daniel June 1 2014 Interview Scoot McNairy on Halt and Catch Fire Uproxx Retrieved April 12 2020 Machkovech Sam May 22 2014 Review Halt and Catch Fire reverse engineers pop culture Ars Technica Retrieved April 27 2020 a b Gagne Ken July 11 2014 Review Halt and Catch Fire adds sizzle to PC history Computerworld Retrieved April 19 2020 a b Poniewozik James August 3 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Became the Next Mad Men When It Stopped Trying to Be Time Retrieved January 26 2021 Perkins Dennis July 19 2015 Halt And Catch Fire Limbo The A V Club Retrieved September 14 2021 Perkins Dennis August 30 2016 Searching for security strikes sparks on an electric Halt And Catch Fire The A V Club Retrieved April 13 2020 Kokalitcheva Kia September 7 2016 Startup Tensions Swirl in AMC s Halt and Catch Fire Fortune Retrieved April 27 2020 Perkins Dennis August 23 2016 Ominously Halt And Catch Fire s Joe MacMillan addiction resurfaces The A V Club Retrieved September 14 2021 a b Poniewozik James August 23 2016 Rebooting the Dawn of Silicon Valley The New York Times p C1 Retrieved June 17 2018 Chaney Jen August 25 2017 Halt and Catch Fire Is Confident As Hell in Season Four Vulture Retrieved April 27 2020 a b Ng Philiana June 1 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Creators Pledge Tale of Combustive Egos and the Anti Skyler White The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 a b c d e f Sirois Justin September 22 2015 Gamer s Grammar An interview with one of the creators of Halt and Catch Fire Baltimore City Paper Retrieved November 2 2019 Rao Priya May 30 2014 Mackenzie Davis Likens Her Hair in Halt and Catch Fire to Donald Trump s Vanity Fair Retrieved September 29 2019 a b Sims David August 22 2017 It s Not Too Late for Halt and Catch Fire The Atlantic Retrieved June 18 2018 Doyle John May 29 2015 John Doyle Stop and watch Halt and Catch Fire The Globe and Mail Retrieved April 23 2020 Bell Shavonne June 12 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Q amp A Mackenzie Davis Cameron Howe AMC com Retrieved November 10 2022 Halt And Catch Fire Explores What It Was Like For Women In 80s Tech WBUR FM May 29 2015 Retrieved February 2 2020 Duncan Fiona Winter 2014 Mackenzie Davis Catalogue No 8 pp 8 17 Retrieved January 23 2023 St James Emily October 15 2017 I loved AMC s Halt and Catch Fire I can t wait for you to love it too Vox Retrieved February 6 2020 Perkins Dennis September 16 2017 There s only a metaphorical way out on a tangled Halt And Catch Fire The A V Club Retrieved April 15 2020 a b Poniewozik James May 28 2015 Review Halt and Catch Fire Works the Bugs Out in Version 2 0 Time Retrieved November 2 2019 a b c Bonaime Ross May 21 2015 Toby Huss Talks Halt and Catch Fire and Embracing the Darkness Paste Retrieved January 26 2021 Baylis Sheila Cosgrove June 8 2015 Halt and Catch Fire recap New Coke Entertainment Weekly Retrieved April 15 2020 O Neill Phelim October 12 2016 Halt and Catch Fire not Mad Men in the 80s but so much better The Guardian Retrieved December 25 2017 a b Crowder Courtney May 28 2014 Bishe adds smarts to Fire role Chicago Tribune sec Arts Entertainment pp 1 5 Retrieved April 14 2020 Schwartz Ryan March 29 2017 Peak TV Treasure Halt and Catch Fire TVLine Retrieved June 11 2023 Lowry Brian May 27 2014 Fire Starter Feels a Little Bit Floppy Driven Variety Vol 324 no 3 p 68 Retrieved April 14 2020 Fienberg Daniel June 8 2014 Interview Halt and Catch Fire star Kerry Bishe on not being a wet blanket wife Uproxx Retrieved April 15 2019 Collis Clark April 21 2015 Halt and Catch Fire star Kerry Bishe teases juicy season 2 exclusive art Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on October 5 2017 Retrieved April 14 2020 Kerry Bishe Halt And Catch Science NPR August 4 2017 Retrieved January 26 2021 Sims David August 4 2015 Halt and Catch Fire A Show on the Edge of Greatness The Atlantic Retrieved April 12 2020 Terry Josh August 22 2016 General Electricity Halt and Catch Fire Season 3 is another solid upgrade for TV s most underrated show Chicago Tribune sec Redeye p 14 Retrieved April 15 2020 Surrey Miles August 16 2017 Halt and Catch Fire resets for final season by making one of its leads the villain Mic Retrieved April 9 2020 Renner Ethan June 2 2014 Halt and Catch Fire premiere recap I O The Baltimore Sun Retrieved April 14 2020 Gallaga Omar L October 22 2017 Halt and Catch Fire showed humanity of early Texas tech Austin American Statesman pp F3 F4 Retrieved November 10 2022 a b Eakin Marah August 3 2015 Toby Huss on King Of The Hill Reno 911 and his time in the Pete And Pete pajamas The A V Club Retrieved September 14 2021 O Neal Sean September 4 2019 How Toby Huss Became Hollywood s Favorite Fake Texan Texas Monthly Retrieved November 10 2022 Coffin Lesley August 23 2016 Interview Actor Toby Huss on Season Three of Halt and Catch Fire TheYoungFolks com Retrieved September 23 2019 Snetiker Marc October 11 2016 Halt and Catch Fire creators talk time jump final season Entertainment Weekly Retrieved April 7 2020 Collins Sean T August 21 2017 Halt and Catch Fire Season Premiere Recap Live and Let Dial Up Decider Retrieved December 25 2017 Agard Chancellor August 19 2017 Halt and Catch Fire premiere recap So It Goes Signal to Noise Entertainment Weekly Retrieved April 26 2020 a b c Snetiker Marc July 25 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Matthew Lillard joins season 3 Entertainment Weekly Retrieved August 5 2018 Stanhope Kate March 11 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Adds Hundred Foot Journey Star for Season 3 Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 a b Petski Denise June 9 2017 Halt And Catch Fire Anna Chlumsky Set To Recur In Fourth amp Final Season Deadline Hollywood Retrieved June 21 2017 a b c d e Galas Marjorie March 17 2014 The Fresh Faces Behind Halt And Catch Fire Variety 411 Archived from the original on April 5 2014 Retrieved November 2 2019 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tone Joe May 15 21 2014 The Unlikely Engineering of Halt and Catch Fire Dallas Observer Vol 34 no 20 pp 11 17 Retrieved January 26 2021 a b c d e Johans Jen November 16 2021 S2 E49 Halt and Catch Fire with Christopher Cantwell Co Creator Showrunner Watch with Jen Podcast Retrieved June 24 2023 via RSS com Borrelli Christopher May 28 2014 The Full Nerdy The tech developer newly fleshed out on TV is having a moment Chicago Tribune section Arts Entertainment pp 1 4 a b Montini Laura May 30 2014 Tech War AMC s New Show Reveals the Scrappy Roots of PCs Inc Retrieved June 5 2018 a b Lambert Molly May 27 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Cocreators Chris Rogers and Chris Cantwell The Lambert Account Podcast Retrieved November 4 2018 via Grantland a b c d e f g h i j k l Kurp Josh October 11 2016 A Halt And Catch Fire Co Creator Details The Show s History In A Revealing Tweetstorm Uproxx Retrieved August 18 2018 Cantwell Christopher ifyoucantwell October 11 2016 Jan 2011 CCR amp I began writing HaltandCatchFire Wrote the first 8 pgs of Joe walking down an IBM hallway at my DTLA apt on 7th amp Spring Tweet via Twitter a b c d Palmer Lisa June 20 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Co Creators Chris Rogers and Chris Cantwell How We Made It in Hollywood The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 a b c Jensen Todd Aaron June 20 2014 The IT Crowd Writers Guild of America West Retrieved June 28 2023 a b c d e O Falt Chris June 20 2018 Halt And Catch Fire Creators Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C Rogers IndieWire Filmmaker Toolkit Podcast Retrieved June 11 2023 a b Andreeva Nellie November 27 2012 AMC Orders Period Drama Pilots From Craig Silverstein Barry Josephson Mark Johnson Deadline Hollywood Retrieved November 2 2019 Snierson Dan July 26 2013 AMC greenlights drama series Halt amp Catch Fire and Turn Entertainment Weekly Retrieved November 2 2019 Goldberg Lesley February 26 2013 Pushing Daisies Alum Lee Pace to Star in AMC s 80s Computer Drama The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 Goldberg Lesley March 4 2013 Argo Actor to Co Star in AMC s 80s Computer Drama The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 a b Goldberg Lesley March 12 2013 Kerry Bishe to Reteam With Argo Co Star in AMC s 80s Computer Drama The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 Andreeva Nellie March 21 2013 Kevin Dunn Upped To Regular On Veep David Wilson Barnes Joins AMC Pilot Halt Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 16 2018 Sepinwall Alan October 14 2017 The Halt And Catch Fire Series Finale Is A Perfect Idea Perfectly Realized Uproxx Retrieved January 26 2021 Wagmeister Elizabeth February 19 2015 AMC s Halt and Catch Fire Adds Two Cast Members for Season 2 Variety Retrieved August 5 2018 Patten Dominic February 2 2015 AMC s Halt amp Catch Fire Adds James Cromwell Deadline Hollywood Retrieved August 5 2018 a b c d McHenry Jackson August 23 2016 Halt and Catch Fire s Creators on Moving the Show to San Francisco and Why the 80s Are Big on TV Vulture Retrieved June 9 2018 Jung E Alex July 26 2017 Halt and Catch Fire s Mackenzie Davis and Kerry Bishe Get the Same Pay As Their Male Co stars for the Final Season Vulture Retrieved August 5 2018 Goldberg Lesley October 8 2015 AMC s Halt and Catch Fire Renewed for Season 3 With New Showrunners The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 Andreeva Nellie July 30 2013 Jonathan Lisco Inks Overall Deal With AMC Deadline Hollywood Retrieved November 2 2019 a b Miller Liz Shannon May 30 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Showrunner Jonathan Lisco on Season 2 Changes and Joe s Fluid Sexuality IndieWire Retrieved June 11 2023 Rozeman Mark June 1 2015 Coding the Human Condition Halt amp Catch Fire Showrunner Jonathan Lisco on the Sophomore Season Paste Retrieved January 26 2021 Fienberg Daniel June 7 2014 Interview Halt and Catch Fire showrunner Jonathan Lisco on the TV tech zeitgeist and more HitFix Retrieved June 9 2018 Adalian Josef October 8 2015 Why AMC Renewed Halt and Catch Fire for a Third Season Despite Its Dismal Ratings Vulture Retrieved June 3 2018 Ausiello Michael October 8 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Scores Season 3 Renewal Amid Showrunner Switch TVLine Retrieved June 11 2023 Villarreal Yvonne May 25 2014 The PC revolution Los Angeles Times p S4 Retrieved November 2 2019 Bell Shavonne June 5 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Q amp A Scoot McNairy Gordon Clark AMC com Retrieved November 10 2022 a b c d e McCracken Harry August 27 2016 Welcome To 1986 Inside Halt And Catch Fire s High Tech Time Machine Fast Company Retrieved April 8 2018 Conner Cheryl May 29 2014 Lessons In Tech And Business AMC s New Halt And Catch Fire Forbes Retrieved April 20 2018 Lewis Evan July 25 2015 How Real Is Halt and Catch Fire s Take on 1980s Computer Technology TV Insider Retrieved February 2 2020 a b c Jung E Alex August 14 2017 Mackenzie Davis Answers the Tough Questions Vulture Retrieved May 28 2018 a b c d St James Emily August 23 2016 AMC s Halt and Catch Fire is set in tech s past But it just might be TV s future Vox Retrieved June 17 2018 Weintraub Steve Frosty August 19 2017 Lee Pace on Halt and Catch Fire Season 4 and the Perfect Series Finale Collider Retrieved June 18 2018 a b c d e f Adams Erik October 14 2017 The creators of Halt And Catch Fire walk us through their series emotional conclusion The A V Club Retrieved July 29 2018 a b c Adams Erik August 17 2017 Halt And Catch Fire s cast and creators on getting great while no one was looking The A V Club Retrieved September 14 2021 a b c d e Yakas Ben August 21 2017 Interview Halt And Catch Fire Creators Embrace The 90s In Season Four LAist Archived from the original on September 9 2018 Retrieved September 9 2018 a b Schilling Dave August 22 2016 Halt and Catch Fire on the set of the best show on TV that no one is watching The Guardian Retrieved August 26 2018 a b c d e Greenwald Andy October 12 2016 Ep 85 The Andy Greenwald Podcast With Christopher Cantwell and Christopher C Rogers The Watch Podcast Retrieved August 19 2018 via The Ringer a b c d e St James Emily October 12 2016 Halt and Catch Fire s creators on why their 80s tech drama couldn t avoid the internet forever Vox Retrieved June 13 2018 a b Adams Erik October 11 2016 Halt And Catch Fire showrunners talk season finale It scared us and it felt bold The A V Club Retrieved September 14 2021 a b c d Weintraub Steve Frosty August 26 2017 Halt and Catch Fire Creators Talk Final Season and How the Series Came Together Collider Retrieved June 10 2018 Agard Chancellor August 18 2017 Halt and Catch Fire producers preview the fulfilling celebratory final season Entertainment Weekly Retrieved September 23 2018 Christopher Cantwell ifyoucantwell May 6 2023 In 2017 WGA negotiations with the AMPTP got to a point where a strike authorization vote was called It was an extremely strong turn out We were in the midst of writing the final season of Halt and Catch Fire Tweet via Twitter a b Laughlin Jamie May 7 2013 AMC Needed Centennial Liquor s Neon Tex for its New Pilot So it Gave Him a Makeover Dallas Observer Retrieved August 22 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Bunish Christine October November 2014 Halt and Catch Atlanta Oz Magazine pp 29 33 Retrieved September 21 2020 a b Littleton Cynthia October 8 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Renewed For Season 3 By AMC Variety Retrieved July 22 2018 Hagey Keach May 30 2014 AMC Bets on Payoff From Original Shows The Wall Street Journal Vol 263 no 125 p B4 Retrieved July 22 2018 a b McNamara Mary May 30 2014 AMC plays well with tech Fire Los Angeles Times pp D1 D7 Retrieved November 2 2019 a b Solomon Dan May 22 2014 Halt And Catch Fire Showrunner Jonathan Lisco On Making Computers Interesting With Complex Characters Fast Company Retrieved June 5 2018 a b c d e f g h i Kate July 9 2015 An Interview with Halt and Catch Fire Set Decorator Lance Totten Mirror80 Retrieved January 26 2021 Kate July 30 2015 A Halt and Catch Fire Interview with Lance Totten Part 2 Mirror80 Retrieved January 26 2021 a b c Ho Rodney May 31 2014 Halt and Catch Fire set in 1983 Texas filmed in Atlanta The Atlanta Journal Constitution p D2 Retrieved August 22 2018 Brett Jennifer December 7 2013 New AC pilot now shooting in Atlanta The Atlanta Journal Constitution p D2 Brett Jennifer May 31 2014 Late artist s work to be featured on AMC show The Atlanta Journal Constitution p D2 AMC show Halt and Catch Fire seeking Atlanta extras Atlanta Business Chronicle January 13 2015 Archived from the original on July 29 2015 Retrieved July 2 2023 a b c St James Emily October 17 2017 The delicate art of the TV series finale Vox Retrieved June 6 2018 Marotta Jenna August 31 2017 Catching Kerry Bishe Backstage Vol 58 no 35 pp 14 17 Retrieved March 8 2020 Ho Rodney August 13 2018 Lodge 49 is a quirky low key AMC character drama The Atlanta Journal Constitution p D1 Retrieved August 23 2018 Walljasper Matt May 21 2015 Behind the Scenes of AMC s Halt and Catch Fire Atlanta Retrieved January 26 2021 a b Hank Melissa August 29 2016 Behind the scenes of Halt and Catch Fire Canada com Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved April 8 2018 a b Vehling Aaron December 2 2017 Is It Really Over Already Talking About Halt and Catch Fire With Composer Paul Haslinger Vehlinggo com Retrieved August 26 2018 a b c Houston Shannon M June 1 2014 Catching Up With Halt And Catch Fire Composer Paul Haslinger Paste Retrieved January 26 2021 Appelo Tim June 24 2014 A Tangerine Dream Conquers Television The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 Roffman Michael Blackard Cap July 15 2014 Paul Haslinger Halt and Score Fire Consequence of Sound Retrieved September 14 2021 Hutchinson Sean August 23 2016 Electronica s Triumphant Cinematic Return Inverse Retrieved August 26 2018 Roffman Michael August 24 2016 Stream Paul Haslinger s exceptional Halt and Catch Fire score Consequence of Sound Retrieved September 14 2021 Aubrich Wess April 2 2019 Exclusive Check out this track from former Tangerine Dream member Paul Haslinger of AMC s Halt and Catch Fire Vol 2 soundtrack The 405 Archived from the original on May 8 2019 Retrieved April 4 2019 a b c Gundersen Edna June 12 2014 Halt and Catch Fire playlists echo characters personalities USA Today p 3D Retrieved September 9 2018 a b c d Bryant Adam October 3 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Q amp A Thomas Golubic Music Supervisor AMC com Retrieved November 10 2022 a b Payne Jason September 2017 DOPE JOBS Halt and Catch Fire Music Supervisors Yvette Metoyer amp Thomas Golubic Interview For All Nerds Archived from the original on April 11 2022 Retrieved November 2 2019 a b Jung E Alex August 3 2015 The Essence of Each Halt and Catch Fire Character Distilled Into a Single Song Vulture Retrieved September 9 2018 a b c d Berman Judy October 13 2017 How Halt and Catch Fire Used Punk Music to Empower Its Female Characters Pitchfork Retrieved September 9 2018 Leas Ryan July 31 2014 The Best Soundtrack Moments Of July 2014 Boyhood Lucy Halt And Catch Fire amp More Stereogum Retrieved November 10 2022 a b c d Landekic Lola Perkins Will June 3 2014 Halt and Catch Fire 2014 Art of the Title Interviewed by Ian Albinson Retrieved January 26 2021 Hurst Adriene Spotlight on Raoul Marks Maxon net Archived from the original on July 26 2020 Retrieved November 3 2021 a b Agard Chancellor October 14 2017 Halt and Catch Fire bosses break down the beautiful series finale Entertainment Weekly Retrieved April 2 2020 Sepinwall Alan October 12 2016 The Creators Of Halt And Catch Fire Discuss How It Evolved Into One Of TV s Best Shows HitFix Retrieved April 27 2020 Vineyard Jennifer October 14 2017 The Halt and Catch Fire Showrunners on Redefining the Story of Losers The New York Times Retrieved April 26 2020 VanArendonk Kathryn August 26 2016 Halt and Catch Fire and Why It s So Hard to Tell Stories About Making Things Vulture Retrieved April 30 2020 a b Thurm Eric August 18 2017 Halt and Catch Fire is the perfect show about tech innovation The Verge Retrieved June 17 2018 Thurm Eric October 16 2017 Farewell to Halt and Catch Fire the best show that nobody watched The Guardian Retrieved April 8 2020 Keveney Bill October 13 2017 The series is ending but it s never too late to appreciate AMC s Halt and Catch Fire USA Today Retrieved April 30 2020 a b c Hudson Laura October 17 2017 Halt and Catch Fire s Most Radical Message Wasn t About Computers Wired Retrieved April 8 2020 Cabin Chris May 29 2015 HALT AND CATCH FIRE Season 2 Review Collider Retrieved April 9 2020 Rozeman Mark June 1 2015 Coding the Human Condition Halt amp Catch Fire Showrunner Jonathan Lisco on the Sophomore Season Paste Retrieved April 14 2020 Bradley Laura October 15 2017 Halt and Catch Fire s Stunning Finale Proves It Was Brilliant from the Start Vanity Fair Retrieved April 10 2020 Agard Chancellor October 14 2017 Halt and Catch Fire finale recap Search Ten of Swords Entertainment Weekly Retrieved April 10 2020 Rivera Joshua October 16 2017 Halt and Catch Fire Should Be the Next TV Show You Binge GQ Retrieved April 10 2020 Schwartz Ryan October 14 2017 Halt and Catch Fire Series Finale EP Breaks Down Joe s Journey Towards Humanity Cameron and Donna 2 0 TVLine Retrieved April 10 2020 Brennan Matt October 13 2017 Joe amp Gordon amp Donna amp Cameron Halt and Catch Fire and the Romance of Work Paste Retrieved April 20 2020 Roffman Michael Cosores Philip Colburn Randall et al October 30 2017 Top TV Episodes of the Month Curb Your Enthusiasm Stranger Things and Mindhunter Consequence of Sound Retrieved September 14 2021 Reid Joe December 14 2017 The 10 Best TV Episodes of 2017 Decider Retrieved April 19 2020 a b c Palmer Lisa May 29 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Boss on Season 2 Reboot Tackling Feminism and the Future The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 a b Kokalitcheva Kia July 10 2016 How AMC s Halt and Catch Fire Celebrates Women s Contributions to Computing Forbes Retrieved April 20 2020 Saraiya Sonya June 8 2015 The radical notion that women can pursue their own grand TV destinies Halt and Catch Fire finds its voice by focusing on women in tech Salon Retrieved April 20 2020 a b St James Emily August 2 2015 What Halt and Catch Fire understands about men and women that few other shows do Vox Retrieved April 8 2020 Keveney Bill August 24 2016 Kerry Bishe is no engineer but Halt star represents well USA Today Retrieved April 7 2020 Fraser Emma August 29 2016 Lipstick Ambition Halt and Catch Fire Dresses for Success Observer Retrieved April 8 2020 a b Greenwald Andy May 28 2015 Hard Reboot The Excellent Season 2 Makeover of Halt and Catch Fire Grantland Retrieved June 15 2018 Shipley Diane May 9 2017 Down with tech bros It s time for TV s female nerd revolution The Guardian Retrieved April 7 2020 Collins Sean T June 22 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Recap Trapped in the Closet Rolling Stone Retrieved April 7 2020 Travers Ben August 22 2016 Review Halt and Catch Fire Season 3 Laughs in the Face of Its Doubters Indiewire Retrieved April 7 2020 AMC Sets June Premiere Date For Drama Series Halt And Catch Fire Deadline Hollywood March 5 2014 Retrieved November 2 2019 a b c Spangler Todd May 19 2014 AMC Previews Halt and Catch Fire TV Series on Yahoo s Tumblr Variety Retrieved August 2 2023 Ross L A May 19 2014 AMC Sneaks Halt and Catch Fire as First Ever Tumblr TV Series Premiere TheWrap Retrieved August 2 2023 AMC s Halt And Catch Fire Attracts 1 2 Million To Network Opening Deadline Hollywood June 2 2014 Retrieved August 2 2023 Must Attend Variety Vol 324 no 2 May 19 2014 p 80 AMC Drama Halt and Catch Fire to Bow June 1 After Mad Men Finale Variety March 5 2014 Retrieved December 30 2019 Sepinwall Alan June 1 2014 Series premiere review Halt and Catch Fire I O Uproxx Retrieved April 20 2018 Kondolojy Amanda March 26 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Season Two Premieres Sunday May 31 TV by the Numbers Press release Archived from the original on June 12 2018 Retrieved November 2 2019 Roots Kimberly June 30 2016 Date for Halt and Catch Fire s Two Hour Season 3 Premiere Set at AMC TVLine Retrieved June 11 2023 Mitovich Matt Webb August 21 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Gets Secret Sunday Sneak Peek Ahead of Tuesday Premiere TVLine Retrieved June 11 2023 Holloway Daniel October 10 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Renewed for Fourth and Final Season at AMC Variety Retrieved October 10 2016 a b Andreeva Nellie October 8 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Renewed For Season 3 By AMC With The Series Creators As New Showrunners Deadline Hollywood Retrieved June 10 2018 Tartaglione Nancy September 5 2013 EOne AMC Networks Ink Multi Year International Output Deal For Scripted Series Deadline Hollywood Retrieved May 11 2020 Clarke Steve April 7 2014 eOne strikes AMC deals Broadcast Retrieved June 9 2020 AMC Networks Re Brands MGM Channel As AMC Press release AMC Networks August 4 2014 Retrieved January 26 2021 Lui John April 9 2015 Making keyboard tapping exciting The Straits Times Retrieved June 9 2020 CBS Europa Exclusively Premieres the Acclaimed AMC Original Drama Series Halt and Catch Fire on 12th April at 21 00 CET Press release AMC Networks March 25 2015 Retrieved January 1 2020 CharlesP June 1 2015 Foxtel in June 200 new shows including Orange Is The New Black True Detective Suits PLL Wimbledon and more Foxtel Archived from the original on July 16 2019 Retrieved November 2 2019 Lambert David February 24 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Press Release Announces The Complete 1st Season for DVD Blu ray TVShowsOnDVD com Archived from the original on February 25 2015 Retrieved February 25 2015 Lambert David May 16 2016 Halt and Catch Fire The Complete 2nd Season Press Release Package Art TVShowsOnDVD com Archived from the original on August 22 2016 Retrieved August 9 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Dials Up Season Two on Sunday May 31 at 10 00 P M ET PT AMC Press release March 26 2015 Retrieved May 28 2015 Season 2 of Halt and Catch Fire for Amazon Prime Instant Video UK Press release Advanced Television March 31 2015 Retrieved November 2 2019 Spelling Claire December 14 2017 Rejoice AMC Fans Halt and Catch Fire Season 4 Is Now Streaming On Netflix Decider com Retrieved December 15 2017 Spangler Todd April 30 2020 The Walking Dead Past Seasons Other AMC Networks Shows to Stream Free on Pluto TV Variety Retrieved May 4 2020 Hayes Dade September 11 2020 The Walking Dead Universe Experience Makes IMDb TV Its Exclusive Streaming Home Deadline Hollywood Retrieved September 14 2020 Steinberg Brian December 9 2020 AMC Networks Launches Two Streaming Outlets for Samsung Smart TVs Variety Retrieved December 14 2020 AMC Live TV Channels Now Streaming for Free on Plex Press release Plex GlobeNewswire March 3 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 Top new series in June 2021 SBS June 10 2021 Retrieved June 11 2023 How the Succession finale will go down Our character by character theories Los Angeles Times December 10 2021 Retrieved December 22 2021 Halt and Catch Fire Season 1 Reviews Metacritic Retrieved May 31 2014 Halt and Catch Fire Season 1 2014 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 26 2021 Goodman Tim May 27 2014 Halt and Catch Fire TV Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 Cabin Chris June 23 2014 Review Halt and Catch Fire Season One Slant Magazine Retrieved November 2 2019 McGuire Colin August 19 2014 In Defense of a Second Season for Halt and Catch Fire PopMatters Retrieved November 19 2018 Halt and Catch Fire Season 2 Reviews Metacritic Retrieved May 31 2015 Halt and Catch Fire Season 2 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 26 2021 Sepinwall Alan May 28 2015 Review Halt and Catch Fire upgrades in a big way for season 2 HitFix Retrieved May 31 2015 Nussbaum Emily August 10 17 2015 Clone Club The New Yorker Vol 91 no 23 p 78 Retrieved June 15 2018 Sims David December 21 2015 The Best Television Shows of 2015 The Atlantic Retrieved June 23 2018 Poniewozik James Hale Mike Genzlinger Neil December 13 2015 Of Spies Techies and Lost Souls The New York Times p 16 Retrieved June 23 2018 Paskin Willa December 10 2015 The Top 10 TV Shows of 2015 Slate Retrieved November 2 2019 Tallerico Brian December 28 2015 The Best TV of 2015 RogerEbert com Retrieved January 26 2021 St James Emily December 21 2015 Best TV shows 2015 from Mad Men to Jessica Jones Vox Retrieved June 23 2018 Sheffield Rob December 2 2015 25 Best TV Shows of 2015 Rolling Stone Retrieved August 24 2018 Halt and Catch Fire Season 3 Reviews Metacritic Retrieved August 22 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Season 3 Rotten Tomatoes Retrieved January 26 2021 Sims David August 23 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Is TV s Most Underrated Drama The Atlantic Retrieved June 17 2018 Fienberg Daniel August 23 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Season 3 TV Review The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved September 14 2021 Ryan Maureen August 22 2016 TV Review Halt and Catch Fire Season 3 Variety Retrieved June 17 2018 Chaney Jen August 22 2016 Halt and Catch Fire Is Still a Very Good Period Piece in Season Three Vulture Retrieved June 17 2018 Stuever Hank August 23 2016 Halt and Catch Fire moseys on to California The Washington Post pp C1 C2 Retrieved June 17 2018 Sims David December 20 2016 The Best Television Shows of 2016 The Atlantic Retrieved June 23 2018 St James Emily December 21 2017 Best TV shows 2016 from O J Simpson to Atlanta to Samantha Bee Vox Retrieved June 23 2018 Paskin Willa December 9 2016 The Top 10 TV Shows of 2016 Slate Retrieved November 2 2019 Thomas June December 20 2016 The TV Club 2016 Slate Retrieved November 2 2019 link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.