So there was much to celebrate all around as USA Network and Lifetime delivered two of the biggest surprises of the year, both during the summer months when surprises of this magnitude tend to be few and far between, especially on advertiser-supported cable.
“Mr. Robot,” on USA (which hasn’t had a noteworthy new show since the glory days of “Psych,” “Burn Notice,” “White Collar” and “Covert Affairs”), was certainly the more challenging of the two. Its consistently fascinating story centered on a scary smart but severely disturbed and withdrawn engineer named Elliott who works at a cybersecurity company and is approached by the leader of a hacker group to take down a monstrous conglomerate – and that doesn’t begin to get into what this show really is. Rami Malek (pictured above) was a revelation as the brilliant but detached Elliott, and Christian Slater was mesmerizing as the very mysterious title character who broke through to him and moved him to take action against people he knew to be bad – and that doesn’t begin to get into what these characters really are.
This was one of the most stylized shows of the year, with the coolest opening credit sequence to come along in a very long time. Week after week, scene after scene it reminded me of those great movies about paranoia and isolation that were so prevalent in the Seventies. Fans are counting the months until it returns.
Lifetime’s “UnREAL” couldn’t be more different from “Mr. Robot,” except in terms of its overall quality. A soap opera-like drama about the cut-throat world of soap-operatic reality television, this show became a sensation with its take on the behind-the-scenes manipulations and machinations at a series not unlike ABC’s “The Bachelor.” “UnREAL” was seriously shocking, sexy and sad in its exploration of the peculiar appeal and soul-diminishing dark side of so-called real-life TV, developing characters we hated to love and some we loved to hate and a few that were caught and crushed between them.