The 10 Best ‘Black Mirror’ Episodes, Ranked

News   2024-12-04 04:30:16

Black Mirror has shocked, creeped out and warned audiences of the dangers of technology for more than a decade, and its returning with Season 6 on Netflix on June 15 after a four-year wait.

Originally conceived as an anthology program on the British outlet Channel 4, Black Mirror moved to Netflix starting with Season 3 and has released 22 episodes and one film so far. With Season 6, fans of bleak, sci-fi drama and twist endings will get five more episodes to entertain themselves.

Charlie Brooker created Black Mirror and has written almost every episode by himself, with some help along the way. Each standalone story revolves around some kind of near-future technology, dystopian future or cultural obsession that wreaks havoc on characters lives, usually to a twisty, violent ending with some exceptions! Almost every episode ends in tragedy, heartbreak or brutal death for the cast, but some, like Hang the DJ and San Junipero, end things on a lighter note.

One hallmark of Black Mirror is its cast. Several big-name stars got an early break on the series, like Daniel Kaluuya, Jodie Whittaker and Letitia Wright, while later episodes spotlighted actors like Jon Hamm, Miley Cyrus, Will Poulter and more. Season 6 ups the star power with Salma Hayek, Michael Cera, Aaron Paul and Kate Mara.

As social media, artificial intelligence and technology still have a hold over our world, Black Mirror seems more relevant than ever. In celebration of Season 6, here are the 10 best episodes of the series, ranked.

Honorable mentions: Fifteen Million Merits, Be Right Back, Shut Up and Dance and Black Museum.

Playtest (Season 3)

The final “it was all a dream” twist in “Playtest” is the cherry on top of a deliciously twisted “Black Mirror” sundae. Wyatt Russell plays Cooper, who accepts an offer to test out an advanced, virtual-reality horror video game but gets much more trauma than he signed up for. The game taps into Cooper’s darkest fears, such as inheriting his late father’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis, and delivers enough Dan Trachtenberg-directed jump scares to leave you unsure of what’s really going on until the final seconds.

Bandersnatch (Interactive Special)

Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix / Black Mirror “Bandersnatch” is remarkable not only for “Black Mirror,” but for being Netflix’s first interactive movie aimed at adults. It gave viewers the chance to make decisions in the story that majorly altered how the story played out – a ground-breaking achievement at the time (and still is). A video game programmer named Stefan (Fionn Whitehead) is making a choose-your-own-adventure game while battling demons from his past. By the conclusion, there are five completely different endings, some bloody and others fourth-wall-breaking, and more than one trillion unique paths to take.

Nosedive (Season 3)

Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix Set in a near future where a large percentage of the population has adopted a form of social-media eye implant that ranks people like Yelp reviews, this pastel meditation shows what happens when we allow fictional clout to dictate societal norms. Bryce Dallas Howard plays Lacie, an amiable citizen with an above-average social media ranking. But after a series of unfortunate incidents, her rank starts to slip. What starts off an an annoyance (can’t open certain doors) spirals into something more ominous and even life-threatening for others. Plus, the angrier Lacie gets about her situation, the lower she’s ranked by those she interacts with, creating a self-fulfilling spiral of social media exile. “Nosedive” brought in big name Hollywood talent to kick off its first season on Netflix. The episode was penned by Michael Schur (“The Good Place”) and Rashida Jones (“The Office”) and directed by Joe Wright (“Pride Prejudice”). Shot with soft light and draped in Millennial pink, the world projects a bubblegum vibe, sweetly smiling while stripping citizens of their autonomy.

White Bear (Season 2)

White Bear is a masterwork of tension that drops viewers into a true nightmare. A woman (Lenora Crichlow) wakes up, not knowing her name or where she is. Things turn bad quickly, as shes chased by a masked executioner shooting at her, while hordes of people follow with cell phone cameras to film the wild scene. This handsomely shot episode starts out eerie, like a zombie film, and then escalates to all-out mayhem, dropping clues to our protagonists true identity along the way. The key twist reveals one of the series most nihilistic world views, a bleak meditation on crime and punishment that considers humanity at its worst. The final scene — a group of men calmly cleaning a house, soundtracked by the desperate shrieks of Crichlow — is a haunting reminder that Black Mirror can easily toggle into flat-out horror.

USS Callister (Season 4)

Image Credit: Everett Collection The closest “Black Mirror” has been to a genre-bending, sci-fi adventure episode, “USS Callister” is an expert spoof of “Star Trek” with a classic, grim twist that’s typical of the series. Jesse Plemons is the perfect star to play Captain Robert Daly, the heroic, dashing captain of the USS Callister spaceship who, unsurprisingly, has a grimy secret. Robert is actually a disgruntled employee at a video game company who uses digital clones of his co-workers to belittle them and seduce new programmer Nanette (Cristin Milioti). Instead of hinging on twists, “USS Callister” is an uncharacteristically colorful and fun “Black Mirror” excursion that ends with the villain getting what he deserves.

White Christmas (TV Special)

Image Credit: Courtesy of Netflix/Everett Collection This feature-length “Black Mirror” episode was one of the series’ first to use a major star as its lead, and Jon Hamm, at the peak of his “Mad Men” fame, was perfect to play Matt, a sleazy pickup-artist turned prisoner and social outcast. The extra-long Christmas “special” is broken into several meaty, interconnected vignettes with devastating moments of their own that could make for good standalone stories. There are plenty of gut-punch twists to love, like the true reason why Matt’s pickup protege is stuck in a cabin on Christmas and the speed at which time can fly by there.

National Anthem (Season 1)

“Black Mirror” starts with a bang (pun, unfortunately, intended) as its first episode has a premise repulsive enough to make a viewer going into the series blind second-guess their decision. Instead of focusing on some futuristic technology gone bad, the idea behind “The National Anthem” is simple: What if the Prime Minister (played by Rory Kinnear) was forced to have sex with a pig on TV? Instead of sci-fi, the episode is more of a dark thriller that plays out the stomach-churning social implications of the deed. Love it or hate it for how different it is from the rest of “Black Mirror,” the episode is sure to stick with you.

The Entire History of You (Season 1)

A pre-“Succession” Jesse Armstrong wrote the only “Black Mirror” episode without creator Charlie Brooker – and it’s one of the most emotionally devastating of the series. A “grain” implant allows people to record their every memory, which turns into a recipe for disaster for jealous Liam and his wife Ffion (Toby Kebbell and Jodie Whitaker). After an awkward dinner party where Ffion gets a little too close with her ex, Liam spirals and demands to review her grain for evidence of infidelity. When Liam learns the truth, it’s a gut punch in this intimate relationship story.

Hang the DJ (Season 4)

There might be panic on the streets of London and Birmingham, but this is one of the few Black Mirror episodes that ends with a sigh of relief. This episode takes place in a world where people are paired up by a dating system that predicts to the minute how long they will last as a couple. When Frank (Joe Cole) and Amy (Georgina Campbell) have an instant connection on their algorithm-induced first date, only to find out that not only are they not meant to be together forever but arent even meant to be together beyond that night they both go through multiple unsatisfying relationships while pining for each other and still trying to accept that the system knows whats best. In the end, they decide to buck the system and escape their world, with the final scene showing this was all taking place inside an app that was determining if a real-world Frank and Amy were a match. Spoiler alert: They are, and its adorable. 

San Junipero (Season 4)

Besides “Hang the DJ,” “San Junipero” is pretty much the only other “Black Mirror” episode with a happy ending, and this one will have you reaching for the tissues by the end. In a 1980s nightclub, Yorkie (Mackenzie Davis) and Kelly (Gugu Mbatha-Raw) meet and have instant chemistry. After they hit it off, however, it’s revealed they’re inside a simulated reality for elders and people who have died, and Yorkie and Kelly are actually older women living out their dreams of being young and free to be their authentic selves. But the question looms: Do they die naturally or live together forever in San Junipero? With this emotional masterpiece, “Black Mirror” tackles themes of death, afterlife and love in a way that no other episode of TV has before.

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