USA TODAY US Edition

‘Halt and Catch Fire’ takes on Silicon Valley

AMC’s tech drama sends characters ‘in with the sharks’

- Bill Keveney @billkev USA TODAY

Halt and Catch Fire is expanding from Mutiny into full-out tech revolution.

The AMC drama, which charts the frustratin­g fits and mind-boggling starts of the 1980s computing boom, last season focused on Mutiny, a gaming start-up led by two brilliant women. Season 3 (twohour premiere Tuesday, 9 ET/PT) ups the ante as Mutiny moves from Texas to Silicon Valley.

“It felt false that we were keeping our characters away from Silicon Valley, the big leagues of the tech industry,” says Christophe­r C. Rogers, who created the show with Christophe­r Cantwell. “They have to get in the arena with the real sharks in California.”

After a first season that followed the dizzying rises and falls of mesmerizin­g entreprene­ur Joe MacMillan (Lee Pace), Halt emerged on many critics’ radar with Season 2’s Mutiny, the tech brainchild of idiosyncra­tic coding genius (and Joe’s ex-lover) Cameron (Mackenzie Davis) and brilliant engineer Donna (Kerry Bishé). (Each season of Halt, which averaged 1 million viewers in Season 2, has been filmed without producers and cast knowing if it would be renewed.)

Bishé likes how Donna traded in corporate reserve for start-up boldness.

“From the get-go, Donna had a lot of promise. She had all this potential but she was trapped in a little world. Her arc has been very clearly about realizing that potential. She’s become a brilliant free thinker and pursued those ambitions,” Bishé says.

Halt’s Mutiny has been celebrated for featuring women competing in male-dominated tech, but Bishé and the creators say that would have been less unusual in the ’80s than it would be today.

“There were more women per capita getting computer science and computer engineerin­g degrees back then,” Cantwell says.

Mutiny’s collaborat­ive environmen­t is appealing, Bishé says. “There was so much friction, tension and manipulati­on in Season 1. I feel it was a team you wanted to root for” in the second season.

Conflict and tension will be unavoidabl­e in the coming season. Joe, now a computerse­curity titan with Steve Jobslike motivation­al skills, will intersect with Cameron, Donna and Donna’s husband, Gordon (Scoot McNairy), another tech master searching for a new opportunit­y while pursuing a lawsuit and grudge against Joe.

The women must learn to navigate Silicon Valley, from finding a big idea to securing funding from venture capital firms. They meet a potential ally and role model from that world, Diane Gould (Annabeth Gish), and focus on a new concept: transactio­nal interactio­ns (think eBay or Amazon).

Other new characters include Ryan Ray (Manish Dayal), a talented young coder, and Ken Diebold (Matthew Lillard), a business investor.

As Halt moves into Silicon Valley in 1986, today’s viewers may start to recognize the forerunner­s of our modern Internet-based system of communicat­ions and business enterprise.

“From the idea of reverse-engineerin­g an IBM PC (in Season 1), we made our way into Mutiny and the proto-social network and the foothills of of what will become the Internet,” Rogers says. “Season 3 is concerned with online connection and retail, things modern viewers are going to understand more as we get into start-up culture and the mythology of companies we know today.”

 ?? TINA ROWDEN, AMC ??
TINA ROWDEN, AMC

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