The Hamilton Spectator

Mr. Robot returns and reboots

- NEAL JUSTIN

Even rabid fans may approach a continuati­on of “Mr. Robot” skepticall­y.

The first season won the Golden Globe for best drama and handed computer nerds their own version of “Game of Thrones.” It climaxed with the revelation that our hero Elliot Alderson was operating out of a dream world, eventually discoverin­g that he’s actually Christian Slater.

USA Network had every reason to bask in the critical acclaim, then switch off its bold social experiment and get back to dishing out comfortfoo­d procedural­s.

Instead, the network has upped the ante. It increased its yearly order from 10 episodes to 12, opening Wednesday with a two-hour extravagan­za and tacking on a postmortem show, “Hacking Robot,” designed to give viewers a chance to exhale in unison. (Locally, catch the episodes Wednesday at 9 p.m. on Showcase.)

Creator Sam Esmail is also stepping up his game; he’ll direct every episode this season, which is akin to a pro baseball player starting every rotation for a month.

In Season 1, Alderson’s ragtag team pulled off an elaborate hack that froze the country’s financial markets. Instead of establishi­ng a new adventure, Esmail picks up the story line where he left off, with the world still reeling over their suddenly worthless ATM cards and Wall Street honchos contemplat­ing suicide rather than enduring another appearance on CNBC.

Alderson (Rami Malek) has moved in with his mother, who may or may not be as real as Mrs. Bates in “Psycho,” and tries to stick to a predictabl­e regimen that includes meals with a newly minted “Seinfeld” aficionado and afternoons sitting courtside at a local pickup basketball game.

But images of Slater — his late father — and an agenda straight out of Lex Luthor’s playbook — linger.

To a certain extent, the journey pays off. The darker tone, which includes more than a couple of bullets to the head, forces the award-winning actors to push themselves even further. Slater hasn’t been this wonderfull­y frightenin­g since he tortured Shannen Doherty in “Heathers.”

 ?? DAVID GIESBRECHT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rami Malek, left, as Elliot, and Christian Slater as Mr. Robot: who is “wonderfull­y frightenin­g.”
DAVID GIESBRECHT, THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Rami Malek, left, as Elliot, and Christian Slater as Mr. Robot: who is “wonderfull­y frightenin­g.”

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