A woman enters the Black Museum, where the proprietor tells his stories relating to the artifacts.A woman enters the Black Museum, where the proprietor tells his stories relating to the artifacts.A woman enters the Black Museum, where the proprietor tells his stories relating to the artifacts.
Daniel Eghan
- Scientist with Tablet
- (uncredited)
Stephan Genovese
- Museum Curator
- (uncredited)
Sally Guinness
- Black Museum Electrocutioner
- (uncredited)
Mark Kempson
- Senator Whitley
- (uncredited)
Hilary Kennedy
- Denise Stockley
- (uncredited)
Karen Smyth
- Bystander
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- Trivia"The Black Museum" is the name of a radio program starring Orson Welles and based on real-life cases from the files of Scotland Yard's Black Museum, much like the "articles" of this Black Museum using items from various BM programs. The radio program ran in the United States in 1952.
- GoofsThe myth about the human brain only using a small fraction of its theoretical capacity has been busted a long time ago.
- ConnectionsFeatured in WatchMojoUK: Top 10 Actors Who Have Appeared in Black Mirror (2018)
- SoundtracksAlways Something There to Remind Me
(uncredited)
Written by Burt Bacharach and Hal David
Performed by Dionne Warwick
Featured review
Tales from the Black Mirror
With its structure, story, and most of all its atmosphere, the "Black Museum" irresistibly resembles the cult anthologies of the eighties, such as "Creepshow", "Tales from the Darkside", "Tales from the Crypt", and to some extent Rod Serling's "The Twilight Zone".
A young black woman rides an old-timer on a dusty road, which suggests a retro episode. But when she stops at a gas station, we see her plugging a car into a solar panel. This kind of charging will take quite a while, so she decides to explore the nearby facility, to pass the time.
The building in question is the Black Museum, which, with the black woman in the lead role, again leads to wrong assumptions. It is a museum of various technological achievements related to crimes. We had the opportunity to see a good part of the exhibits in previous episodes of the "Black Mirror" series, but this episode does not focus on them, so they can easily go unnoticed and represent the "easter eggs" of this episode.
The Black Museum focuses on three exhibits we have not encountered so far. The curator of the museum, a person of a very suspicious character, tells our heroine the history of these exhibits, so in this episode, we have a triptych of short, but powerful and quite shocking and morbid SF dramas. Each of these stories opens new questions about human psychology and attitudes towards technical achievements and makes us think, and each for itself would be a worthy episode of the "Black Mirror" series. And when you finally, through the final twist, see how all three stories are connected, to each other and the background story, the episode becomes even more striking.
Although the twist is quite unoriginal and towards the end it becomes more and more predictable, and there is no tension typical for most "Black Mirror" episodes, everything is so nicely blended and works perfectly that the shortcomings are negligible. And in my case, the similarities with the anthologies of my childhood add another nostalgic star to the final rating.
8/10.
A young black woman rides an old-timer on a dusty road, which suggests a retro episode. But when she stops at a gas station, we see her plugging a car into a solar panel. This kind of charging will take quite a while, so she decides to explore the nearby facility, to pass the time.
The building in question is the Black Museum, which, with the black woman in the lead role, again leads to wrong assumptions. It is a museum of various technological achievements related to crimes. We had the opportunity to see a good part of the exhibits in previous episodes of the "Black Mirror" series, but this episode does not focus on them, so they can easily go unnoticed and represent the "easter eggs" of this episode.
The Black Museum focuses on three exhibits we have not encountered so far. The curator of the museum, a person of a very suspicious character, tells our heroine the history of these exhibits, so in this episode, we have a triptych of short, but powerful and quite shocking and morbid SF dramas. Each of these stories opens new questions about human psychology and attitudes towards technical achievements and makes us think, and each for itself would be a worthy episode of the "Black Mirror" series. And when you finally, through the final twist, see how all three stories are connected, to each other and the background story, the episode becomes even more striking.
Although the twist is quite unoriginal and towards the end it becomes more and more predictable, and there is no tension typical for most "Black Mirror" episodes, everything is so nicely blended and works perfectly that the shortcomings are negligible. And in my case, the similarities with the anthologies of my childhood add another nostalgic star to the final rating.
8/10.
helpful•132
- Bored_Dragon
- Oct 21, 2021
Details
- Runtime1 hour 9 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.20 : 1
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