Reviews of Mr Robot Season 4 First Episode?
Humans | |
---|---|
Genre | Science fiction |
Created by |
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Based on | Real Humans |
Starring |
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Theme music composer | Cristobal Tapia de Veer |
Composers |
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Land of origin |
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Original linguistic communication | English language |
No. of serial | three |
No. of episodes | 24 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producer | Chris Fry |
Production locations | London, England, UK |
Cinematography |
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Running time | 46 minutes |
Production companies |
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Distributor | Endemol Smoothen UK |
Release | |
Original network |
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Motion picture format | HDTV 1080i SDTV 576i |
Audio format | 5.ane |
Original release | xiv June 2015 (2015-06-14) – 5 July 2018 (2018-07-05) |
Humans is a science fiction television series that debuted on Aqueduct 4. Written by Sam Vincent and Jonathan Brackley, based on the Swedish science fiction drama Real Humans, the series explores the themes of artificial intelligence and robotics, focusing on the social, cultural, and psychological impact of the invention of anthropomorphic robots called "synths". The serial is produced jointly by Channel 4 and Kudos in the United Kingdom, and AMC in the United States.
8 episodes were produced for the first series which aired betwixt xiv June and two August 2015. The second eight-episode series was broadcast in the Britain between 30 October and 18 December 2016. A third series was commissioned in March 2017 and aired eight episodes between 17 May and 5 July 2018. In May 2019, Channel 4 announced that the serial had been cancelled.[1]
Premise [edit]
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (November 2020) |
The series focuses on the social, cultural, and psychological touch on of the invention of anthropomorphic robots called "synths". Information technology explores a number of science fiction themes, including bogus intelligence, consciousness, human being-robot interaction, superintelligence, listen uploading[2] and the laws of robotics.[three]
Cast [edit]
Chief [edit]
Introduced in serial 1 [edit]
- Manpreet Bachu[4] as Harun Khan (series 1), a friend of Mattie, who helps her hack the synths.
- Emily Berrington[5] as Niska, a conscious synth built by David Elster to be Leo's sister, assigned to work equally a prostitute when they were separated. She is violent and resentful of humans and wishes to live her ain life, but later starts to care near humans. In the 2d series, she uploads the consciousness program to the synth network, but but a few synths are successfully upgraded. After a cyclone relationship with Astrid, Niska returns to the Hawkins and asks to be tried as a human for her crimes. In the 3rd series, later Astrid is injured in a terrorist attack, Niska spends the series looking for revenge for her girlfriend. At the terminate of the 3rd serial, Niska meets V, originally Odi, who tells her she is unique and has great power.
- Ruth Bradley[4] as Karen Voss (series one–three), a detective inspector and the partner of Detective Sergeant Pete Drummond. Those effectually her have not discovered that she is a conscious synth and was created by David Elster to replace his deceased wife, Beatrice. Karen wants to finish her life only her programming forbids suicide. By the second series, she has become more than accepting of her status and is in a relationship with Pete.
- Lucy Carless[four] as Mattie Hawkins, Laura and Joe's teenage daughter, who is upset that her family is falling apart and aroused at the emerging part of synths in society. Despite her ain intelligence, she feels useless, claiming that synths will soon be able to practise anything she can do. She is skilled in computer programming and hacking.
- Gemma Chan[5] as Anita/Mia, a servile synth belonging to the Hawkins family. She was sold every bit new, but is actually Mia, a conscious synth built by David Elster to be Leo'south babysitter, kidnapped and hacked with new software. Past the 2d series, she has begun working in a café, and is romantically interested in her employer.
- Pixie Davies as Sophie Hawkins, Laura and Joe's younger girl. She names the new family unit synth Anita after a friend of hers who has moved abroad, and develops a stiff affection for the synth.
- Jack Derges[4] as Simon (series i), Jill Drummond's bonny synth caregiver and physiotherapist. Pete is dissatisfied with Simon, thinking that he is his replacement.
- Sope Dirisu[half dozen] equally Fred (series 1), a witting synth congenital by David Elster to be a brother to Leo. Professor Hobb likens Fred to the Mona Lisa in terms of the complication of his design. He has gone missing between the starting time and second series, although Max believes that he is safety.
- Rebecca Front[v] as Vera (series 1), a medical synth from the NHS who is supposed to replace Odi equally George Millican's caregiver. Millican is frustrated with her relentlessly officious and domineering manner, and generally refuses her help.
- Tom Goodman-Hill[5] equally Joe Hawkins, Laura'due south hubby. He bought Anita because he felt Laura's absence caused a void, and he needed help managing their family unit.
- Jill Halfpenny[iv] as Jill Drummond (series one), Pete's disabled wife. She is dissatisfied with Pete.
- Ivanno Jeremiah[half-dozen] every bit Max, Leo Elster'southward witting synth and confidant, congenital by David Elster to be a brother to Leo.
- Neil Maskell[6] as Pete Drummond (serial one–two), an unhappy Special Technologies Task Force detective sergeant who has always been suspicious of synths. He is partnered with Karen Voss. By the second series, Pete and Jill accept separated and Pete is shown to be involved with Karen despite his knowledge of her true nature.
- Colin Morgan[5] as Leo Elster, son of David Elster, a function-synth fugitive believed by the residual of the world to have died in a car blow; he was in a fatal accident as a child and his father developed synth components to cope with the impairment to his brain. He spent the get-go series trying to rails down and reunite the witting synths fabricated by his father, while in the 2nd serial he is trying to help synths conform to the spread of the consciousness program.
- Katherine Parkinson[5] equally Laura Hawkins, a lawyer and mother of three who feels uncomfortable around synths. She had concerns well-nigh Anita and sought to observe out more about her. By the 2nd series, she had become more than accepting of the idea, like-minded to act every bit Niska's lawyer in her subsequent trial for murder while Niska underwent an cess to determine if she was truly conscious.
- Theo Stevenson[5] as Toby Hawkins, Laura and Joe's teenage son, who is attracted to, and has go protective of, Anita.
- Will Tudor[5] equally Odi (series one–2), George Millican's malfunctioning synth caregiver. He is decumbent to system glitches, though Millican is unwilling to recycle him or return him to the NHS. He stays with the Hawkins briefly in the second series.
- Tudor also portrays V (series 3), an artificial intelligence developed past Athena Morrow based on her deceased daughter Virginia. Following 24-hour interval Zero, V inhabits Odi's body, having erased his consciousness at his request, and becomes the mythic majestic-eyed "Synth Who Sleeps". 5 leads Niska to her so as to grant her connectivity to the internet and persuade her to become the synths' leader. Chloe Wicks voices the disembodied Five in the second serial.
- Danny Webb[5] equally Edwin Hobb (series i–2), an artificial intelligence researcher.[7] He is simultaneously concerned near and intrigued by the possibility of conscious synthetics. Hobb is a central player in the quiet authorities investigation to find the four synths deemed a threat.
- William Hurt[5] as George Millican (series 1), a retired artificial intelligence researcher and widower who suffers memory loss and physical disabilities secondary to a stroke. He forms a special bond with his outdated caregiver synth named Odi.[8] He previously worked with Leo'southward father.
Introduced in series 2 [edit]
- Marshall Allman every bit Milo Khoury (serial two),[9] a techno-entrepreneur and owner of Qualia, a synth enquiry corporation, who seeks to harness the sentient synthetics for himself.
- Sonya Cassidy as Hester (series 2),[9] a synth who becomes self-aware from the consciousness program unleashed beyond the world. She is rescued from a synth-laboured facility by Leo and Max, but soon starts to showroom disturbing behaviour.
- Carrie-Anne Moss as Athena Morrow (serial two),[nine] an AI researcher based in San Francisco who has been invited to contrary engineer the consciousness programme. She presents herself as unconcerned about the conscious synthetics, but in reality she has already independently developed her own sentient AI, who she refers to as "V" (for Virginia, her girl), and is attempting to provide V with a new body.
- Thusitha Jayasundera as Neha Patel (series 2),[10] a regime lawyer whose initially hostile stance towards the synth cause will somewhen prove to be more sympathetic.
- Baton Jenkins as Seraph Sam (serial 3; recurring series ii)[11]
Introduced in series 3 [edit]
- Holly Earl every bit Agnes (series 3),[11] a synth in Mia and Max's grouping. She is suspicious of their leadership and sympathizes with the terrorists.
- Ukweli Roach equally Anatole (series 3),[11] a onetime courtesan synth who believes in a college power, namely David Elster, and that synths were always meant to be given consciousness.
- Mark Bonnar as Neil Sommer (series three),[11] a mannerly scientist on a authorities commission with whom Laura develops a strong personal connectedness.
- Dino Fetscher as Stanley (series 3),[eleven] an "orangish-eyed" synth given to a reluctant Laura past the Dryden commission grouping equally her personal synth and protector.
- Phil Dunster equally Tristan (serial three)
Recurring [edit]
- Ellen Thomas[4] as Lindsey Kiwanuka
- Jonathan Aris[4] as Robert
- Stephen Boxer[12] as David Elster, Leo's father and the creator of the witting synths
- Spencer Norways[thirteen] as immature Leo Elster
- Letitia Wright as Renie (series 2), a human who lives as if she were a synth and whom Toby dates[9]
- Bella Dayne as Astrid, a waitress who becomes romantically involved with Niska, helping Niska become more emotionally invested with humans[14]
- Ritu Arya as Wink (series 2–3),[9] a house synth who, like Hester, becomes self-aware from the consciousness program. Flash is rescued by Max, and they detect a new rubber haven in an abased train.
- Sam Palladio equally Ed (series 2–three),[nine] Mia'due south employer, with whom she forms a special bond. He is the owner of a beachside cafe.
- Akie Kotabe as Ji Dae-Sun
- Matthew Marsh as Lord Dryden
Episodes [edit]
Production [edit]
Development [edit]
The series was announced in April 2014 as part of a partnership between Aqueduct iv and Xbox Entertainment Studios.[xv] Still, after Microsoft closed Xbox Entertainment Studios, AMC came aboard as partners to Aqueduct 4.[16] Filming commenced in the autumn of 2014, with the series premiering on fourteen June 2015.[xvi] The series' budget was £12million.[17]
The commissioning of a 2d, eight-episode serial to air in 2016 was announced 31 July 2015.[18] Gemma Chan had previously said, in an interview with Den of Geek, that the first series is "not completely tied upward at the finish" and "there are definitely still areas to be explored for a second series."[19] Similarly, C4's Head of International Drama, Simon Maxwell, told Broadcast's Talking TV podcast that: "Nosotros've got a story that is told over a great many episodes and is very much designed to come up back and return. We'll be following those characters on a really epic journeying."[xx] Filming of the second series began on 11 April 2016, with a premiere date of 30 Oct 2016.[21] [22]
A third series was commissioned in March 2017 and premiered in the Uk on 17 May 2018,[23] [24] and in the Us on v June 2018.[25] By August 2018, discussions were ongoing about a possible fourth series.[26] Aqueduct 4 announced in May 2019 that there would not exist a fourth series.[27]
Filming [edit]
During rehearsals, Gemma Chan and her fellow robot actors were sent to a 'synth school' run past the bear witness's choreographer, Dan O'Neill, in a bid to rid themselves of whatsoever human physical gestures and become convincing synths. "Information technology was virtually stripping dorsum whatever physical tics you naturally incorporate into performance", explains Chan, who adds that it was a "relief to go home and slouch" after a mean solar day on set up.[28]
Katherine Parkinson began filming six weeks after giving birth to her 2nd child; her part in the series was filmed on x dissever days, betwixt 10 days' remainder.[29]
A number of scenes for the second series were filmed in Thanet, Kent. The product squad used Phytology Bay and Due west Bay as filming locations, while shots of the subcontract and fields overlooking the factory were filmed in Dagnall. The scenes were predominantly centred on Anita at piece of work.[xxx]
Circulate and release [edit]
The get-go episode of the series was broadcast in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland on Aqueduct 4 on fourteen June 2015 and premiered in the United states and Canada on AMC on 28 June 2015.[31] It started ambulation in Australia on ABC2, on iii Baronial 2015.[32] It was shown on TV3 in New Zealand from 11 Baronial 2015.[33]
The second series premiered in the United Kingdom on 30 Oct 2016,[22] in Australia the mean solar day afterwards[34] and premiered in the United States on 13 February 2017.[35]
Marketing [edit]
For one week in May 2015, the series was marketed using a false shopfront for Persona Synthetics on London's Regent Street, inviting passers-past to create their own synth using interactive screens,[36] [37] and employing actors who pretended to exist synths around primal London.[38] An accompanying Aqueduct iv trailer for the series in the style of an advertizement for Persona featured "Emerge," a robotic servant described as "your new best friend." In addition, website banner adverts appeared on the eBay UK website leading to an eBay "buy it now" list for a Persona Synthetics Robot.[38]
Dwelling media [edit]
Channel four DVD released the first series on DVD in the UK on 17 Baronial 2015.[39] Spirit Entertainment released the second series on DVD in the UK on 16 January 2017.[40] Spirit Entertainment released the third series on DVD in the Uk on 29 January 2019 [41]
In Region ane, Acorn Media has released both seasons on DVD & Blu-ray. Humans – Season 1: Uncut UK Edition was released on 29 March 2016.[42] Humans – Season two: Uncut United kingdom Edition was released on 31 October 2017.[43]
Reception [edit]
Critical response [edit]
The commencement season of Humans received positive reviews from critics. Review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes gave the season an 88% based on lx reviews, with an boilerplate rating of 7.3/10. The site'south critical consensus reading: "Humans is a mature, high-octane thriller offering emotional intrigue and idea-provoking suspense that should show irresistible to sci-fi fans while remaining attainable enough to lure in genre agnostics."[44] Metacritic gave the season a rating of 73 out of 100, based on 25 critics, indicating "more often than not favorable reviews."[45]
The 2nd season received critical acclaim. On Rotten Tomatoes, the flavor has a score of 94%, based on 17 reviews, with an boilerplate rating of 7.8/ten. The site's critical consensus reads, "Humans continues to quietly distinguish itself in the sci-fi drama category – and prove amend than almost of its flashier AI competition."[46] On Metacritic, the season has a rating of 82 out of 100, based on viii reviews, indicating "universal acclamation."[47]
The third season received disquisitional acclamation. On Rotten Tomatoes, the season has a score of 100%, based on 12 reviews, with an average rating of 6.0/10. The site's disquisitional consensus reads, "Humans gains new sociopolitical dimensions in its third season, mining deeper insight from its sci-fi premise without diluting the authorization of its well-drawn characters."[48]
The prove is Channel 4'southward highest rated drama since the 1992 programme The Camomile Lawn.[17] Information technology has been described as having "universal appeal" and as beingness "one of 2015's dramatic hits."[49] The show has been described as "a scrap dystopian and Black Mirror-esque."[50] A review in the Telegraph praised the prove'south performances but said that the story is "conceptually ... old lid" and "wasn't breaking any new ground philosophically."[51]
In December 2015, Humans was voted Digital Spy's "Top Show of 2015," described as managing "to stand out as something totally different in a Telly landscape awash with cop shows and crime thrillers... And its fearlessness, its creativity and its quality all deserve to be recognised."[52]
Awards and nominations [edit]
Year | Award | Category | Nominee(due south) | Result | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2015 | British Screenwriters' Awards | Best British TV Drama Writing | Joe Barton, Jonathan Brackley, Sam Vincent and Emily Ballou | Won | [53] |
Majestic Television Society: Arts and crafts and Pattern Awards | Design Titles | Momoco | Won | [54] | |
Trails & Packaging | 4Creative | Nominated | [54] | ||
2016 | BAFTA | Audition Award | Humans | Nominated | [55] |
Television: Drama Series | Humans | Nominated | [56] | ||
Idiot box Craft: Digital Creativity | Development Team | Won | [57] | ||
Idiot box Arts and crafts: Editing – Fiction | Daniel Greenway | Nominated | [57] | ||
Broadcast Awards | Best Drama Series or Serial | Humans | Nominated | [58] | |
Broadcasting Press Guild Awards | All-time Actress | Gemma Chan | Nominated | [59] | |
Best Drama Series | Humans | Nominated | [59] | ||
Breakthrough Accolade | Gemma Chan | Nominated | [59] | ||
National Television Awards | New Drama | Humans | Nominated | [lx] | |
Royal Television Gild: Plan Awards | Best Drama Series | Humans | Nominated | [61] | |
Satellite Awards | Best Genre Series | Humans | Nominated | [62] | |
South Bank Sky Arts Awards | Best Television Drama | Humans | Nominated | [63] | |
Televisual Bulldog Awards | All-time Drama Series | Humans | Won | [64] |
Chinese adaptation [edit]
On 25 July 2018, it was announced Roland Moore would be head writer on a Chinese version of Humans in Mandarin,[65] produced by Endemol Smoothen China and Croton Media.[66] The series [67] began ambulation on Chinese broadcaster Tencent on 19 February 2021.
Come across too [edit]
- Better than Us
- List of fictional robots and androids
References [edit]
- ^ "Aqueduct four sci-fi Humans has been cancelled". Radio Times . Retrieved 12 March 2021.
- ^ "AMC'due south 'Humans' Is Closer To Reality Than Y'all Think". Popular Science . Retrieved xxx Nov 2015.
- ^ "Review: AMC's 'Humans' explores the laws of robotics yet again". Uproxx. 25 June 2015. Retrieved 3 June 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Humans – Series 1 Episode one". Radio Times . Retrieved viii June 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Hegarty, Tasha (x January 2015). "Humans: Channel 4 and AMC's sci-fi drama releases its beginning image". Digital Spy.
- ^ a b c "Humans: New AMC Idiot box Show to Debut". Tv set Series Finale. xiv May 2015. Retrieved fourteen May 2015.
- ^ "HUMANS – Professor Edwin Hobb – AMC". AMC. Archived from the original on 6 November 2018. Retrieved xvi June 2015.
- ^ "HUMANS – Dr. George Millican – AMC". AMC. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 16 June 2015.
- ^ a b c d due east f "Product Begins on Humans Season 2". ComingSoon.internet. 21 April 2016.
- ^ "Humans : Series 2 - Episode 2 : EPISODE GUIDE". Retrieved 11 November 2020.
- ^ a b c d e "Humans Series 3 Episode one". Retrieved half-dozen May 2018.
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- ^ "Humans – Series one Episode 8". Radio Times . Retrieved 23 July 2015.
- ^ "Humans Series Iii Press Pack – Channel 4 – Info – Press". www.channel4.com . Retrieved xvi May 2018.
- ^ Fullerton, Huw (xv October 2014). "William Hurt and Colin Morgan to star in new sci-fi drama series". Radio Times. Archived from the original on 10 July 2015. Retrieved 13 October 2014.
- ^ a b Finbow, Katy (22 September 2014). "Channel 4 teams upwards with AMC for sci-fi series Humans". Digital Spy . Retrieved 11 January 2015.
- ^ a b Plunkett, John (22 June 2015). "Humans becomes Aqueduct 4'southward biggest drama hit in xx years". The Guardian . Retrieved 23 June 2015.
- ^ Barraclough, Leo (31 July 2015). "AMC, Channel four Renew Sci-Fi Drama 'Humans' for Season 2". Variety . Retrieved 31 July 2015.
- ^ Meller, Louisa (12 June 2015). "Humans: Colin Morgan and Gemma Chan interview". Den of Geek . Retrieved 23 June 2015.
- ^ Kanter, Jane (10 July 2015). "C4 in talks over second run of Humans". Broadcast . Retrieved 11 July 2015.
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- ^ a b "Gemma Chan reveals Humans series 2 air date – and information technology's non far off". Digital Spy. 6 October 2016. Retrieved 6 October 2016.
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- ^ Denham, Jess (14 June 2015). "Humans: Everything we know about Channel 4'southward new series so far from the cast to that creepy Persona Synthetics advert". The Independent . Retrieved 23 June 2015.
- ^ Wilson, Benji (xx June 2015). "There's something slightly robotic most Humans". The Telegraph . Retrieved 23 June 2015.
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- ^ 你好安怡
External links [edit]
- Aqueduct 4 official website
- AMC official website
- Humans at IMDb
- AMC official website
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Humans_(TV_series)
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