Inside Black Mirror

Charlie Brooker

Book - 2018

"The first official companion to the Emmy-winning Netflix cult-hit sci-fi television series that's fascinated millions of fans worldwide, with stunning visuals and never before seen behind-the-scenes content. What becomes of humanity when it's fed into the jaws of a hungry new digital machine? Discover the world of Black Mirror in this immersive, illustrated, oral history. This first official book logs the entire Black Mirror journey, from its origins in creator Charlie Brooker's mind to its current status as one of the biggest cult TV shows to emerge from the UK. Alongside a collection of astonishing behind-the-scenes imagery and ephemera, Brooker and producer Annabel Jones will detail the creative genesis, inspiration,... and thought process behind each film for the first time, while key actors, directors and other creative talents relive their own involvement"--

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Subjects
Published
New York : Crown Archetype [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Charlie Brooker (author)
Other Authors
Annabel Jones (author), Jason Arnopp
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
"Originally published in hardcover in Great Britain by Ebury Press in 2018"--Title page verso.
Physical Description
319 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 314-316) and index.
ISBN
9781984823489
  • Series 1. The national anthem
  • Fifteen million merits
  • The entire history of you
  • Series 2. Be right back
  • White bear
  • The Waldo moment
  • The Christmas special
  • White Christmas
  • Series 3. Nosedive
  • Playtest
  • Shut up and dance
  • San Junipero
  • Men against fire
  • Hated in the nation
  • Series 4. USS Callister
  • Arkangel
  • Crocodile
  • Hang the DJ
  • Metalhead
  • Black museum
  • The future of Black Mirror.

Charlie Brooker: So, how did Annabel and I meet? This is like the scene in When Harry Met Sally , when they interview those couples. Annabel Jones: Yes. Old people who wish they'd never met. Charlie Brooker: My first memory of Annabel is her mocking me. I was in the [TV production Company] Endemol building on Bedford Square in London, playing the video game Counter-Strike with three other comedy writers, when Annabel came up and took the piss out of us all, for being grown men pretending to be counter-terrorists. Annabel Jones: At Endemol, my job was to look after its smaller companies, including the comedy label Zeppotron. Sharing a love for counter-terrorism, we all got on and I became managing director. We were making it all up as we went along of course, and then Charlie and I started working together on the Wipe shows that he presented for the BBC. Charlie Brooker: While working on Channel 4's The 11 O'Clock Show , I met Shane Allen, who would eventually commission Black Mirror. Shane Allen (then Channel 4 Head of Comedy): Charlie was one of The 11 O'Clock Show's topical writers and I was a producer on the topical footage team, so we'd cross paths. He was chosen for his work on the website TV Go Home which enjoyed an early following. I got to know Annabel around this time as part of the same social group. Charlie and I worked together on Chris Morris's 2001 Brass Eye special again after that and kept crossing paths. I got the job as Channel 4's comedy commissioner in 2004. Charlie Brooker: I wrote a 2005 Channel 4 sitcom called Nathan Barley with Chris Morris, which had a really long gestation period. It would also inspire a Black Mirror episode, but we'll cover that later... Charlie and Annabel's transition from comedy to drama began with 2008's Dead Set , which saw a fictional Big Brother house invaded by zombies. Charlie Brooker: Conceptually, Dead Set sounded like a comedy, with its preposterous conceit. But despite that, we were keen to impress on people that we were going to play it straight. Annabel Jones: We wanted it to be an uncompromising and credible TV horror show . Big Brother was Endemol's biggest show and, being part of Endemol, we hoped we could make Dead Set in an authentic way, with access to the presenter Davina McCall, the Big Brother house, the branding... Shane Allen: In about 2006, Charlie and Annabel had pitched Dead Set to Channel 4 drama, who ultimately passed. So Charlie and Annabel brought it to my attention with a first episode script and series treatment. It was instantly gripping: the core concept was brilliantly irreverent in taking this huge Channel 4 pop culture brand and rooting a genre thriller at the heart of it. Beyond that, the writing was pin-sharp in how it set up the world, nailed the characters and rattled through a page-turning narrative. I connected with it immediately and was beguiled with the notion of it as a smart contemporary satire on reality TV, as well as a zombie thriller in its own right. Charlie and Annabel had such a clear vision and went to great pains to explain that it wasn't a comedy and it wouldn't be funny. It had to work as a piece of credible and rooted real-life drama and they set me homework to get a sense of tone. I had to watch the 2004 Dawn of the Dead remake, read Cormac McCarthy's novel The Road and see [photographer] Gregory Crewdson's profound stills. To this day The Road remains the most affecting and haunting book I've read-thanks for f***ing up my world view so fundamentally. Dead Set became a piece of event television, stripped across a week on Channel 4's younger-skewing offshoot E4. Annabel Jones: Shane said, "Okay, what next?" because it had gone down really well and was BAFTA-nominated. It was a real surprise hit for Channel 4. Charlie Brooker: I'd been writing TV criticism for quite a while, and was still doing it then. So I'd see lots of shows that maybe otherwise I wouldn't have watched, such as the Battlestar Galactica reboot. But that show was actually really good and I wondered why we weren't doing things like that here in Britain. I miss all those silly US shows like Manimal, Automan and Knight Rider. At the time, everything on British TV was a detective drama or a costume drama, and it felt like there wasn't much in between. But Doctor Who was huge, having come back and been an enormous hit, so you knew there was an appetite for something else. Annabel Jones : Charlie wanted to do an anthology show. He was familiar with T he Twilight Zone and I was familiar with Tales of the Unexpected, and that all felt something that was really missing in the TV landscape at the time. There were no ideas-driven single dramas. Charlie Brooker: I didn't like the idea of doing something where it's the same thing all the time, partly because I find it hard to work out how that would stay interesting over weeks and weeks and weeks. I also don't tend to have ideas that last beyond an hour. Shane Allen: Enter Charlie and Annabel's Black Mirror pitch, about doing modern parable stories around the theme of social media, technology and AI advances. By this point I'd been made head of comedy, so was drunk on ego and power. Annabel Jones: We pitched Black Mirror as the fears of the day. Things that hadn't been dramatised. Things that people didn't quite realise were unsettling them. Excerpted from Inside Black Mirror by Charlie Brooker, Annabel Jones, Jason Arnopp All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.