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MR. ROBOT’S Sam Esmail On His Dark and Timely Creation

BY Abbey White

Published 9 years ago

MR. ROBOT'S Sam Esmail On His Dark and Timely Creation

Mr. Robot’s overnight success was surprising to most, but perhaps less so to the series creator Sam Esmail.

Esmail had been working on the pilot for the hacker drama for several years before it managed to get picked up -- on the day the Sony hack was announced no less.

From that point on, his breakout hit climbed to the top of viewers' and critics' must-watch charts and continued to be timely in a way no other series on television has been to date. This type of success is in large part  due to Esmail's uncanny ability to double down on what it means to write a stylish, smart and relatable story.

His appearance this past weekend at New York Comic Con, along with the entire Mr. Robot cast, revealed even more so that recognizing what a good story is and having a little bit of timing can make for the most perfect of television storms.

Before Esmail sat with his cast on the Friday panel at Hammerstein Ballroom, ScreenSpy had the chance to chat with the show creator, writer and director about how he constructed the dark and sharp world of Mr. Robot. 

Here are five things we learned from that discussion.

The Moral of the Story

While it’s easy when watching a show to pick out what might be considered “the morals of the story,” it’s another thing altogether to ask a showrunner what they want viewers to take away from their characters and their narrative. For Sam Esmail and Mr. Robot, the moral is quite American, which some may interpret as odd considering how the cultural landscape is painted so darkly within Esmial’s story. So what is the moral takeaway of Mr. Robot? Heroism, the revolutionary spirit and helping make our world a better place.

“One of the things that drives Elliot is that he wants to be a hero,” Esmail said. “One of the things he says to [Tyrell] when [he asks] ‘Why are you doing all of this?’ he says ‘I wanted to save the world.’ I think there’s something really profound about that. Maybe in all of us there’s this revolutionary spirit in all of us that we want to not just do something for ourselves, but society. Especially when we feel like its not going in the right direction. If anything the moral of this story is just tapping into that, finding that in ourselves.”

 

 

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