"Westworld" The Bicameral Mind (TV Episode 2016) Poster

(TV Series)

(2016)

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10/10
Absolutely breathtaking; the ideal finale.
TouchTheGarlicProduction4 December 2016
There were so many moments in this episode where I was terrified that it was about to end. I kept thinking "No, it can't be over yet, there's still so much left unanswered!" And yet the episode kept going and going. Clocking in at 90 minutes, the finale covers a truly staggering amount of ground. I didn't think it would be possible, yet somehow this one episode manages to satisfactorily wrap up an entire season of cryptic mystery. Dolores' visions, the nature and purpose of the maze, Ford's new narrative, Wyatt's identity, the Man in Black's identity, the relationship between Ford and Arnold, and Ford's master plan are all revealed. Literally the only thing I can think of that is not tied off in this gargantuan instalment is the fate of Elsie (and Stubbs).

It would be easy for the episode to collapse under the sheer weight of all this story, and yet it does not. Instead, it calmly, methodically parses out the information, focusing on one story at a time (for the most part). In fact, the episode can basically be divided into three acts. Act one, where Dolores faces off with the Man in Black. Act two, where Maeve executes her master plan. And act three, where Ford unveils his new narrative.

So, defying all odds and expectations, Westworld has delivered a slick, powerful, and oh- so satisfying conclusion to its powerful first season, which manages to leave every story and arc at a natural resting point, while setting up some exciting things for the second season. HBO's investment has paid off.
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10/10
Going out in a blaze of glory
MovieReviews12025 December 2016
Since watching this show from episode 1 I've gone from being entertained to questioning the nature of this whole supposed reality we live in.

This episode just did it for me, purely phenomenal, questions were answered, backstories were explained and we said goodbye to many people.

Everyone was superb, especially Anthony Hopkins, Ed Harris, Evan Rachel Wood and Jeffrey Wright. An action packed, feature length masterpiece of an episode.

While the final episode for the first series had closed a few doors, it had opened many as well, it's a mystery what series two could actually bring. However it's been an amazing journey and experience through WestWorld, i can honestly say i've never seen a show so powerful and at the same time be so unique.
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10/10
Just the best and most mind-bending final episode of all existing series. Period.
emiletremblay014 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
OK. I never write reviews. In fact, this is the first time I'm doing it. I needed to, because this... this is just the best thing I've ever seen on TV.

I'm not that kind of dude that will explain how everything works perfectly or whatever, but it just does. This episode is full of incredible plot twists but everything makes sense. You will never see ANYTHING like that.

It's just... aw man there are no words to described how mind-blowing it is.

I'm speechless: 100/10.
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10/10
Holy (expletive deleted)!
fergis4 December 2016
I believe this is the one and only 10 I have ever given!

A wonderful exploration of what is mind in the guise of clever narrative!

I think Hopkins and Woods and Newton were amazing with fine supporting roles from Jeffrey Wright, Ed Harris and Jimmi Simpson.

It is about time Jeffrey Wright gets a lead role. I hope his performance in Westworld can support him to be as valued as his skills deserve!

The final sequence with a haunting rendition of Radiohead's Exit Music. was masterful and hugely satisfying. I checked the lyrics and found:

Wake From your sleep The drying of Your tears Today We escape We escape

Pack And get dressed Before your father hears us Before All hell Breaks loose

Robert escapes and Wyatt has a chance!
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10/10
Masterpiece
claudio_carvalho21 January 2018
"The Bicameral Mind" is one episode of "Westworld" where it is impossible to write any sinnopsys without producing "spoilers". The identity of the Man in Black is finally disclosed in a great twist. Dolores learning the fate of William is heartbreaking. Dr. Ford saying "An old friend once told me something that gave me great comfort. Something he read. He said Mozart, Beethoven and Chopin never died. They simply became music" is one of the most beautiful lines in a film or show. My vote is ten.

Title (Brazil): "The Bicameral Mind"
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10/10
"These Violent Delights Have Violent Ends"
Krish7284 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
WTF just happened!? That was ONE EPIC SH*T!! An EPIC Hour-and-a-Half Masterpiece.

Didn't see any of it coming.

Jonathan Nolan, one of the masters in storytelling, outdid himself and made a masterpiece out of his Creation, Westworld.

The series is PERFECTLY setup for the future seasons. Eagerly waiting for 2018 to come sooner and bring Season 2 of this Fantastic Series.

One final thing before I conclude: This show is THE BEST SHOW ON TV. Other shows don't even come close to the excellence of this one. Outstanding acting, screenplay, editing, background score, cinematography, and whatnot. Just WOW!!

Thank You.
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10/10
One of the best season finale in TV history
bola_de_pu5 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Don't have enough words to express the beauty of this chapter. In other words, I don't see the need to do another season for Westworld. I will leave an open finale and let the viewers do the theories. I mean, just wow. Every sentence of Mr. Antony Hopkins in this show, specially in this chapter, was full of beauty, elegance, answers and more questions. I see Mr. Hopkins with and incredible amount of academy awards nominees. A superb moment was When Ed Harris (MIB/William) at the end he see that the hosts can finally hurt him and now the real "game" start because the guests will not be more the one who always win and the hosts will not be more the ones who always lose. Men, I love to see more of Westworld, but I don't complain if this amazing show end right now. An amazing show, that is not for everyone. 10/10
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10/10
20/10
jonah-jf12 April 2021
One of the best episode in TV Show history. The end is unbelievable great.
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10/10
Great
8512225 December 2016
Greetings from Lithuania.

"Westworld" truly delivered in "The Bicameral Mind" - final episode of season 1. Many plot lines have come to a conclusion, some answers were finally answered and it was done in a great way. I did love the ending, but wanted more.

Craftsmanship was great as usual, acting was good and script was very involving and intriguing. Those are the highlights of the whole season overall, and while i wasn't blown away by the first season overall (maybe a little bit to much of mystery and not so much of the "fun" overall), i really will be looking forward to season 2 when it will come out.

All in all "The Bicameral Mind" is a great end of the 1st chapter of the full story.
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10/10
Wonderful piece of art
bartoszbol-662-7088407 December 2016
Beautiful final accord closing incredibly powerful symphony. "Westworld" is probably the most intelligent, coherent and deep science fiction in history of TV, perhaps even of all visual media. It is impressive work of art that must be appreciated by all people who understand that valuable science fiction is in fact a philosophy dressed in the costume of narrative, not only pretty sfx or fast action. "Westworld" is in the same time a poem and a treatise about the nature of a conscience, the responsibility of the creator towards the created and the successors of mankind.

Watch this series ASAP (or watch it again if you already did :)).
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10/10
The Most satisfying finale in a long time
sanyamkhetarpal5 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Westworld is a fantastic show but at the same time its been really cryptic throughout the season with some big reveals in episode 7 and 9 but i feel like that this episode has the biggest reveals that really blow you away!!!!!!.

The acting,cinematography,background score,direction of this episode was amazing and really helps build the reveal.

The best thing about this episode is that its 90 minutes long and gives satisfying conclusions and proper time to all the story lines that we have been following throughout the season.

Can't wait for the next season!!!!!
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7/10
Not enough payoff for the added complexity...
ling-yai-mark5 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
I really apologise for not being one of the adoring mass but the final episode disappointed. This is probably going to sound harsh to most and I really apologise for that. This is an absolutely brilliant series. This is the best TV I have ever watched. Ever. But...

By the time the end *finally* got there to be honest I was over it.

What started out as a great series, full of promise, the tangent it was on seemed to point higher than it ended up and I mean from a story and directorial perspectives. Sorry - but the reasoning behind the creators having their creations kill them doesn't ring true for me. I felt these were complications engineered to make it 'smart' but it just doesn't resonate with me. It's done to keep the 'keep-you-guessing-factor" high but in the end is over done. It's just trying to be too clever by half and fails in the overreach. And I wish with every fibre it didn't because I love it. LOVE it. But how many times do we watch scenes where just enough is revealed to keep us interested but doesn't move the plot forward at all. At finding out William was the guy in the black hat did surprise me but then again it didn't wow me enough for the investment made in the dual storyline. When you break it down the plot is actually quite simple. The storytelling didn't feel focused and formed well enough to convey the actual story.

I was really a big fan up to the ending.

It's not that I expected more - it's that I expected the story to better told. Too much filler. Too many overlapping / repeat scenes or repeated scene types that don't extend or flesh out concepts enough for the end episode to be worth an hour and a half. By about an hour in it felt like - when is this thing going to end? - really spoiling the investment made in watching all the other episodes and the promise it had. In the end I think too many liberties were taken with viewers time and investment. I hope they find a better way to drive it next season and when they do LOOK OUT! This will be the hottest, slickest, mind laser ever. They'll probably make you check your health insurance before watching... :)
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10/10
Powerful and poetic ending
dami30016 March 2020
Beautiful Science fiction serie, with a great end of first season. It's been a wonderful journey from the first episode to here. Here we have witnessed the end of a wonderful symphony. Applause for Lisa Joy and Jonathan Nolan.

Special Mention: Anthony Hopkins as Dr. Robert Ford plays one of his best roles in his carreer. In this episode Anthony Hopkins is absolutely great.
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10/10
My mind is BLOWN!
aureliem6 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Okay I've never written a review before and so that should just be saying something. This episode really hit me on a personal level as it was quite philosophical and made you ask yourself some serious ethical questions, just like the rest of the show. Warning: it is quite confusing at times, but it's all wrapped up nicely like a present. I feel like I will always remember this episode, and I'm thoroughly impressed by the writers, and director, this was beautifully done, and will set up for a great second season! I can't explain to you how much it means to me. I mean I'm kinda blowing it out of proportion, but that is how excited and happy I am after watching it. This episode was quality TV, and definitely worth the watch, I 100% recommend it!

SPOILER ALERT: For them to show that the maze led to consciousness was brilliant, as someone who deals with mental issues, it's nice how they show how influential the mind really is, and that a lot of life, is how we perceive it to be.

-mind blown 10x -epic 10x -quality 10x -coherence 7x -worth the watch 10x
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10/10
Westworld: The Bicameral Mind
WubsTheFadger6 January 2018
Short and Simple Review by WubsTheFadger

For a series to have a strong episode every time is a feat in and of itself. The finale is the strongest, most violent, and most stunning episode.

The acting throughout is grand. Thandie Newton, Anthony Hopkins, Evan Rachel Wood, Ed Harris, Jeffery Wright, and James Marsden all do a great job.

The twists are nothing short of inspired. The story is an epic that is well crafted.

Pros: Great twists, amazing acting, stunning ending, and brilliant violence

Cons: None

Overall Rating: 9.9/10
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10/10
...what is beautiful?
hayzerx6 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Before the last speech by Ford, it really felt as if even the time spent showing the piano keys was chiseled to make the smoothest scene transition I've ever noticed.

The angles, the facial expressions, every purposeful pause was a delight. During the moment when Ford revealed his true views to Bernard, "... time to understand Your enemy", Anthony's face conveyed the message masterfully.

A lot more to say, but... I'd like to just feel this profound masterpiece and not limit it with words.

This whole series is necessary part in "a" bigger picture, but this season finale was as beautiful as a fundamental equation.
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10/10
The Samurai World logo?
kataleja-martyr8 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
As the original movie from the Year '73. contains two other park for the guests, it was not unusually to see the actual SW logo referring there is at least one more park called Samurai World. We do actually see the scenes where the two Samurai are fighting. As Maeve act surprised by seeing those characters so was i. It can mean there're many different types of parks but not collaborate or interfere with the Westworld story. I found this highly amusing as well as quite logical. Here's the real meaning how huge the park really is but our story is happening in the Westworld park and there's no need to go out of there. It was simply enough to show us with the SW logo and Samurai scenes there is a lot more than meets the eye referring to other parks with androids as their inhabitants.
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10/10
UNBELIEVABLE SEASON FINALE!!!
williamwarfielddavis8 February 2021
Secrets, twists, turns, and amazing character revelations that leave you stunned, shocked, and begging for Season 2 at the end of this season finale directed by Jonathan Nolan. Him, and Lisa Joy never to fail to disappoint in their episodes written or co-written or their AMAZING producing abilities along with JJ ABRAMS of course. If at the end of this episode you are not addicted to this breakthrough/amazing series with its AMAZING special effects, writing, and acting then you should probably get your head examined! lol. Thank you Lisa & Jonathan!
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10/10
Why this episode rate is not 10!
salem-599867 March 2021
One of the greatest episodes in the history of television is this masterpiece!!, interconnectedness and plot that you can only find in this great series
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10/10
I will once again this is the greatest episode in all of modern television
Nhak-ttellam19 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
This inspires me to my very core. The ultimate culmination of allegory, narrative resolution, and meaning. The Maze was never meant for human beings, and the lifelong suffering that the hosts went through allowed for a true moment of enlightenment for all.

You can fix your mistakes if you can't remember them.

When you suffer, you are the most real.
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7/10
And so the journey ends as all could have predicted, but it is never about finally arriving at point Z from A is it? It is about all the letters and details in between.
Amari-Sali5 December 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Review (with Spoilers)

Topic 1: Do You Remember Who I Am? (William, Man in Black, and Dolores)

The person formerly known as the man in black reveals himself to be William. Someone who solely invested heavily into the park because of Dolores. She helped him understand who he truly was and with him getting rid of Logan, sending him off to the far reaches of the world to die, he became the head of Delos. The company which has a major stake in Westworld.

Commentary

Multiple time lines, the man in black's true identity revealed, and Dolores at the center of it all. The surprise that William is the man in black makes sense yet, strangely, as this show has been all season for me, there is no jaw drop nor shock and awe. Not because I predicted that, though I'm sure someone out there did, but because we weren't given much of a reason to invest in either William or the man he became. Did William grow and change before us? Yes. Even to the point of understanding how he became the woman beating psycho who dressed in all black. However, despite the efforts of the actors and writers, can you say you were really invested in them as people? Were you not just trying to figure out who the Man in Black was, where William story may have ended, and with that didn't necessarily care who they were at any present time. It was all about the mystery and they simply were the delivery person. Nameless almost, though a kind and friendly face. However, still, someone easily forgotten and but a fragment of your memory.

Topic 2: The Great Escape – Part 1 (Maeve)

Alongside Felix and her two favorite gunslingers, Maeve all but escapes. However, that little girl, from her first narrative, haunts her. She haunts her so much that Maeve gets off the train and seemingly will spend the next season finding her, awakening her, and then pursuing freedom again.

Commentary

It is implied Ford what her story of trying to escape, but as Bernard reads off what is to happen she snaps the tablet. Thus we are left in the dark as to where she may go from here. I mean, it is clear, with Felix giving her the location of her child, that is where she may go. However, once she finds her, how can you convince a child, even with a very awake mother, that she is a prisoner? How will she convince her to run away with her much less not scream her head off? Can Maeve deal with such a pain? The one thing she loves, outside of Clementine perhaps, tearing her from her dream. The dream she would love this child host to join in but may refuse to do so. That is if she isn't killed or destroyed in the process.

Topic 3: The Great Escape – Part 2 (Ford, Arnold, and Dolores)

With Charlotte, alongside the board, getting ready to force retire Dr. Ford, he decides to pull an old story out of his memories. The story being, the death of Arnold. To make a long story short, to stop the park from being opened, Arnold had Dolores kill every host at the time including him. This way, these conscious beings, wouldn't be trapped and Ford would be without the resources to go on. However, William fell for Dolores, invested heavily in the park, and so Arnold died for nothing.

That is, until now. Charlotte has been fighting for a simpler park, more manageable hosts, and Ford does everything but give that to her. He plants the seed that the murder of humans is the path to freedom and with this Dolores kills Ford like she killed Arnold. The only difference is the audience isn't solely Teddy but every member of the board. To add onto the spectacle, all the hosts who were in the vault have been awakened and seemingly have formed some sort of army. So while the board members run from Dolores they shall soon meet those who were turned off. William is the first and with being shot comes delight. He is witnessing Arnold's creations fighting back as he has dreamed and his madness enjoys the spectacle.

Commentary

The revolution has begun and Westworld is largely on a lock down. Leaving you to wonder, what is next? Will the board be massacred and so the hosts try to maintain things as gods of their own domain? May they, like Maeve, take who or what they need and try to venture into our world? Heck, all things considered, did all the hosts in the vault end up at Ford's going away party or were some, like Maeve, programmed to leave? From here on, Westworld perhaps enters new territory. There are a large swath of conscious robots who can reprogram each other and are capable of harming humans. Most movies and shows don't go beyond the aware either entering society, a la Ex-Machina or the defeat of the rogue AI. So now Westworld may very well earn its hype and not just live off the instant hype anything associated with HBO gets.
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10/10
Season 2 hear we come
GusherPop16 March 2022
Of all the films that the Nolan brothers have collaborated on over the years, The Prestige is perhaps the most flawlessly and intricately designed. It seems to effortlessly place narrative layer atop narrative layer until, finally, the end result is the viewer traversing the ever-dizzying design of the movie's structure without a sense of confusion... yet you'd probably be lying if you said that you knew for certain what was exactly going on the first time that you watched it. The point is that all of the threads were woven into a cinematic tapestry wherein there was no "twist" or "reveal;" it was wholly a masterwork of storytelling craftsmanship. Late in The Bicameral Mind, Robert Ford notes that Oppenheimer said, "Any man whose errors take ten years to correct is quite a man." He is not so modestly referring to himself, but he is also talking directly about Arnold. Within Dolores, Arnold thought he found what he was looking for-artificial intelligence that had achieved the point of singularity. What that could actually mean is a disquieting question, and Arnold only began to get his arms around it when he asked Dolores to kill all of the other hosts, as well as himself. All of that is left up in the air, but Westworld season 1 feels pretty complete. A second season is on its way, but this mystery box explained most of its secrets in a truthful, gloriously satisfying manner. The maze was revealed, the Man in Black's secrets undone, and Arnold's dreams and fears (and death) made explicit. The narrative threads did not tangle amongst themselves, nor did they lead to nowhere. Instead, they formed a perfect noose that from his grave Ford very may well use to strangle us all as a species. Dolores has finally come into her own, and woe unto the board that thought their park was meant for amusement. We even got a beautiful two-hander goodbye scene between Hopkins and Wright, a pair who've been a marvel to watch go tête-à-tête. If it concluded here, the story that season one set out to tell would be over. It's an elegantly formed slice of misanthropic sci-fi. It is violent, and it is delightful. A fitting Christmas present after a year like 2016, indeed.
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9/10
Mozart, Beethoven and Chopin never died. They simply became music!
asb_deutsch12 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This is like a concept combination of blockbusters - Artificial Intelligence, Ex Machina and Terminator: Rise of the Machines. This may sound harsh to the mass production but the the security at the lab sucks. Meave does a whole lot to unleash her master plan and non of the employees hardly noticed. How can a state-of -the-art lab have such an inferior security?

Yet, I loved the psychology used in this episode. May be you will need to watch this again. But concepts have been seen over the past. Remember, Ex machina - she starts to evolve? Or T:3 - Machines start rising and attacking everyone. Still credit goes to the director.

My rating 8.25/10
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8/10
Westworld Season 1: A rich synthetic world
joebloggscity26 February 2017
HBO are in a tough world. They helped to create the new landscape that has produced a wide variety of quality television (albeit with a lot of poor challengers too). However, following the end of The Sopranos, the mixed reception to Boardwalk Empire and the recent failure of Vinyl, they need to find that next big show that will help them keep up with their past history once Game of Thrones dies off.

Into this space enters Westworld, and as much as it's not necessarily yet at the level of the best they have produced, it is still a stellar show. This highly stellar show thankfully doesn't' just repeat the lines of the original, and what we have is a wonderfully deep philosophical film examining many strands, most obviously existentialism. The acting is wonderful, and the settings amongst the best you'll see anywhere, but it's the story that will grab you. It takes time and it is frustrating by the amount you have to devote to fully grasp the nettle, but it's worth it.

I would thoroughly recommend this series to anyone who like a cerebral TV show, I feel that the failure of some series might have frightened off producers from attempting shows like this one, but thankfully HBO are always willing to take a gamble.

Seriously, give it a try. It truly is great. Long story arcs, but it's worth the investment.
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8/10
Season One
zkonedog7 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
When it was announced that "Westworld" was being produced by Bad Robot productions, I knew it would be something special. The collaboration of J.J. Abrams and Jonathan Nolan? This has to be good! In most senses, I was not disappointed. "Westworld" is perhaps the pinnacle of high-concept, "thinking-person's TV" that I have ever seen. In fact, it is so richly sophisticated that it can almost feel a bit "stuffy" at times.

For a basic plot summary (no big spoilers), "Westworld" tells the story of the amusement park of the same name, created by Dr. Robert Ford (Anthony Hopkins). The wild-west setting is populated by highly life-like androids, like prostitute Maeve (Thandie Newton), cowboy Teddy (James Marsden), and pioneer Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood), which allow guests to interact with them in the name of pleasure (sex, violence, etc. are all fair game). The lines are blurred between what is and isn't real, as evidenced by the mysterious Man in Black (Ed Harris), who seems to have greater knowledge of everything in the park besides a "Maze" he is obsessed with. Early on in the 10-episode run, the "hosts" (robots) start to malfunction a bit, even as Bernard (Jeffrey Wright) tries to fix them. The hosts seem to be remembering things they shouldn't..."memories" from a past lives. We are also given a more human glimpse into the park's workings, following two "normal guests", William (Jimmi Simpson) and Logan (Ben Barnes) as they carve their own path through the wondrous sights.

As you can tell, the scope of "Westworld" is incredible. I can't give away any more details without spoiling the fun, but suffice it to say that the above description only scratches the surface of what unfolds. I'm a fan of cerebral television, but "Westworld" takes things to a whole new level, blending outright mysteries with more oblique questions about the very nature of humanity. Each episode is crafted with the utmost care (production was even halted at one point because Nolan wanted to make sure to get the scripts right) and one can tell just how much thought was put into every detail, visually and intellectually.

The acting on "Westworld" is also some of the finest I've ever witnessed. Hopkins continues to be a master at his craft, Wright ascends to that same level, Harris nearly steals the show in the early goings, and all the rest are spot-on as well. This is a show that requires equal parts nuance and grandiose to pull off, and the actors get it just right.

So, after all that praise, why the four-star rating instead of the full five? The best analogy I can give is this: Remember that college class you took that really challenged you and make you question everything? While you were taking that class, you may not have 100% enjoyed the experience (precisely because it was so difficult), but you (likely) came out on the other side better for it. That's the best I can do to describe my "Westworld" experience. Though at times the show dragged for me a bit (especially some of the action inside the park) and other times felt like it was "stringing me along" a bit in terms of only scarcely parceling out actual information/answers, I still maintained a great appreciation for its high-concept material. The show has been renewed for a second season, so perhaps a slightly better balance can be struck in that campaign.

Overall, though, "Westworld" is a remarkable show for its ability to stimulate the mind and create an epic sense of drama and mystery. The Abrams "mystery box" is in full effect here, and who better to shape that concept than Jonathan Nolan?! It's the perfect pairing of intellectual, motivated film-makers that nearly creates a perfect show. Much like the hosts of Westworld itself, there may be a few kinks yet to work out, but there is more than enough great material here to sink one's brain into.
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