"Black Mirror" Crocodile (TV Episode 2017) Poster

(TV Series)

(2017)

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8/10
Have you ever asked yourself what's the worst thing you'd be capable of doing?
pronto196616 April 2018
One of the darkest black mirror episodes I've seen, this one explores the spiralling depths someone is capable of in order to protect a secret and a way of life.

It left me with a very dark, uncomfortable feeling at the end, but well worth the watch.
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7/10
Crocodile gives us a disturbing look into the mind of a desperate woman; with a Black Mirror technological twist
DissidentRebel29 December 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Crocodile is an episode sure to illicit a reaction of utter disgust - in the same vain as season 2's White Bear, and season 3's Shut Up and Dance. This is the kind of twist I expect from the mind of Charlie Brooker and here he does not fail in making me feel totally drained come the end of this episode. However, my issues with this episode are many unfortunately.

Crocodile follows Mia Nolan. A woman who, one night after leaving a club with her boyfriend, gets involved in a hit and run on a stretch of lonely highway. Terrified, the two decide to dispose of the body and forget the event ever happened. Fifteen years later, Mia is a successful architect with a husband and son. However, her past comes back to haunt her during a trip away when her ex-boyfriend, Rob meets her in at a hotel; consumed by guilt he's desperate to confess. After a violent encounter, Mia's life is further thrown into a tail-spin with the witnessing of a hit and run on the street, which leads investigator Shazia on her trail.

Where do I start with this one? It's definitely one of the most sickening episodes of Black Mirror. What contributes to this is the character of Mia; she's arguably one of the dislikable characters Black Mirror has had as its lead. We know that Mia is a heinous person, however we feel her anxiety as she scrambles to cover her tracks. For a moment, I asked the question: are we meant to hate her? She's a mother desperate to keep her family in-tact. However, any sympathy I had for Mia is disposed of during the final act of Crocodile, as the crime - or rather crimes - she commits are so monstrous - with that final revelation nothing short of depressing. However, what lessened the effect was the sheer implausibility of elements of the ending - you know what I'm talking about if you've watched the episode.

Despite a stellar performance from Andrea Riseborough and some excellent Icelandic cinematography, the episodes story is its detriment. There's nothing particularly special about it and, at this stage in Black Mirror's run, to me it felt dark for darkness sake - along with a number of inconsistencies and questionable character decisions. What started well in the opening flashback of this episode faltered and resulted in a mediocre effort from Charlie Brooker.
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8/10
Solid Episode
hillnick-519082 January 2018
Really solid Episode. Even though this is one of the longer episodes of season 4 at 59 minutes, the pacing was so well done that every moment feels as tense as the last. This is classic black mirror, giving you a glimpse into the not so distant future, leaving you with that feeling afterward like only Black Mirror can. 8/10
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7/10
Can we move on from the brain implants?
rhemfelt113 May 2020
A decently written episode, but they do the brain implant/virtual reality theme absolutely to death.

It's my biggest qualm with later seasons, they just do episode after episode of the exact same thing. One of the earlier seasons' greatest strength is the variety of tech themes that they explore. The implications of brain implants/VR are interesting, but there's an inherent lack of creativity on the writers' part by falling back on it over and over again.

It's almost guaranteed that 3/4 new episodes are going to be brain implants/VR.
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10/10
Crocodile Tears
tomgoodwin8155 August 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Crocodile is easily the most underrated episode in all of Black Mirror's five seasons. Why it has a lower viewer rating than most of Black Mirror is a mystery to me. Rather than focusing mostly on the horror of its technology, like many episodes like White Christmas, Crocodile instead plays out more like a traditional thriller/murder drama, as its protagonist desperately tries to cover up a series of disturbing secrets which spiral completely out of control towards the end, and it just happens to feature the invention of memory-harvesting technology, although this isn't the central theme. I've seen some viewers slate this episode because it has an unlikeable main character, but isn't that the whole point? If anyone tries to suggest that Crocodile is a bad episode because Mia is a horrible person, then they've missed the point completely. What makes Crocodile so disturbing is how it portrays an otherwise fairly normal person going to such lengths to cover up her tracks from 15 years ago that in the end she becomes a heartless monster, murdering four people including a baby to try to preserve her own life. It makes the viewer question how far they would go to do the same, and makes you wonder what terrible things people are capable of deep down when they get desperate. The last shot is of Mia crying at the end, which are likely crocodile tears for herself rather than the lives she's destroyed, because she's ultimately failed to protect herself and will now be humiliated in front of her own family, and also because she would surely never be able to return to a normal life after this even if she did evade justice. The setting is so spectacular that's surely worth a mention too, with the frozen, sprawling landscape reflecting the general bleakness of this story. Yes, there are some arguably dubious plot holes, such as whether Mia would really be able to kill a man much larger and stronger than her so easily or whether a guinea pig's sight is good enough to identify someone's face, but those are fairly insignificant and don't ruin my enjoyment of Crocodile at all, so I'll overlook that and say it deserves an outstanding rating, contrary to some people's reviews that I've seen on here.
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7/10
"We coulda been anything that we wanted to be..."
classicsoncall4 February 2018
Warning: Spoilers
One must accept a lot on faith if this episode is to have any meaningful impact on you. My first 'what the heck' moment came when Mia (Andrea Riseborough) choked out and killed Rob (Andrew Gower) when he came by to state his intention to confess to the accidental death of the biker. His proposition seemed logical enough and he was going to keep his name anonymous. How Mia could have overpowered him didn't seem credible to me at all.

I had some trouble with the recall machine as well. When the old dentist believed the slicker he saw the woman wearing was lime colored, shouldn't that have been the color in the image he remembered? When Shazia (Kiran Sonia Sawar) stated to Mia at the start of her 'recall' interview that 'private stuff is private stuff', it sounded like a tip-off that she already knew about the porn movie Mia rented. She did of course, but that was an unforced error that put Mia even more on the defensive for what she could potentially reveal.

But the kicker of course was old Codger the guinea pig. Really? He was going to provide Mia's identity via the recall machine? That was an interesting twist that would have made more sense in an old time series like 'The Twilight Zone', but in one in which modern technology provides the linchpin to the effectiveness of these Black Mirror stories, it takes a tremendous leap of faith to believe an animal with a tiny brain like a guinea pig could be a credible murder witness.

As for the title of the story - Crocodile?
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9/10
This is why I watch Black Mirror.
dwaghorne1130 December 2017
Season 4 started off ok with USS Calliper. It didn't feel like Black Mirror as much as it did just another sci-fi flick though unfortunately. Episode two was a definite step in the right direction, and was overall fantastic. Crocodile, however, hurt to watch towards the end. I literally found myself sitting up in my chair and saying , "No. Please, they can't do this." It made me physically uneasy afterwards. And that, right there, is what I wanted from this show. We see a woman slowly throw out all morality in an effort to keep her name clean. What made this harder to watch was the fact that her actions are more than likely not too far off from what could actually happen in real life. This is one of my favorite episodes of Black Mirror so far, and I hope they put out more content like this, as terrible as that sounds.
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Perhaps the worst episode of the series
tadaia8 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I suppose anything is plausible in the Black Mirror universe but this one was disappointing. I have to ask did it ever occur to Mia to convince her ex to confess without including her? She was complicit to be sure but he was the driver, he insisted on not calling the police despite her protest and disposed of the body. Other issues were Mia's overpowering him in the hotel room and Shazia's authorization to invade people's private memories to gather insurance company evidence for a simple accident. It moved slowly and seemed to rely purely on the shock value of Mia going as far as she did. Fantastic series but this was a loser.
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7/10
Stale writing, but executed with the typical immaculate production we've come to expect from Black Mirror
e-cesare15 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
As usual, the acting, cinematography, and production in general are stunning. I also liked the refreshing subversion of invasive technology causing crimes rather than solving them

However I'm disappointed in general with the writing of this episode. A great quality and distinction of Black Mirror is that it doesn't run off into sci fi imagination land for the sake of dramatic effect. Rather than the product of some inexplicable confluence of misfortune and implausibly godlike technology, you get the sense that these dystopic scenarios are more than just plausible - they're 80% going to happen tomorrow - adding to the sense of immediacy and intimacy. Crocodile starts off great in this way - a drunk-driving couple hit a biker and agonize over the consequences - about as ordinary as you could imagine, exactly how you would empathize with an audience. Then the plausibility drops from there.

First off, the guy really couldn't think of any way to let the widow know her husband is dead without leaving a trail? Come on.

Then there was the implausibility of how Mia committed the murders. Unlike the other reviewers, I'm not too concerned with these. There were clearly more plausible options, but they could have complicated the storytelling, and they don't change anything anyways.

More importantly, there's fact that Mia leapt from conscientious but tragic damsel to ruthless assassin literally overnight. The initial crime was understandeable, and the second murder could have been ascribed to panic, and both were somewhat sensible since they would have been hard to trace. By the third murder, there was no way she would've gotten away anyways (even without the family, there was a pile of forensic evidence and trails). And (still) seemingly a moral character, she should have just risked the out that the detective gave her, especially since (as Mia believed) the detective ALSO had a family which was the whole reason Mia went to these extremes.

Finally the narrative took a nosedive with the guinea pig. I'm pretty sure rodents are basically blind. (Just googled it and found that rats and mice have less than 1/60th the visual acuity of humans.) Not to mention the absurd waste of money to adapt the Recaller for every type of household pet. In fact the episode would have been great if it simply ended with Mia in horror over her actions, without any need for a ridiculous "good guys win" twist ending, and subverted the usual way this technology plays out in crime shows. There must have been a last minute rewrite or something, since this ending was so out of character.
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10/10
One of the best Black Mirror episodes
ef-457894 January 2019
I am amazed at the negative reviews; this is a train wreck episode and I mean that in a good way. It is compelling television- The twist is not something you would expect and maybe some of these haters just didn't like it- The setting in Iceland is stark and it is a brutal story. Brilliant.
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6/10
Disturbing, but not in the way it should have been
shawneni0122 September 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Up until now the series has been really good at portraying somewhat rational people in a world of philosophically mind bending technology.

My problem with this episode is that the main character is not a rational person by any means, and just gets worse until it culminated in a completely unnecessary infanticide. It's not the thought provoking what-if situations of other episodes.

Then again, maybe the point of this episode was to make me so uncomfortable that I'
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9/10
THOUGHT PROVOKING AT THE VERY LEAST
sphillips054 April 2018
I am very shocked at the number of derogatory comments about this episode. I thought it was excellent. Black Mirror is fictional drama, it's not real life and the posters who are questioning the logic of the programme really are missing the point. Logistics and technology out of the equation, it really is just confirming that bad things can get progressively worse when not addressed properly. I thought the acting was superb, the location of filming was isolated and desperate (like the main character) and I would say this is my second favourite Black Mirror after San Junipero.
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7/10
Quite a dark episode.
mfmehmood12 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This is a great episode but it is not my favorite. It is however, out of all the episodes of Black Mirror, the most provocative. The lead character does everything in her power to not get caught but she comes across as too overpowered. She murdered four people without being caught and that seems a bit farfetched for a woman such as Mia to accomplish. Overall, the episode is of good quality but some aspects seem overlooked.
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1/10
Easily the worst episode in 4 seasons
sirdekar-879923 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
What garbage, hot steaming garbage. I've never written a review but I couldn't let this slide.

While Black Mirror as a whole is an amazing series, this episode leaves you wondering what went wrong. To start, constant reuse of the same technology every episode that plugs into your head and shows your thoughts/memories is beyond old now. All of the first three episodes this season use some form of this but it seems most ludicrous in "Crocodile". Unlike episode one where the device is essentially a game controller that plugs you into some form of VR, in "Crocodile", it's used as a police state distopian/Orwellian "corroboration" device. This is supposedly mandatory by law as told through Shazia to Mia before her interview.

Secondly, this petite ~100lb woman can apparently choke out a large man with only one of her arms and kill him. While there is absolutely no evidence throughout the show to explain how Mia is superhuman, maybe this is how they explain the title "Crocodile" and she is in fact a lizard person in disguise with lizard strength.

Finally, the very end foreshadows that the device works on a literal guinea pig and is the ultimate downfall of Mia. I cannot believe that such a ridiculous ending was approved.
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S4E3: Crocodile: Bleakness without connection or dread; even if the locations are tremendous
bob the moo11 February 2018
The third episode in the fourth season of Black Mirror was Crocodile; it is an episode that shows the budget and scale that the show now has in its locations. Throughout the episode the selection and use of locations is impressive in the beauty of the Nordic landscape and even the use of interiors and specific places. Read any professional and amateur review and you'll find they all praise this. Part of the reason for that is that it is true, but the other reason is that the episode is unfortunately sufficiently lacking that this single aspect stands head and shoulders above the others.

In terms of technology and darkness, the episode has both - which is usually the core of these episodes working. In this case though, the technology is used to setup the scenario but there isn't really a feedback loop onto the technology as it is in the episode, and as it connects to us now. This lack of connection to the device weakens the episode, but what makes it not work is that the darkness is so pointlessly bleak, and the lead character seems single-minded without any hook for the viewer to try to connect to her actions or feelings. Instead we see characters murdered without involvement - only watching. It is surprisingly dull in this regard, and is pretty disappointing in all ways apart from the scenery.
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7/10
Left me cold
mego_spillane12344 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Crocodile is an odd one. I came out the other side not knowing why I didn't like it. After having a think I managed to come up with a couple of reasons but first I will say what I did like about it. I enjoyed the scenery, the sweeping vistas and snow capped mountains made me feel like I was watching a nordic noir, it looked stunning, it also puts across how isolated we all are in this modern world and how the inside of your mind can be a brutal and lonely landscape. The technology of accessing someone's memories for witness corroboration was an intriguing idea, it is one I imagine many organisations would see value in, it creeped me out and amazed me at the same time. This is the best type of black mirror tech. I loved how the bugsy malone moment at the end tied in with the character's journey and was a great touch, it seemed like the first time she felt something apart from her survival instinct. Also it made me remember that bugsy malone existed and this can only be a good thing. Now on to the bad. I had a massive problem connecting to the main character. Even if characters are unlikeable you want to know what happens to them and to be honest Mia left me cold. I like Andrea Riseborough and have enjoyed her in other stuff but really not a fan of how she played it here. I just didn't get the desperation needed to make it believeable that she would esculate her violent actions so quickly and I think the performance was a miss. The whole episode was quite alienating and played out far too quickly. I suppose on top of the previous episode Arkangel the point is that we are all capable of commiting horrific violent acts if the circumstances or emotions arise, an implusive decision can lead you down terrifying path and looking back this is a point Black mirror often tries to make. The technology is just the device which sets these impluses in motion sometimes. Maybe I would have enjoyed Crocodile more if I was more engaged by Mia but just don't think it fit together quite right and lingered on the wrong moments for too long.
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8/10
Mercylessly over the edge
Bored_Dragon12 October 2021
An insurance agent is investigating a minor car accident, using a device that reads the witness's memory. But one of the witnesses inadvertently reveals to her a dark secret from the past, which she must now cover up at all costs.

I have a lot to say about this "Black Mirror" episode, but a deeper analysis requires specific details that would spoil the story, and for a full experience, it is best to enter this adventure with as little prior knowledge as possible. For the most part, it is predictable enough that the additional information I would present here would completely ruin it.

Many resent its unconvincingness, in the sense that it is not in human nature to choose the path that the protagonist took, and that on that path she could not physically perform everything she does in the episode, and on top of all that she does it so nonchalantly and still no one caught her in the act.

True, the story has holes and illogicalities, but it is not so naive, because this is not about the average person, but about someone driven into psychopathy by fifteen years of guilty conscience combined with the urge to protect the family. The drama of a mentally unstable mother, who struggles with a guilty conscience and tries to keep the family together, sinking deeper into madness and eventually turning into a monster, is shown strong and impressively enough to distract you from the holes and illogicalities.

Many also blame it for not being in the spirit of the "Black Mirror" series. And I agree with this too. While "Black Mirror" deals with the positive and negative impacts of technology on the individual and humanity as a whole, basing plots on specific examples of (mis)use of technological advances, this episode is based on the characterization of the protagonist, while the Sci-Fi element is there just to push the story in the desired direction and provide the final plot twist.

If not a particularly representative episode for "Black Mirror", viewed outside the context of the series, "Crocodile" is a great psychological drama-thriller. With a well-balanced pace and duration, a great choice of scenography, a tense atmosphere, and a story that gradually transforms from a drama into a thriller and pushes further to the edge of horror, it held my undivided attention until the final twist, which serves as both a shocker and a comic relief.

All this, along with the fact that the protagonist is so skillfully brought close to the audience that I sympathized with her all the way, and even at times cheered for the monster to get away with her crimes, is reason enough for me to disregard all the clichés, holes and illogicalities in the story.

8,5/10.
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6/10
Sick Stuff!
Hitchcoc15 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Mia is the principal character. When her boyfriend hits a bicyclist while driving drunk, she reluctantly helps him dispose of the bike and the body. When he shows up years later, filled with guilt, she kills him and disposes of his body. But there is a technology being employed by insurance companies that allows witnesses to recall things they may have overlooked. When Mia is approached, she realizes that she is going to be caught for the murder and takes dramatic steps to cover things up. Not just dramatic but psychotic. This series has a lot of sick stuff in it and this one sort of takes the cake. One question. Are Guinea pigs reliable witnesses?
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10/10
What a powerful sixty minutes of drama.
Sleepin_Dragon2 January 2018
The first two from series four have been very good, quality episodes, but this one puts Black Mirror firmly back at the top of the drama genre, this particular episode is unlike anything else I've ever seen. The story is mind blowing, and the delivery is sublime. Massive plaudits for every cast member, in particular Andrea Risborough, she is nothing else but spellbinding, an incredible performance from her. The ending was almost unwatchable, tragic and harrowing, delivered in a way that ties all parts of the plot together, all the minor incidents fit together nicely. Incredible, 10/10
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6/10
Decent ideas but ridiculous ending
evertryckx2 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
This was a Black Mirror episode wich I personally didn't enjoy as much as I wanted to. The ideas were Ok and mostly executed well but the ending was just plain stupid. A hamster can recall a murder perfectly and remember faces? come on... I personally would like the ending way better if she didn't kill the kid. The police would use the memory retriever and find out that the baby was blind, so he couldm't identify her face. She would go free, again after al these years...
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8/10
Not for light hearted people
organant21 September 2019
If you can watch dark things then only this episode is for you. If you get hurt easily then i recommend you that DON'T WATCH IT...
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6/10
LOL
islamsc125 July 2021
Warning: Spoilers
All this technology and there's no camera in front of hotel?

You did everything to show us the mind's reader device from the future but the story has no sense.
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8/10
Maybe RETHINK what happened at the ending....
jorimdekroon9 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
I understand the fuzz about the ending really well. But I think a lot of people misinterpreted the ending. Remember the guy she killed in the hotel room? He came to her because he couldn't live with the paranoia that was caused by killing the cyclist with their car. He wanted to tell authorities and Mia refused and after that, killed him, sending her further down a murderous path.

What if Mia has developed an equally disturbing paranoia that she might get caught? She is crying during the kids play because she is thinking of the blind baby she just killed. What if the police isn't really there, but it is just her paranoia kicking in? Obviously a hamster can't recollect a clear image of her. But what if she thinks that's what happened? What if now SHE is the one that is paranoid and scared to get caught? What if killing a baby is just one step too far to stay sane for her?

For me that is what happened at the ending and it makes it a way better ending imo.
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6/10
Very dark & not really BM
Gelaos14 October 2020
Probably the darkest BM episode ever. The technology (memory reading, similar to The Entire History of You) is completely unimportant (but the question of use of such surveillence is pretty important), instead the episode focuses on murder and its psychological consequences. Crocodile would be pretty weak, but at least the cold nordic atmosphere, dark soundtrack and breathtaking Iceland aesthetic partially make up for the rest of the episode.
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4/10
Decent, until the end
filipnikolic-480211 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Although not as innovative and thought provoking as past episodes of the show, i was invested in the plot throughout, till the very end...

My main problem with the episode (aside from the end - ill get to that in a bit) is that the technology being displayed doesn't depict any of the negative tendencies we've created with our over reliance to the digital world and is mainly used as a plot device to move the story along. The tech that they have created in past episodes of the show are usually items accessible to the general public and have some correlation to current devices that we use on a regular basis in the real world. The episode felt more like the plot for an hbo crime drama than a BM episode and although there were many scenes that could have been taken out, but werent to extend the run time, the great direction and decent acting kept me interested to see how the writer would twist up the story... and then the last 2 mins happened

Cmon a hamster... are you kidding me?

Every time the insurance lady used the memory machine, she would let the people smell a beer and played a song that would help jog their memory, one guy didnt even remember getting hit by the car! You mean to tell me that the hamster not only witnessed the murder, but had the mental capability to flawlessly recreate the murderers facial features that would help the cops identify her within minutes? I mean they literally caught her like an hour after she murdered the family, was the hamster traumatized by this event to the point where that memory was just playing over and over in its head?

Killing off the baby because he might have been a witness was ridiculous enough, but if she spared the child and was caught as a result of that, it would have still made more sense then a freakin hamster... I mean wouldn't the little pin that goes in your head to connect the machine be the equivalent of a lobotomy for the hamsters tiny brain? I dont want to go into the gritty details of this because it already sounds ridiculous enough on its own.

This is only the second episode ive seen in the fourth season so I cant legitimately judge it yet, but this is a pretty disappointing start. They should definitely bring back the director but Charlie Booker is starting to appear to be a fairly inconsistent writer.
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