"Westworld" The Original (TV Episode 2016) Poster

(TV Series)

(2016)

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10/10
Pretty fine introduction to the show.
Westworld has quickly become one of HBO's breakout hits. The show's not even two years old yet and it's still attracting new viewers who probably never saw the original film from 1973. The series is a serialised take on the original movie and tells a completely different story from it, but keeps the same philosophical questions and dilemmas in place.

'The Original' shows us that Westworld is a holiday attraction that's like the world's most seamless video game experience except the whole theme park consists of robots who actually believe they're part of the American Old West. This introductory episode is a beautifully shot and bloody affair that we've come to expect from HBO, and the delivery of this episode makes me wonder about the future of the series once it's no longer running side by side with Game of Thrones. I think Westworld easily has strong legs on its own.

Another golden chapter to HBO's ever-growing library of quality programming.
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10/10
Awesome . Mesmerizing
jetkot28 November 2017
This show got me instantly hooked on. Evan Rachel Wood is extremely beautiful and gorgeous. She acts well too. Ed Harris looks menacing . Many other characters get introduced and they act really well. The visuals are spectacular and the action sequences are brilliant. Anthony Hopkins is the icing on the cake. Brilliant show .I am loving this.
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10/10
Amazing
TheFirst0127 August 2019
Has to be one of the greatest pilots ever made, right? So much intrigue, we literally don't even know what's coming.
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8/10
Promising Series
claudio_carvalho8 January 2018
Warning: Spoilers
In the future, the Western-themed amusement park Westworld is a place where android hosts receive human guests that live experiences in the West in different storylines performed by the androids. The hosts are programmed to not harm the humans. When a software updated is implement in the hosts by the Westworld´s creator Dr. Robert Ford, there is a malfunction in the sheriff first and in a criminal later, and the manager of the park Theresa remove the updated androids from Westworld to keep the guests safe. Meanwhile the host Peter Abernathy acts strange after finding a photo taken outside Westworld. His daughter Dolores is in love with the host Teddy and when he is killed in a shooting, Dolores is deactivated and interrogated by the Westworld programmers.

"Westworld" is a promising series based on the 1973 "Westworld" by Michael Crichton. The storyline is interesting, showing androids with feelings and the backstage of the amusement park, with manager, programmers and the creator performed by Anthony Hopkins. My vote is eight.

Title (Brazil): "The Original"
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10/10
Stunning And Riveting Pilot
adarshbohra694 October 2016
One of the Show's And Pilot's best features (much like Game of Thrones) is that it distances itself to such a degree from anything you've seen before, that anything could happen. The particularly brilliant spin here is that even as we hope to learn the rules, glitches and human interference are pushing those rules aside, so it becomes a wonderfully maddening game of "the more we know the limits, the less there are limits." It plays off of the disconnect it forces you to have by virtue of its own world creation, by shifting these limits, and throwing out your natural reaction to what you're watching. It becomes an amazing dance, as you watch a gunfight while realizing that you don't know what you're supposed to do with it really, or what watching it means. You're used to watching gunfights while knowing the good guys are going to win, but this is a whole new game. 'Westworld' straddles the future and the past of your imagination. In the first episode we get to see this 'Westworld' and it's inhabitants. Guns, Bots, Beautiful girls and an uncertain future make for potential gold with this show. As always HBO delivers in the drama department once again
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9/10
Welcome to "TV 3.0"
A_Different_Drummer5 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
TV 1.0 started in the 1940s, and pretty much held its own until the 1990s.

Then, in bits and pieces, came TV 2.0 -- shows like Buffy and Sopranos -- that threw the traditional narrative arcs out the window and dug deep into story ideas, looking to seriously mess with viewers' heads.

And created a new and addictive form of TV in the process.

Is it possible that a quarter century later, we now have TV 3.0 and Westworld could be the leading exponent? I think yes.

The concept? -- the original Westworld was brilliant and the fact it was never picked up or re-imagined is almost beyond comprehension.

The actors? -- do my eyes deceive me or am I watching Ed Harris and Sir Anthony Hopkins, two of the greatest character actors of the age? Looks to me like TV 3.0 will be the place that more "mature" actors go to continue their craft, much to the delight of their fans everywhere.

The writing? So sharp it stings. At the same time delightfully demented (Banshee, one of my recent faves, always had a touch of insanity in the scripts) and yet also offering detailed characterizations and story hooks for the discerning viewer.

I will note that the very first episode (pilot) of Westworld delved more deeply into the concept of artificial life than the entire first season of the British hit HUMANS, and that is saying something indeed.

And during the big shoot-out in the pilot, unless my ears were playing tricks on me, they hired a full orchestra to riff off the Rolling Stones tune, Sympathy for the Devil.

And the fact that this show boasts the Nolan family in the credits hints, I think, at what is yet to come.

It could develop for HBO a following even more loyal than THRONES, IMHO.
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10/10
great start to an amazing show
moviesfilmsreviewsinc16 March 2022
Like that long awaited locomotive pulling into Tucson for the first time, Westworld is finally here. Many at HBO have anticipated this day with just as much reverence and optimism as the 1880 denizens of that famous railroad town from the Old West, watching anxiously as the smoke clouds plumed beneath the fading Arizona light. Of course, in spite of the dust, horses, gunplay, and even coal-powered engine from that oft-romanticized era, Westworld is not a Western; nay, for all we know it's not even located in North America. This craftiness is on display in the very opening scenes where those familiar with Crichton's 1973 movie of the same name are thrown for a devious and perfectly orchestrated loop by Nolan (who also directed the episode) and Joy's script. For those who may never have seen the original Westworld, the general set-up is that two buddies from Chicago plan to get their rocks off by visiting Westworld. For one of them, it is his first time in town while the other is an old pro. Within minutes of arriving, however, they're both shooting Yul Brynner's infamous Gunslinger robot (the Man in Black) dead and being the toast of the town. Also, once more, it raises new insights about Dolores' purpose. She is apparently the oldest robot still operating in the park. She's "the original." That means she has a lifetime of reveries, decades of them, waiting to be awakened like her one-time father. Memories of abuse; memories of exploitation; memories of this world being far less than the vastness of rose-tinted potential. Where she, or the series, will go from there is still way too early to know. However, already the hooks are in. It is a very difficult thing, even for HBO's best shows, to grab viewers so completely in the first hour, but Westworld is firing without any blanks at the moment. Despite being based on a movie of meagre length, the premiere suggests a vast web of story threads to carry the series for what could easily be years to come.
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9/10
These Violent Delights Have Violent Ends
ThomasDrufke2 October 2016
Westworld is one of the most promising shows in quite some time. Its premise, cast, and crew involved show me this could be the next big thing for HBO. And if the premiere is any indication, it will be just that.

Jonathan Nolan, his wife Lisa Joy, and J.J. Abrams are the brilliant minds behind this TV series adaptation, and they do a nice job of incorporating many of Michael Crichton's intriguing ideas in the original film while also adding in some nuances as well. Although in the film version the 'hosts' are played more as antagonists, I appreciate the change in having them more as victims and/or toys for the guests. This change brings a good balance so that as audience members, we don't necessarily know who to root for.

Westworld boasts an impressive ensemble cast including Anthony Hopkins, James Marsden, Evan Rachel Wood, Thandie Newton, Jeffrey Wright, Luke Hemsworth (yep, there's another one), and the great Ed Harris. The premise of the show opens the door for characters to die and come back, considering half are androids, but having big names also helps bring the show down to a more recognizable and understandable level. It's a dense show, but I don't expect anything different from a Nolan product.

The premiere sets up the promising idea that the androids/hosts have a possibility of malfunction due to Hopkins' and Wrights' programming issue. Of course, knowing where the movie ends up is probably a good indication as to the direction the show will take, but I like that it wasn't immediately clear. It's also nice to see that some of the main cast members are hosts. We didn't get to see a whole lot on them in the film, besides Yul Brynner, so I like seeing much more character development come from that angle.

This show is being billed as a Western Game of Thrones, and it now has a strong pilot to show for it. Plus, throw in a great score by Thrones' composer Ramin Djawadi and some incredible visual effects that could rival Thrones, we may have ourselves another Emmy winner. Here's hoping.

+Impeccable cast

+Another Nolan gem

+Score

+Nuances to the film's ideas

9.0/10
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9/10
Westworld a philosophical view
barokq821 April 2021
From the beginning, the series addresses heavy-loaded philosophical questions. It raises many questions that have no definite answer and makes the watcher intrigued to follow the dialogues. What is reality? The most basic question that whoever gives himself time in contemplating the existing have thought about it. Here, he exhibits the famous duality between the "true" reality and the "illusion" reality. You can see this meaning throughout the dialogue of the "newcomers." Could we replace our reality? That reflects the purpose of this "Westworld," but is it the ultimate goal of this world?

Another philosophical question is what consciousness is? Can humankind reach the level to implant consciousness in robots? What could be the consequences of that action? The scene of Dr. Robert Ford and Peter Abernathy is a cornerstone in the building of the plot.

Also, a very debatable topic in Philosophy is whether we can program feelings? Dose the robots when they "feel" are they really experience the same experiences we humans do? Or is it a mere reflexive?

There are more questions the series do implicit to it. It would be an enjoyable experience if I could get out thinking about it and if lucky to reach satisfiable answers.
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9/10
Westworld: The Orginal
WubsTheFadger4 January 2018
Short and Simple Review by WubsTheFadger

The story is extremely interesting. This episode introduced us into the world of Westworld with such ease and grace. The pacing throughout the episode is perfect.

All of the characters are interesting and complex.

The acting is fantastic all around. Ed Harris, Anthony Hopkins, James Marsden, and Evan Rachel Wood all do a great job. Louis Herthum, who play Peter Abernathy, has the best performance in this episode.

The blend of violence and nudity are perfectly mixed. There are no scenes with aberrant or unneeded nudity or violence.

The science behind the androids and behind the world itself is left unanswered (This will most likely be answered in later episodes).

Pros: Interesting story, great performances (Most notably by Louis Herthum), good pacing, complex characters, and a perfect blend of violence and nudity

Cons: The science behind the androids and the world are left unanswered

Overall Rating: 9.2
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10/10
Mind-blowing
asadkhan081014 November 2018
I loved the first episode, it's really promising. I loved the cast, theme and the background music as it felt so intense.

I'm looking forward to complete the Season 1.
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The Original Depiction
theminorityreporter10 July 2019
Warning: Spoilers
"When someone shows you who they are believe them; the first time." - Maya Angelou

The First Thing the makers of this show chose to present is a naked and bloodied woman seated in cold isolation in a state of apparent paralytic horror. In the dialogue overlay she states that she is terrified - she is in a dream and she wants to wake up; she is advised by a man that there's nothing to be afraid of as long as she answers his questions correctly. Her freedom from this 'highly original' dramatized condition of confinement and despondency is evidently contingent on a man's approval of her performance in some examination. This woman is the ingénue. We learn incrementally that her recurring experience of this condition is often bloodier and more indicative of abuse, and is the result of being viciously raped and abused by a sadistic old man who employs an enormous knife for the occasion - an occasion which is relived over and over again with revolting repetition and some degree of variation, depending on the man's capricious will in a given instance. But not before her family is murdered. The character is programmed to endure real physical and psychological trauma and the actress is directed to display copious evidence of emotional torment. An expression of gaping incredulous horror signals her helplessness and utter dismay as she's dragged, kicking and screaming, to the barn for recreational violation by an ugly predator with heavy weapons and an attitude of cavalier nonchalance.

In a work studio setting a woman seated naked in a trance-like state is observed suggestively stroking her lower lip. This is referred to by the man present as a "Reverie" and is described as being the sort of thing that makes the guests to the park "fall in love with them". The man is called off on another duty and the woman remaining on the scene first casts her eyes over the incognizant woman's body, then advances somewhat criminally for a kiss. Is this supposed to be an apology for the rape of the ingénue? 'Apology' not accepted. This looks like an insult to the audience's intelligence embedded in an 'apology'. I've had gay friends and I've never known a lesbian who would creep on an incapacitated woman in this way (this, generously assuming she's even a true lesbian). This is just an attempt to even the field by making EVERYONE lousy. Robot or not, there's a factual element to what's being plainly depicted in action on the screen and she (the host) evidences no distinction from a human. As with the ingénue, we all know she's a human player. We all know she doesn't look like a robot or demonstrate such manifest discrepancy from a human as might sufficiently distance us from the violation. To make the jump to Robot requires doing and it is here left undone, deliberately - not as a result of an oversight.

Later we're given a tour of Sub-level 83, a robot repository that's a sort of wet necro-land with fully-fleshed, damp, naked dead-looking people standing in a passive, unresponsive state and appearing in varying mild conditions of mortis, as if they never made it to the grave or else were disinterred without delay - many more females shown in close shots than males. As the camera pauses on the scene, framed on both sides by two necro-nude females, we hear a character say "Ain't got a cherry, that ain't no sin. She's still got the box that the cherry come in". Well, as the security guy says just prior to the tour "No one's complained". I am complaining.

Midway through, in another work studio scene, it's suddenly F-bombs dropped inanely in what should actually be a credible work conversation; like what you might expect from an immature 14-year-old trying too desperately to impress: "f-, f-, f-"... This is immediately followed by a group brothel scene in which a woman steps out of a bath and displays 180-degree nudity with particularly obvious comprehensiveness for the camera, approaching a man lounging in a bed. It's gratuitous, and it's predictably exceeded by a sensationalized sex scene in episode two. Both scenes are a pointless waste of time and a manipulative insult to the audience's intelligence.

Three buckets of blood are extracted from a deeply suffering man whose throat has been cut by the man in black. Blood gushes from the man's mouth and he tries to escape to the scant amusement of the man in black. The camera drifts away as the man in black proceeds to scalp the screaming man with his heavy knife. We're supposed to be inoculated from the heinous treatment of this man by the fact that he first demonstrates thieving tendencies and a generally derelict character prior to this torture session. But there really is no character type at all that deserves this kind of abuse. This isn't 'violence'; this is sadism, crude and simple (sadism always is - this is one of the reasons it rapidly becomes exhaustingly tedious and grating, and when I see it I often find myself mired irritably in a "deep and dreamless slumber" in a prison of someone else's sins).

In the saloon at the end of a safe-robbing scene, an outlaw says "No tellin' if there's anything worthwhile in that safe..." then, leering at a prostitute, continues with theatrical lechery "...we should take this sweeet little b**ch just in case." This bit is depicted in an entertainment-oriented and catchy way to distract from the grim reality of the threat of abduction and rape, and while the description of the woman may seem like a mix of compliment and insult that should basically cancel itself out, it's actually pure insult - she's absurdly characterized as a thing to be acquired that is both desirable and undesirable at the same time. We're supposed to feel better about it all via a combination of retribution and distraction when the brothel madam casually shoots the outlaws face off with a gun and the piano kicks in playing an entertainment score, but it's just a quick switch to shallow, glossy violence that's presented as an 'apology' to remedy the original transgression and diminish any negative response from viewers. The show's authors talk a lot about how they mean to be socially conscious and artfully address the plight of "the oppressed" but then they carefully design "the oppressed" as characters built around absurd contradictions and stereotypes and they arrange things to be catchy, sensationalized, and demeaning in a common and crude way.

This show is markedly calculated and it proceeds predictably with a long, escalating series of violations and 'apologies'. Transgressions are difficult to address and can be problematic to identify and sort out to begin with. But it's relatively obvious when in a later episode, for instance, a human character insists on demonstrating to another that the ingénue host is all machinery inside and cuts her abdomen open, that this is supposed to be the demonstration that puts the issue to rest by displaying the mechanics of her internal workings. It doesn't though. It's just another lousy violation because it's still plainly a depiction of a woman being brutally abused.

There's an operational credo used by some producers and writers that they'll state that they do verily decry rape and sadism and exploitation and that this, of course, is why it must all be used as a primary driver of plot and explicit visual exposition. People need to be engaged emotionally and a dialogue needs to be opened, they say. This is cheap, especially on HBO (home of only just entertainment, really), and that's what women's rights and human rights groups are doing already and doing right. Do your job as an artist; create something interesting and poignant using any of the many true artistic methods available to you and you won't need a vulgar, troubled, and calculatedly compensatory treatment, even if you actually are pursuing these troubling issues as foremost in earnest.

What if there are people everywhere who are traumatized by this kind of subject matter because of experiences they themselves and/or a loved one have suffered? How must it feel to be confronted with a pervasive culture of depiction and consequent (or direct) trivialization of rape and sadism in the entertainment media? Wouldn't that have the effect of alienating you from society; not just to see and be affected by the works themselves, but to see ordinary people in society blithely saying things like "I really enjoyed this" in conversation and in reviews? The authors' intentions may be quite irrelevant, depending on the disposition of a complex of factors. In a medium that is already fragile with respect to outcome dynamics, this thematic material should be regarded as a volatile tinderbox; a barely-contained and perilous curse waiting to blow up in the faces of the enterprising, unwary, and less-than-painstakingly conscientious.
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7/10
Good start
tenshi_ippikiookami7 December 2016
"The Original", the first episode of "Westworld", teases us with some of the stories and mysteries the show will be based on, while introducing its characters in an interesting manner. Overall, the first episode is a quite assured product, even if it could have offer a little bit more.

There are for now three story-lines. One includes the 'people' who live at Westworld, the robots that can be shoot at, taken advantage of, and that have their own story-lines in which the guests to the park can jump in if they feel like: there is the bar, the bandits, the sheriff... We get introduced to Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) and Teddy (James Marsden) which the show teases for like one minute is just a guest. That their stories are presented as reality for the viewer shows the clear intention "Westworld" has to blurry the line between reality and fiction.

The second story-line is the Man In Black With A Hat (Ed Harris) who seems to be searching for something, seems to be a guest, and seems to have an special interest in Dolores.

And last, but not least, the 'people' behind the park, which includes big boss Ford (Anthony Hopkins) and his right hand Bernard (Jeffrey Wright). These are the people that create the 'hosts', their story-lines and care that everything goes well. For a people that seem to be quite the expert, they seem to be having some problems with their 'hosts' (of course, we all know something bigger must be going on).

The episode jumps from one story to the other in a flawless manner. The pace doesn't suffer, and the show does a good job in making us care for everyone involved, even if we might see them die more than once. The action sequences, the mysteries and the characters seem interesting enough. However, "Westworld" is still holding all the triumphs in its hand, so we don't really know yet where it will go and if it will be able to win the game. For now, it is a very interesting start, with an overflow of threads that it will struggle to keep under control.
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1/10
I did not understand the meaning and purpose of the series
dlvlv21 July 2022
The film is built on a time loop, a constant return to the same events, their different development, but always the same result, but the meaning. What's the point?

Emptiness, cruelty.

The series does not relax, does not intrigue, is a little nervous and annoying.

Lots of blood, brutality, murder.

I did not understand the meaning and purpose of the series, I could not watch the season.

Boring meaningless dialogues, a bunch of murders that could not have happened, so simply between two words some hero killed several people. Why?
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9/10
It is original yet artificially intelligent
jeetg043 October 2016
The pilot of this series lived up-to expectations, with a nice set-up of theme park and well established characters within the theme park, who follow normal repetitive daily routine in the theme park with minor changes everyday.

The show gives viewer a perspective of normal old school western world in the beginning, only to bring out the sci-fi element swiftly in the story. At the beginning the sci-fi element seems quite normal, justifying the theme-park element of the story. But, eventually the pilot elaborated more on sci-fi element and gave audience a slight hint of self-developed instincts in some of the characters.

This show with its unique representation is going to dwell into different aspects of human behavior in conjunction with artificial intelligence. And will also elaborate on the philosophical as well as psychological outlook of human nature and its consequences.
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The most satisfying mystery is one where you go back to the start and see the answers were there all along
TheDonaldofDoom8 November 2016
Warning: Spoilers
This is how to do a perfect pilot episode. It introduces us to the concept and main characters while making it clear the world has been working about the same for a long time, but that something is starting to go wrong now. It's slickly produced, with great shots that show both how beautiful and how dark this world is. The soundtrack is excellent, I love the way the cheekily relaxed music really gives you a feel for the world. And the 'Paint it Black' tune being adapted for orchestra is wonderful. Really all the music is perfectly suited to whichever scene it accompanies. This show wouldn't be the same without Ramin Djawadi.

Everything in this episode, and in the whole show, is in a small or big way there for a reason. With repeat viewings, you realise it is almost overflowing with subtle clues to the twists that come later in the season. There are the obvious things that you would have picked up on the first time, like Dolores's first decision to harm a living thing. But there are also way more subtle things, like the way milk mixes with blood, with the milk signifying the white fluid used to create hosts. And Ford's behaviour in particular is fascinating to see. His statement that evolution happens because of the mistakes. But nope, he's nothing to do with the unusual Host behaviour of course ;)

The characters are also mostly really well introduced and quite deep. Even the ones that at first seem like charicatures, like the Man in Black, have a hell of a lot more going on than meets the eye. No matter how evil he is, this isn't a guy who does what he does just because he's a sadist. No, there's clearly a lot more going on. And ah, that line 'I want you to fight back'. I love it.

In short, Westworld is off to a fascinating start that is even more impressive on a repeat viewing because every scene serves a purpose, even the apparently unimportant lines of dialogue. The Man in Black's statement that there's a deeper level is most fitting. In this show, there is always a deeper level to everything, and that's why it's one of the best things on TV.
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9/10
A review of the "Westworld" pilot (2016)
ericrnolan24 March 2017
Warning: Spoilers
Blog Correspondent Pete Harrison suggested I give the Westworld" series (2016) a try, and I'm damn glad he did. The first episode was superb, and it's safe to say it's reeled me in. I'd give the pilot a 9 out of 10; this seems like it could be the best science fiction television show I've seen in a long time.

I still think the premise is just slightly cheesy — grown men and women spending a fortune to visit a western-themed amusement park with interactive android cowboys. (I think maybe westerns were a more mainstream genre in 1973, when Michael Crichton's original film was in theaters.) And there are times when the show's central western- themed motifs are a little annoying to me … even though I know the park is supposed to appear superficial and cliché.

But "Westworld" is a highly intelligent thriller — it looks like a hell of a lot of thought went into the script. Just about every aspect of the show seems like it was well developed — everything from the actors' performances to the set design. And don't let the gorgeous, idyllic, sunny landscapes fool you — there is no shortage of pathos here. It's brutally dark in its storytelling. (By the way, if you happen to be a fan of this show, I must recommend 2014's "Ex Machina" film — it is similarly cerebral and dark in its outlook.)

Anthony Hopkins is fantastic, as usual; Jeffrey Wright, James Marsden, Evan Rachel Wood and Thandie Newton are all very good. They're all overshadowed here, though, by two stellar performances.

The first is Ed Harris as a black-clad psychopathic visitor to the park — I had no idea he could be so frightening. Dear God. Has he played bad guys before? I've always associated him with nice-guy roles — even his antagonist in 1996's "The Rock" was misguided and sympathetic. I'd love to see him get a role in an upcoming "The Dark Tower" film, maybe as one of the Big Coffin Hunters, if they are ever featured.

The second is Louis Herthum, the ostensible "father" of Wood's heroine. (They are both androids within the park — I don't think that's much of a spoiler, as it's all over the show's advertising.) Herthum may be a lesser known actor, but he stole the show in a tour-de-force performance, in my opinion. And that's no small feat in a cast including Hopkins and this surprisingly vicious Harris. I haven't seen a performance that good on television since NBC's "Hannibal" went off the air.

Anyway, I noticed something funny here. Steven Ogg plays a bandit who invades people's homes and murders them … this is basically the same role he plays as Negan's chief henchman on "The Walking Dead." It must be weird to be typecast like that.

Hey … it is only just now that I realized the logo below is a riff on Da Vinci's "Vitruvian Man."

https://ericrobertnolan.wordpress.com/
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10/10
Outstandingly brilliant.
emmahamilton-8664415 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I first saw the film of Westworld as a teen with my mum, dad and sister as a teen. I recall little apart from it had a twangy guitar in it and it was about robots gone wrong in a theme park. And that it was freaky!

Many many many years later, I decide to try the series. I was addicted by the end of the first episode! It's absolutely brilliant. Great story, and fabulous cast. My only gripe at this early stage (about to start series 2) is that the fabulous Jimmy Simpson's character William, was not who we thought. His character was infinitely way more interesting and worthwhile than the dull but handsome male lead meant for the gutsy and brave Delores. (Brilliantly played by Evan Rachel Wood)

Jeffrey Wright as Bernard, is another fascinating character whom you root for, as is Thandie Newtons tough want-to-get-out-of -here Maeve Millay. Naturally Anthony Hopkins's wicked Dr Robert Ford is fabulous and Ed Harris's The Man in Black is nasty, cruel and yet strangely sort of likeable.

The music is by genius Ramin Djawadi who also composed the music for GoT. I love how the piano in the saloon plays modern hits that suit the feeling at the time such as "Paint it Black" by The Rolling Stones, "House of the Rising Sun" by The Animals (always thought that would be good in a Western) "Back to Black" by Any Winehouse" and "Exit Music (For a Film)" by Radiohead.

This has me gripped. It is something very different to what I'd normally watch, and has me hooked! Like Band of Brothers and Game of Thrones, this will become another HBO classic.
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9/10
A modern series does make sense
nnyytre20 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
A completely different story from any one I saw ,the acting is very good, this is the first episode makes me very excited for more ,music just wonderful , I hope that the rest of the series be like this.
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10/10
Incredible opener
Leofwine_draca30 November 2022
So, the original WESTWORLD is one of my favourites, a movie that helped put Michael Crichton on the map and subverted the western genre in engaging, fascinating ways. I wasn't impressed by the sound of a TV series remake, but it turns out I was wrong about that one: this is something totally different. It has the same basic concept but runs away with it in the opposite direction, focusing on the robots instead. This opener has perfect acting, cinematography, and an incredible amount of depth, looking at human nature, artificial intelligence, memory, violence and a whole lot more besides. It's creepy, fascinating, and enthralling. More please!
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10/10
Flawless masterpiece
john-eivind26 March 2022
The episode itself is so beautifully written and it slowly builds and puts a story together. It also creates a desire for the viewer to watch more of the series, I have watched the first 3 seasons, but this episode might be my favorite because I have never seen anything like it in the TV world, I can't find a single flaw with the storytelling and the world that has been created is absolutely fantastic and mysterious. Any new TV or even movie writer should take inspiration from how this "The Original" was written.
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9/10
One of the best opening you will ever see
ksharath199925 December 2022
Westworld gets one of the dream opening every series expects to get. The wonderful landscapes and the western background opening is the perfect opening it deserved. Great concept, good casting and amazing performances have delivered something really praise worthy. Evan Rachel Wood and Louis Herthum deliver master class performances which adds to the amazement because it is just the beginning and they have acted their heart out. This episode has the potential to blow your minds with the concept it is trying to tell which is beyond comprehension. The mystery factor and the secrets yet to be revealed adds to rje tension and excitement of the viewer. Surprise twists and the climax makes every viewer longing for more from the series.
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6/10
The Original
Prismark1022 January 2019
Warning: Spoilers
Michael Crichton wrote and directed the film Westworld in 1993. The interesting aspect of the story was that Crichton reworked the concept 20 years later and replaced the robots with dinosaurs and called it Jurassic Park.

Jonathan Nolan developed the Westworld television series and directed opening story.

The Original sets the scenes and develops a mystery. Robots or Hosts as they are called here are malfunctioning in the theme park. Some of them have received the latest updates which include a reverie. Westworld has been going for three decades without a major hitch. The park and robots were developed by Dr Robert Ford (Anthony Hopkins.)

The theme park is a success operated by a team of specialists. Lee Sizemore writes storylines and narratives. Bernard Lowe (Jeffrey Wright) has taken over from Dr Ford for the day to day functioning of the robots.

The episode starts with Dolores (Evan Rachel Wood) who is being interviewed by Lowe. We guess she is a robot. Then we meet Teddy Flood (James Marsden) who arrives on a train fresh to Westworld. He is also a robot, he arrives on the train daily.

Less certain is the mysterious Man in Black (Ed Harris) who seems to be a protagonist of some kind. We are not sure if he is a robot or a human at first.

What Lowe realises that robots malfunctioning is not only bad for business, it can cause corporate shenanigans.

Obviously Westworld has to spin the movie to some kind of 5 years series stretch. There would be a host is stories and issues it will raise. From the first episode there is an indication it will got to Blade Runner territory. It helps that they have a cast that includes Anthony Hopkins and Ed Harris.
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3/10
Wanted to like it. **possible spoilers**
JustCrazy23 October 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Enjoyed the movie West World and was looking forward to this series. HBO really needs a new hit series and I thought this might be it. The premise is the same as the original, but the show focuses on my least favorite of the original fantasy scenarios, the old west. The acting is good, at least in the first episode, but I'm not sure where they can go with this. Will every episode consist of the machines becoming more self aware? This, at least in my opinion, would become extremely repetitive and boring, especially if the show continues on such a dark path. And this isn't to say that I''m not a fan of dark shows. One of my favorite television series was Hannibal. It's just that I can't see where a show with such a limited premise can go.

All of the main female characters, except two, are prostitutes. Can writers not come up with anything more imaginable? The main female robot, played by Evan Rachel Wood of True Blood fame, gets brutally raped in the first 15 minutes of the show and in my opinion, it just goes downhill from there. I am personally tired of this worn out plot device, and am seriously wondering what is wrong with the folks at HBO, as this seems to be a recurring theme in most of their original programming.

I cancelled my Tivo subscription to this show and doubt I will watch a another episode. The target audience of this series is obviously young males and anyone who gets off on rape fantasies.

I gave this three stars for the acting, but I would not recommend the series.
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A perfect Introduction to the show
killermantis5 July 2022
With great action and beautiful cinematography this pilot gives a first time viewer everything they need to determine if they want to continue to watch.
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