Open Netflix at any given time, and the âtrendingâ menu is inevitably peppered with true crimeâtales of murder, cults, scandal, and beyond, all rendered with a stylistic polish that makes binging salacious stories feel like a not-completely-trashy experience. Black Mirror knows you canât tear your eyes away from true crime, a subject it puts through the wringer in season-six episode âLoch Henry.â
âLoch Henryâ very specifically pokes into Netflixâs own brand of true crimeâwhere the details of monsters, victims, and grisly evidence may vary, but the visual execution tends to share a comforting same-ness that any regular viewer will recognize. âMoody piano chord,â muses Pia (Bodies Bodies Bodiesâ Myhaâla Herrold), envisioning the opening shot of the documentary she and boyfriend Davis (Peaky Blindersâ Samuel Blenkin) hope will interest popular outlets like Streamberry, Black Mirrorâs dead-on Netflix clone. The couple, who met in film school, head to Samuelâs Scottish hometown aiming to chronicle a local naturalist, but plans shift once Pia hears about a gruesome event that rocked the community a few decades prior. Itâs not something Samuel is eager to revisit, but he canât avoid the topic once Pia starts asking why the quaint village is a ghost town rather than swarming with tourists.
We will be discussing plot twists for âLoch Henryâ below, so if you havenât watched the episode yet, hereâs your notification.
âLoch Henryâ is directed by Sam Miller (I May Destroy You) and written, like all of season six, by Black Mirror creator Charlie Brooker. No time is wasted in establishing the setting (gorgeous countryside) and the dynamics between the main characters, as Davis and Pia pull up to the cozy cottage where his mother, Janet (Monica Dolan, who played an entirely different character in season-five Black Mirror episode âSmithereensâ), awaits their arrival. Despite a bit of culture clash and generational awkwardness, Janet is clearly happy to host her son and his girlfriend. These early scenes are sprinkled with nuggets that come into play later: the lingering presence of Davisâ father, Kenny, a police officer who died a few decades prior and is much-missed by his wife, but less so by his son, who barely remembers him; Janetâs stack of VHS tapes containing what appear to be every episode of 1980s British crime drama Bergerac; a vintage camcorder that happens to be around the house; and the fact that Pia canât get a cell phone signal. At just under an hour, âLoch Henryâ has to be efficient about its foreshadowing.
Though Davis is committed to their original documentary topic, you canât blame Pia for pushingâhardâfor a change-up once she hears about the areaâs very own boogeyman. The tale spills forth courtesy of pub owner Stuart (Daniel Portman, Game of Thronesâ Podrick Payne)âa brash childhood buddy of Davisâ who makes jokes about pronouns and wokeness, coming across like a charming but tactless bulldozer. This lack of filter proves useful for the increasingly curious Pia, and it opens up a hell of a flashback as Davis and Stuart regale her with the details: in 1997, a honeymooning couple suddenly vanished into thin air. The circumstances were so puzzling the story briefly commanded screaming headlines, until the death of Princess Diana took over the news cycle, and that was apparently that.
âUntil one day,â Pia prompts, an eager gleam in her eye, and the old friends finish the story, which picks back up in the very bar theyâre sitting in now. At the time, it was run by Stuartâs father (The Mummyâs John Hannah), a man who now exists in a state of constant inebriation. One night, a regular patron named Iain Adairâa nondescript village kidâbegan acting strangely, making weird statements and threatening his neighbors. Soon after, the young man shot his parents and then himself, and also managed to (non-fatally) shoot the cop whoâd followed him home: Davisâ father, Kenny. In the aftermath, Pia is thrilled to hear, investigators discovered Iainâs secret torture dungeon and proof of many more victims. Itâs juicy, and itâs exactly the kind of true-crime tale Netflix, or Streamberry, would gobble up: âQuaint little village, but for years this Hannibal Lecter dude has been operating a death den? … The details are so awful, itâs irresistible,â Pia exclaims.
Davis takes a bit more convincingâhis dad was seriously injured, after all, something he reminds Pia was âreal, not fucking contentââbut he comes around. Stuart is jazzed, predicting that the film will lure vacationers back to the town. âIâve even got a drone you can use!â he crows, because it wouldnât be a Netflix-style doc without plenty of aerial shots. He also has a trove of archival material his late mother kept about the case, which he happily hands over despite his fatherâs grumbling. The wheels are in motion for true-crime triumph!
But of course… this is Black Mirror, which means thereâs always another shoe waiting to drop. First, Pia and Davis have to find a production team to fund their film, and the haughty exec they speak to isnât initially sold on it. They need a hookââsomething unseen, unheard, unexplored,â which is why they end up breaking into Adairâs boarded-up basement, a supremely cinematic and creepy location, toting Kennyâs camcorder for maximum Blair Witch vibes. As far as Black Mirror episodes go, âLoch Henryâ is surprisingly light on technology themes. But that shoe weâre waiting on drops, big-time, thanks to some vintage tech: one of those Bergerac VHSÂ tapes, which Pia discovers also contains irrefutable evidence that Davisâ parentsâthe late cop and the soft-spoken widow making shepherdâs pie in the next roomâwere ghoulishly enthusiastic participants in Adairâs horrific crimes. We see grainy footage of terrified victims tied up, screaming through their gags. We see Janet dancing around in a sparkly mask and latex nurse outfit, brandishing a power drill.
The foreshadowing isnât entirely subtle in âLoch Henry,â but the suspense still manages to be razor-sharp. The story quickly shifts from âLoch Henryâ to Loch Henry, a title that eagle-eyed viewers can spot on the Streamberry menu in another season six episode with some very meta themes, âJoan Is Awful.â With that unmistakable moody piano chord and those opening drone shots, the episode becomes the true-crime film itself, crafted exactly the way we knew it would beâwith Davis and Pia now foregrounded as the filmmakers who stumbled on the greatest story of their careers.
Only, Piaâs dead, having accidentally perished while fleeing Janetâs house in fright. After her secret was exposedâand after she failed to chase down PiaâJanet took her own life, leaving a stack of murder mementos labeled âfor your filmâ behind. All Davis has now is Stuart, who was correct in predicting Loch Henry would lure tourists back to the area, and the smarmy team of producers who hog the mic when the documentary inevitably wins a BAFTAâand who are already greedily plotting a dramatic series adaptation of Davisâ story.
For Davis, this is all too real, but whether he likes it or not, itâs most definitely âfucking contentâ now. And as it turns out, as Black Mirror pokes into the idea of tragedy being exploited for a specifically curated type of entertainment, itâs contained in one of its most nail-biting episodes to date. A secret torture bunker hidden under a farmhouse, a filmmaker with a tangential personal connection who sets out to document the story, only to discover heâs more intimately linked to it than he ever realized? You can see why Streamberry pounced on Loch Henry, and why âLoch Henryâ is such an enjoyable episode. The details are so awful, itâs irresistible.
Black Mirror season six is now streaming on Netflix.
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