Nov 15 episode 3.5, Mr. Robot 41 minutes in.
(No spoilers btw)
Angelia (looking and feeling like an Alice who just fell down a rabbit hole) is on the subway and the poster reads
'We'll help see you through the storm'.
Of course it's an Evil Corp Insurance poster.
Across from her two women talk and the poster behind them does indeed have a rabbit on it, 'Loslan Theater' ? (hard to read the name).
Poster reads:
Kaitlin Doubleday
in
REPULSION
A New Play
Based on the film by
Roman Polanski
rabbit pic
Loslan Theater (could be lodan Theater)
The film REPULSION, is a 1965 movie directed by Roman Polanski
"A sex-repulsed woman who disapproves of her sister's boyfriend sinks into depression and has horrific visions of rape and violence."
https://gointothestory.blcklst.com/classic-60s-movie-repulsion-4065d7e9c1e0 There's a video excerpt here, wasn't going to watch it but did anyway, one could say that knowing what we know about MK ULTRA today, it's not a stretch to imagine that the authors/director might have had some familiarity on the subject.
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0059646/
So of course I'm posting all this here on PG because of the CBTS and Q posts, reference to the rabbit (which could be white or slightly glowing depending on how you look at it, think chalk drawing on blackboard), a character in the midst of living in a 'rabbit hole' so to speak, the poster about the storm, show tornado looking pic (not going to give away spoiler on the threatening storm within the episode itself)
And the Reference to Roman Polanski of course.
Some things do (coincidentally or not), get curiouser and curiouser...
Writer David Stone did some of the adaption/writing for Roman Polanski's and Gerard Brach's original screenplay, REPULSION.
David Stone has theses other works to his credit:
Secret Agent (TV Series) (written by - 7 episodes) aka 'Danger Man'
- Loyalty Always Pays (1965) ... (written by)
- English Lady Takes Lodgers (1965) ... (written by)
- A Very Dangerous Game (1965) ... (written by)
- Have a Glass of Wine (1965) ... (written by)
- The Ubiquitous Mr. Lovegrove (1965) ... (written by)
- Whatever Happened to George Foster? (1965) ... (written by)
- The Galloping Major (1964) ... (written by)
Two years after the original "Danger Man" series concluded, it was revamped and retconned. The series returned in a longer format. (1 hour/episode instead of 30 minutes). John Drake was now an agent for MI9, getting exotic assignments exclusively from Her Majesty's Secret Service as an agent of M9. This version of the series introduced several Bond-like gadgets, including a tape-recording shaver, as well as a lighter with a camera hidden inside. http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0831816/?ref_=ttfc_fc_wr3
1965
The Wednesday Play (TV Series) (written by - 1 episode)
- The Seven O'Clock Crunch (1965) ... (written by)
1965
Repulsion (adaptation & additional dialogue)
1965
Front Page Story (TV Series) (2 episodes)
- The Vital Contact (1965)
- Anonymous Donor (1965)
1964
Hide and Seek (screenplay)
Also this (Don't know if this is the same person) "David Stone author writer in the fiction thriller novel genre writing espionage and spy novel mystery thrillers."
In his Micah Dalton character series, one book is called The Orpheus Deception.
About David Stone: https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/81844/david-stone
David Stone is a former British army infantry officer. Much of his service was in Germany, both with and alongside soldiers of the Bundeswehr in peacetime and on operations. He became a military historian in 2002 and is the author of the authoritative works Hitler’s Army: The Men, Machines and Organisation, 1939–1945 (2009) and Fighting for the Fatherland: The Story of the German Soldier from 1648 to the Present Day (2006).
And people in the comments section of a review of that book mention Mr. "Stone" being his pen name. (Mixed opinions btw). One person even observed that he seemed to be British:
A surprisingly enjoyable read. I thought it was going to be another yawn inducing "thriller" with single-page "chapters" but it turned out to be very engaging. The interesting thing is the author is using the name "David Stone" as a cover - he is apparently some kind of enchilada in the intelligence community and doesn't want to reveal himself. (No picture of him obviously.) But his writing does ring true, and his language is ... dashing. He could be British or have some British connection - I can't imagine an American writer saying things like "deader than di and dodi". Unputdownable, really.
view the rest of the comments →
Celticgirlonamission ago
Whoa...that's some heavy stuff...Stone...hmmm...German soldier...family? Wow...I'm fallinggg into the hole!
kestrel9 ago
I just followed @vahelper observation about Sam Esmail and, following some additional trivia, have fallen down a historical/cultural 'who's who' of banking rabbit holes! LOL....still finding my way out of it. ;)