Rob Delaney Cast in Netflix’s Black Mirror Season 6

Netflix black mirror He was cast by comedian Rob Delaney in Season 6. Many Marvel fans know Delaney from his now iconic role as “Peter” in Deadpool 2’s version of X-Force; Delaney has also starred in films like Hobbs & Shaw, and family-friendly reboots like Warner Bros. The movie Tom & Jerry and Home Sweet Home Alone. Delaney will also play a role in the much-anticipated sequel Tom Cruise: Impossible – Dead Reckoning Part One next year, and has a role in Matthew von Argylle’s spy thriller, which is in development.

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(Photo: 20th Century Studios)

There are currently no details on who Rob Delaney will play in Black Mirror – or what kind of story his section of the anthology series will tell.

Black Mirror has been on a long hiatus since the blockbuster interactive movie Black Mirror: Bandersnatch released at the end of 2018, and the fifth season was released in the summer of 2019. Rights issues have led to executive producers Charlie Booker and Annabelle Jones leaving production company House of Tomorrow Shine and forming their own production house, Broke and Bones. This year it appears that the rights issues have been resolved, and Broke and Bones has begun work on the production of Black Mirror Season 6.

The sixth season (or “series”) of Black Mirror will be longer than the five-episode season. And the cast of Black Mirror for Season 6 also looks pretty stacked up, with Rob Delaney joining a squad that already includes Zazzie Beetz (Joker, Deadpool 2), Papa Isidu (I May Destroy You), Josh Hartnett (The Falthy), Aaron Paul (Breaking Bad, Westworld), Kate Mara (House of Cards), Danny Ramirez (The Falcon and the Winter Soldier, Top Gun: Maverick), Clara Rugaard (Press Play), Auden Thornton (This Is Us), Anjana Vasan (Killing Eve), Rory Culkin ( Succession), Annie Murphy (Sheets Creek) and Salma Hayek (The Eternal).

Black Mirror summary below. The show premiered in 2011, and is often compared to being The Twilight Zone reimagined for the technological age we live in. Most episodes function as stand-alone stories, often told as mini-features (longer than a TV show, shorter than a movie):

“The show looks inward, at the darker sides of humanity and society. It is done through the theme of technology, hence the second meaning. The black mirror is the screen that rules our lives. Taking into account contemporary phenomena (from the unbridled popularity of talent shows on television to the impact of the media) social communication and smartphones over our lives) as a starting point and speculate how these phenomena might/will develop in the future. Each episode tells a different story with different protagonists and focuses on a different topic.”

source: Limit

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