Mr Robot’s Rami Malek: “So much of how we live is manufactured rather than real”

“Mr Robot resonates because we’re all concerned about what’s happening in the world right now,” says the star of the hit series


“I went to the barber’s yesterday and the barber burst out laughing,” says Rami Malek. “She said, ‘Sorry for laughing – it’s just that everybody comes in asking for your haircut. And now you’re here yourself.’”

Malek shouldn't sound so shocked. Since Mr Robot first aired on Amazon last summer, the hacktivist thriller has been one of TV's most talked about shows – and given us a new trim for our time. It's already won a Golden Globe and is tipped to dominate the Emmys, with Malek among the favourites to land best actor.

Mr Robot is an addictive journey into the dark heart of modern America. Full of twists, the show follows reclusive hacker Elliot Alderson in his attempt to bring down corporate giant E Corp, which Elliot simply calls Evil Corp. In his now-iconic black hoodie, he stalks the streets of New York, shoulders hunched and eyes wild as his hacks cause mayhem.

Elliot is helped on his quest by the titular Mr Robot (an unshaven Christian Slater channelling his bad-boy Heathers heyday) who recruits him to join his hacking collective fsociety, which is run out of an abandoned amusement arcade in Coney Island.

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Or does he? Of all the twists in the compulsive first season, the best was the revelation that Elliot cannot trust his own mind: his life is upended and suddenly he is TV’s most unreliable narrator.

“He’s my polar opposite,” says Malek now. “I’m an exuberant person. I thrive on affection. I like chit-chat.”

“One of the great things about living in New York,” he says, “is that you meet so many strangers – and I love encounters with strangers. Wait, that sounds odd. What I mean is I love meeting people and hearing their stories.”

Ethnic melting pot
Malek's parents were Coptic Egyptians who moved to Los Angeles's San Fernando Valley, which he describes as "a massive ethnic melting pot – my friends were mostly first-generation Americans". His mother is an accountant and his father, now deceased, sold insurance. His older sister is a doctor and his identical twin brother, Sami, a teacher. "We're all very theatrical," he says.

Although he always knew he wanted to go into acting, his parents saw it as an unstable career, a feeling that doubtless intensified as Malek could hardly be said to have shot straight to the A-list.

Instead, he spent 10 years building up a solid reputation as a character actor, most notably in Steven Spielberg's war drama The Pacific and Paul Thomas Anderson's The Master. Along the way, there were parts as a terrorist in 24 and an Iraqi insurgent in military drama Over There. Was he angry about that typecasting?

"I believe things are going to change," he says. "In this day and age, the American son no longer has a quintessential look. I think Mr Robot reflects that.People look at me in the street now. I don't know if they differentiate between me and Elliot. There's this look, like 'There's our little hero walking around New York!'"

Isolating times
There's a certain irony to the fact that Mr Robot, a show that reflects our desperation to connect in isolating times, has resonated so strongly with fans. There are Reddit forums dedicated to unpicking its many mysteries and Tumblrs full of theories about how much of what we see is real and how much simply the product of Elliot's fevered imagination.

“Mr Robot resonates because we’re all concerned about what’s happening in the world right now – the sense that it’s just undulating right beneath our feet. We spend all our time connecting by typing on devices or viewing the world through lenses. There is something inauthentic about that. So much of how we live is manufactured rather than real.”

Does that make him anxious?

“Absolutely. I’ve always been concerned with where we’re going and this show’s only made me more so.” How? “The world is chaotic at the moment and we’re shining a light on that. This show is asking exactly what effect this chaos might have on all of us. Do we all ultimately feel as uncomfortable as Elliot?”

There are, however, times when it all feels a bit too much.

“Our audience is so enlightened. I like engaging with fans, taking selfies with them on the street. But one day I was hanging out with Sami and we were getting approached a lot. So he said, ‘Give them the Elliot – no one messes with that guy.’”

- (Guardian Wire)