Severance

2022 - 4 - 8

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Image courtesy of "Polygon"

Severance creator decodes season 1 cliffhanger ending, season 2 ... (Polygon)

Severance's 9-episode run ends with a cliffhanger finale. Here are answers to what happens to Mark, Helly, Dichen Lachman's Ms. Casey, and when season 2 ...

Why not just have her like, wake up sitting in a chair?” or, you know, “Why is Mark a disembodied voice instead of being there in the room with her?” And we talked about this idea of like, psychologically, we almost want to make her feel like the building is a person, like the building is speaking to her, Lumon is speaking to her from on high. But that was something, again, where in many conversations with Ben and others we wanted to make sure that everything was being grounded in a reality that we could eventually justify. Like being in a place where truly the logic of the world prevents you from getting away somehow is so uniquely terrifying to me. And so that changed a lot of the story beats is sort of trying to make that make to honor that idea. And what is that image that he’s drawing, and what is the significance of that, and what’s he going for? But we talked about this idea that there’s been distrust intentionally seeded between the departments, and that each of them has a secret thing that they’re doing that the other departments don’t know about, that they don’t even necessarily understand what it is like. And a lot of the cult-like element of her character came from those conversations. In terms of the story, I mean, not a ton; most of the story beats stayed the same. But ultimately it was like, No, it’s this; this leaves him in such an unsettled, vulnerable place that it was just interesting to think of what the next stage in his journey would be. Then we were going to see some of the fallout of it, and it was gonna it was gonna continue on. And so this idea that she would reach kind of the end of the line and realize that she’s the ultimate enemy, she’s the one who is keeping herself there — and not only that she’s keeping herself there, but that she’s sort of running the whole show — just seemed like the most heartbreaking and horrific revelation for that character. So we got the creator to shed a bit of light on where season 1 leaves the world of Severance.

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Image courtesy of "The Verge"

Severance season 1 review: wonderfully tense workplace horror (The Verge)

The first season of Severance on Apple TV Plus is a sci-fi thriller that combines a workplace drama and existential horror, with a cast that includes Adam ...

Some of this comes down to the way the show looks: the severed floor is like something out of a parallel dimension. The first season of Severance is stressful, but it’s also a lot more fun than a Lumon-allocated Music Dance Experience. We’ve all seen the stories of what tech giants try to get away with in the real world; Severance posits a future where they can do literally anything in secret because employees have knowingly signed up to be lab rats. It’s the kind of show where a celebratory waffle party inevitably devolves into something bizarre and uncomfortable. It’s almost like a cubicle farm ripped out of the ‘60s, but with strange retrofuturistic computers, twisting hallways designed for maximum confusion, and a breakroom that doubles as a psychological torture chamber. The sense of discomfort — and, eventually, outright terror — grows as the show progresses, and you learn more about Lumon and what life is like in the basement. When they leave work, their next memory is of arriving the next day. They feel the effects of sleep, but they never experience it themselves. We’re introduced to the concept through Mark (Adam Scott). On the outside, Mark is grieving the loss of his wife, and he signed up to be severed in hopes of avoiding those feelings for at least part of the day. The work self, meanwhile (the two are colloquially referred to as “innies” and “outies”), is stuck in a life that is nothing but work. Who wouldn’t want to cut that drudgery out of their lives and focus on the good parts? Your life and memories are yours right up until you hop in the elevator at Lumon Industries, go down to the severed floor, and get to work.

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Image courtesy of "Den of Geek"

Severance Season 1 Ending Explained | Den of Geek (Den of Geek)

The innies have a big day out in the exhilarating Severance season 1 finale. Here is everything you need to know about that shocking ending.

Since Burt is the only person he feels he can trust, he heads over to the address that his outie has marked on the map. While all of these emotionally loaded things are happening at the same exact time, strongman Dylan gets intercepted by Milchick, and the entire experiment gets terminated. He races up to the door and pounds on it, shouting “BURT! BURT!” Unfortunately, Burt doesn’t answer in time to get to chat with Irv’s innie. Unfortunately, Irv finds out that he doesn’t seem to have a family or friends or any sort of social support network on the outside. Innie Irv wakes up and starts to go about the business of snooping through his outie’s belongings. The initial mission that the innies agreed to was to find someone they could trust and tell them everything. An unflinching look at society’s insistence on maintaining a “work/life balance,” Severance introduced us to the idea of the “severance” process, or the process of implanting a chip into one’s brain in order to surgically separate work and life memories. Severance wasn’t going to leave us hanging without first serving up some jaw-dropping reveals, and they disclose the true identity of Helly’s outie in the first few moments of the episode. Full of tension, anxiety, and cliffhangers galore, the fantastic Severance season 1 finale is sure to go down in the history books as one of the best season finales of 2022. In the finale, the innies stage a daring attempt to find out more about their lives in the real world. Ok, all joking aside, the last 10 minutes of this episode are “I-forgot-to-breathe” good. And Helly, ah, poor Helly, no one in her outie’s world is trustworthy, least of all her outie self.

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Image courtesy of "Esquire.com"

You Can Blame Ben Stiller For That <em>Severance</em> Cliffhanger (Esquire.com)

There was almost another episode, creator Dan Erickson reveals, until Stiller had a bright idea.

There’s a sense of what Lumon is trying to do and the role that our main characters are going to play in that, and where it all will culminate. We want to be sure that we're honoring what works about the show and what people have fallen in love with. We want to reward people for their enthusiasm and for caring so much about where it's all going to go. Ultimately, we wanted this cliffhanger episode to be the moment where we finally get to hit the ground and go, go, go. We wanted to reward the viewers with something visceral, where you're in the perspective of the characters and it's confusing and scary. Within Lumon, we're going to see more of the building, and we’ll see more of the outside world, too. How did you find the balance of tone and the tension in that episode? We have to set the boundary that much firmer, because the boundary has been muddied. I love that we're living in a time of rethinking the structure of labor. Are we making an office show right as offices are going extinct?” What was crazy and surprising was just how much the pandemic re-contextualized the question of work-life balance, and what you owe or don’t owe to your work. I would think a lot about the person I wanted to be and the career I wanted to have. In those hours on the job, I was resentful of not being in a grander place in life, but there was a sense of escape to it.

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Image courtesy of "Vanity Fair"

Adam Scott on That 'Severance' Cliff-Hanger: “I Know It's Cruel and ... (Vanity Fair)

But like anyone who loved the end of 'Lost' season one, Scott knows the power of delayed gratification.

“The discipline it took them to wait until that moment to get that camera to go down that hole and looking up at the actors…it was incredible,” Scott says. “And just how I think I leapt up from the couch and just screamed, ‘No!’” And Irving, having embarked on the year‘s best workplace romance with Burt (Christopher Walken) before Burt is forced to retire, finds Burt out in the real world for the first time—seemingly happy at home with his husband.

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Image courtesy of "Vulture"

What Is Lumon Industries Up to on Severance? (Vulture)

Following the first season finale of the Apple TV+ series Severance, “The We We Are,” a look back at all the clues the show has given us about Lumon ...

Maybe the second season of Severance is about the person sent there next in order to help Kier come back. (I am very aware that my “Adam is Javi” theory from Yellowjackets did not pan out!) Maybe I’m taking a leap forward in interpreting lines like Mark’s “We’re people, not parts of people” and Helena’s “I don’t think severance divides us. - The little 2-D animated version of Kier Eagan says “I love you” to the person who successfully sorted all their quarterly MDR data, and that’s what the cult is looking for, right? … In this theory, the larvae eventually eats and replaces you.” So sort of like the horror movies The Brood and Possession, in which host/original bodies are replaced by duplicates? That transference of consciousness and the manipulation of people’s bodies is what I think Lumon has been working on this whole time with the severance procedure, with the end goal of bringing Kier Eagan back to life. “The We We Are” ends on a cliffhanger for the MDR team once Milchick breaks through the door and tackles Dylan, ending the Innies’ rule-breaking excursion.

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Image courtesy of "The Cosmic Circus"

Review: 'Severance' Season One - A Head-splitter of an Entrance ... (The Cosmic Circus)

Anthony Flagg reviews the first season of Severance now streaming on Apple TV. Severance was directed by Ben Stiller and stars Adam Scott.

In the last 20 or so minutes of the season one finale “The We We Are” I should have worn my Apple Watch to see the leaps my heart rate was making as the final moment intensifies and cuts to black. His alcoholism more than once drove people away from him and it was interesting to see this depicted quite accurately throughout the season (one example is Mark eating minimal food to drink more instead). Even when in his “innie” mode, others notice things such as the smell he sweats off to help underscore the severity of his drinking. As the work and the season progress, the uncoverings of Lumon are horrifying – aversion therapy that hammers away at their apologies until they actually “mean it” as Milchick urges them on for the 1,287th time. So back to Data Refiners. In the MDR (Macro data refinement) wing, the team gathers clusters of numbers on a screen and categorizes them into certain digital buckets based on their interpretation and emotional connection to what they are seeing on the screen. Currently in the spotlight for his portrayal of Carmine Falcone in The Batman is John Turturro as Irving, the longest-tenured “innie” as they refer to themselves, the 8-hour split that works within the walls. The show discussions on the subreddit have been incredible and as of this writing, Variety has confirmed that it will be renewed for a second season.

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Image courtesy of "Paste Magazine"

The Severance Season Finale Leaves More Questions Than Answers (Paste Magazine)

To put it simply, Severence is lucky that it was renewed for a second season the day before the season finale aired.

Nevertheless, if Severance Season 2 is going to live up to the expectations of the first, it’s going to need to pick up the pace and raise the stakes even more. As intriguing as the entire season was, and as much as I will be eagerly awaiting the second season, it was almost painfully obvious that Severance was written to be more than one season long. We’re left to ponder a laundry list of questions; What is it like on the research floor where Ms. Casey was sent? He tells Helly that everyone in the world will “all be Keir’s children” because of Helena’s decision to sever herself, which is a welcome expansion to the exploration of the real world consequences of being a severed worker. (Though we’ve seen again and again that Cobel is one of Keir’s fiercest devotees outside of the Eagan family, there is still no true explanation for why she is so deeply invested in the company.) Regardless, Cobel manages to contact Milchick and send him after Dylan, which leads to the end of the MDR outing into the real world. As Dylan barely holds on to the override switches that keep the innies in the outside world, Severance finally gives us the big reveals we’ve been waiting for all season.

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Image courtesy of "Mashable"

'Severance' Season 1 finale: 20 fan theories and questions we need ... (Mashable)

There are still lingering concerns about the baby goat department, the Lumon Board, and the Eagan family, though fans have some solid theories about the ...

Later in the series, Dylan requests a crystal cube with the new MDR group photo engraved on it as his prize for being Refiner of the Quarter. He takes it to the waffle party, and then carries it to the security office and sets it down before enabling the overtime contingency. Helly set that Lumon gala ablaze, Mark's sister Devon wants to take his story to the press, and Outie Burt and Outie Irv are about to meet face to face. When the overtime function is enabled, Irving's Innie wakes up in his Outie's house and uncovers a box of his father's U.S. Navy memorabilia in his closet. When Dylan broke into the security office to enable the overtime contingency, we got quite a bit of insight into Lumon, its employees, and other ways that those severed chips can be used. In Episode 7, we learn that Mark's wife Gemma — who supposedly died in a car accident shortly before he started at Lumon — is actually Ms. Casey. Cobel and Milchick know this, and that the two don't remember each other as severed Innies, but right before the finale ends Mark's Innie sees a photo of Gemma and connects the dots. The Eagan family and philosophy doesn't just run Lumon. Cobel's shrine proved that for some it's essentially a religion, and we come to learn that the Eagan presence overlaps with education, medical facilities, banks, and more. Just when you think her existence can't get any bleaker, Milchick sends her down a dark hallway (the same hallway Irv's Outie paints) and she takes the elevator down to (what I believe is) the department Petey told Mark about; the "one where you don't get to leave." Perhaps the most noteworthy item here is a breathing tube/hospital bracelet that bears the name "Charlotte Cobel" and the birth date "3-17-44." Fans wonder if Charlotte was a family member, such as Cobel's mother. Later that night, Milchick enabled the overtime contingency and woke up Dylan's Outie in hopes of getting the card back, so you know those cards have to be important. We finally got to see some of our favorite Innies in the outside world, but the finale ended on a major cliffhanger and left fans with a slew of new questions. Vocal egg-hater Ben Stiller mentioned in a Twitter A&A that the egg bar was "necessary for the story," and perhaps that's just because Irv needed something soft to smash inside the handbook. One leading theory is that MDR is teaching Lumon how to potentially manipulate emotions of severed people (!!!). Kier Eagan's statue explained "the four tempers" that define human beings are woe, frolic, dread, and malice.

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Image courtesy of "Vox"

Severance review: The Apple TV+ drama about worker organizing ... (Vox)

Mark (Adam Scott) and Helly (Britt Lower) stand in front of the Mark and Helly, plotting. Apple TV+. You may not have ...

We cannot ignore what happens to us at work, even if we’d like to, and even if our overseers do their best to facilitate the idea that our work lives are separate from the rest of our lives. It’s a narrative that puts the brutality of work front and center, and through stories, we can learn that what seems impossible is not. A union cannot solve every problem workers face, but it wins us a seat at the table to determine at least some of the conditions of our working lives. (TV writers are represented by the Writers Guild of America West; as an editorial employee of Vox, I’m represented by their sibling, Writers Guild of America East.) There’s a reason the saying “an injury to one is an injury to all” has stuck around in the labor world, and Hollywood writers are especially good at using their collective power to secure better conditions for everyone in their industry. “You’re not a person” — the message Helly’s outtie tells her innie — brutally epitomizes the loss of dignity and humanity we endure in the workplace. Severance is a road map of organizing, a revolution in progress, and it begins and ends with caring about your fellow worker, who in turn cares about you. In Severance, Helly, newly severed and rebellious, represents the audience surrogate and an unadulterated reaction to all this, and perhaps what everyone’s reaction should be to spending their days doing pointless tasks for the profit of others: rage, repulsion, and determination to escape. Macrodata Refinement is a perfect example of a job that doesn’t really need to be done, and one brought about by Severance creator, writer, and showrunner Dan Erickson’s real-life temp job entering data. There seems to be a direct correlation between how necessary your job is and how low you are paid and indecently you are treated. While the workplace sitcom has been a staple of TV for decades, no show about work has captured quite so accurately how damaging work can be in real life. Entire sectors of the economy are based on a large pool of low-wage workers, aided by state governments run in large part by business owners. With no personal memories and no context of the outside world, attempts to understand their jobs and surroundings are childlike and naive.

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Image courtesy of "The Spool"

Podcast: Theodore Shapiro on the Music of Severance - The Spool (The Spool)

Welcome to Right on Cue, the podcast where we interview film, TV, and video game composers about the origins and nuances of their latest works.

And it’s a place that Mark ( Adam Scott) and the other three members of his department will have to navigate, as they work to figure out what their real lives are like and discern what they’re actually doing for Lumon. That’s the eerie premise of Apple TV+’s latest series, Severance, a Ben Stiller-directed corporate satire that imagines a company that allows its employees to undergo an experimental procedure to cleave their memories in twain. In a world where so many people have learned to start working from home the last couple of years (and many still do), the phrase “don’t take your work home with you” has become ever more dubious.

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Image courtesy of "Daily Mail"

Patricia Arquette, Kathryn Hahn and Britt Lower at season finale ... (Daily Mail)

Patricia Arquette, Kathryn Hahn and Britt Lower smiled big on the red carpet for Severance's season finale on Friday. Arquette attended the event in a black ...

His dark hair was slicked back and he added a pair of clear frames His dark hair was slicked back and he added a pair of clear frames. Her blonde hair was parted in the middle and brushed straight down the sides of her face. Tommy actor Michael Chermus hit the carpet in a black blazer and pants combination He added a pair of light brown pants to the look. His silver hair stood up in a shock atop his head.

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Image courtesy of "Forbes"

The 'Severance' Finale Cements It As One Of The Best New Shows ... (Forbes)

As for Severance, this is a deeply weird, extremely brilliant series concocted by of all people, Ben Stiller. It is not a comedy. At least not outright, though ...

Helle – We learn that Helle is actually Helena Egan, daughter of the current head of the company, and she has severed herself in order to prove a point that severance is a good thing that anyone can undergo. Mark – Learns that Outie Mark’s wife is still alive, and exists as Miss Casey at Lumon. We learned that last week, but Mark himself learns it this week when he sees a photo of her for the first time. You slowly start to realize how horrifying this is over the course of the series, and yes, there is some extremely good commentary in here on the state of corporate life and how workers are treated. If one version of you never has to deal with work, the other version of you that the severance process creates, only exists at work. The story follows a company, Lumon, who uses the practice of severance on certain employees. Oh, and Apple managed to have the Oscar Best Picture winner on its service this yeartoo, with CODA.

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Image courtesy of "Manchester Evening News"

Will there be a Severance season 2 on Apple TV+? (Manchester Evening News)

The drama stars Adam Scott as Mark S, who is a grieving widower who makes the decision to forget who he is for all of his working days, through surgery. The ...

Season one of Severance had a shocking ending that left fans with several questions. On Wednesday, April 6, Apple TV+ addressed the question of whether the popular drama would be returning for a second season through a tweet, captioned with a short 12-second clip. Since the release of Severance season in February this year, fans have been eager to know whether there will be a returning season.

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Image courtesy of "9to5Mac"

These 'Severance' wallpapers for iPhone will make you feel like a ... (9to5Mac)

While season one may be over, you still can enjoy a bit more of the Apple TV+ show Severance with these Lumon inspired wallpapers.

Share your thoughts in the comment section below. After nine episodes, Apple just ended season one of Severance. The show is based on the premise of a mysterious company called Lumon Industries, which features a severed floor wherein workers cannot recall their personal memories. Parker has created some nice wallpapers inspired by the show.

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