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Severance (TV series)

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Severance
Genre
Created byDan Erickson
ShowrunnerDan Erickson
Directed by
Starring
ComposerTheodore Shapiro
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes9
Production
Executive producers
Producers
  • Adam Scott
  • Patricia Arquette
  • Aoife McArdle
  • Amanda Overton
  • Gerry Robert Byrne
Cinematography
Editors
  • Geoffrey Richman
  • Gershon Hinkson
  • Erica Freed Marker
Running time40–57 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkApple TV+
ReleaseFebruary 18, 2022 (2022-02-18) –
present (present)

Severance is an American science fiction psychological thriller television series created by Dan Erickson and directed by Ben Stiller and Aoife McArdle. It stars Adam Scott, Zach Cherry, Britt Lower, Tramell Tillman, Jen Tullock, Dichen Lachman, Michael Chernus, John Turturro, Christopher Walken, and Patricia Arquette. The plot follows Mark Scout (Scott), an employee of the fictional corporation Lumon Industries who agrees to a "severance" program in which his non-work memories are separated from his work memories.

The series premiered on Apple TV+ on February 18, 2022. It received acclaim from critics and audiences for its cinematography, direction, production design, musical score, story, and performances. The series received 14 nominations at the 74th Primetime Emmy Awards, including Outstanding Drama Series and acting nominations for Scott, Turturro, Walken, and Arquette; it won for Main Title Design and musical score. In April 2022, the series was renewed for a second season, which is set to premiere on January 17, 2025.[2]

Premise

[edit]

Biotechnology corporation Lumon Industries uses a medical procedure called "severance" to separate the consciousness of their employees when an implanted chip is activated. The implant is generally activated spatially, when they enter one of the restricted "severed" floors of the company, ostensibly to ensure highly classified work cannot be leaked.

When severed workers are at work, they are dubbed "Innies" and cannot remember anything of their personal history, lives, or the world outside, though they retain general knowledge. Because their consciousness only exists while at work, an Innie never experiences going home, leaving the building, etc. From their perspective, they are eternally at work. When outside work, they are dubbed "Outies" and cannot remember their time at work. To an Outie, it feels as if they arrive at work, only to immediately leave, though 8 hours have passed.

There is a strictly enforced separation of Innies and Outies. Due to this, Innies and Outies experience two different lives, with distinct personalities and agendas.

The severance procedure is highly controversial in the world of the show, bringing up the ethics and vulnerability of Innies, who have no choice but to work at the demand and benefit of their Outies who have opted out of that unpleasant portion of their lives, and whose lack of personal history, oversight, and isolation make them susceptible to control.

Season one centers on one severed employee, Mark (Adam Scott). Mark's Innie is newly appointed as the head of his department after the mysterious and abrupt disappearance of his friend and boss, Petey. Mark must balance the challenges of managing his department, including the onboarding of belligerent new Innie, Helly (Britt Lower) and his increasing disquiet at the cult-like Lumon. Mark's Outie must deal with the personal tragedies which lead to his decision to become severed, and the sudden overlap of his separate lives when controversial mysteries from Lumon begin to intrude into his Outie life.

Cast and characters

[edit]

Main

[edit]
  • Adam Scott as Mark Scout, a former history professor and a severed worker for Lumon Industries in the Macrodata Refinement division, whose "outie" is grieving the death of his wife.
  • Zach Cherry as Dylan George, Mark's severed co-worker, who particularly enjoys company perks.[3]
  • Britt Lower as Helly Riggs, a new severed employee who replaces Petey.
  • Tramell Tillman as Seth Milchick, the supervisor on the severed floor at Lumon.
  • Jen Tullock as Devon Scout-Hale, Mark's pregnant sister.
  • Dichen Lachman as Ms. Casey, the wellness counselor on the severed floor.
  • Michael Chernus as Ricken Hale, Devon's husband and Mark's brother-in-law, an inspirational self-help author.
  • John Turturro as Irving Bailiff, Mark's severed co-worker, who is a stickler for company policy and is drawn to Burt.[4]
  • Christopher Walken as Burt Goodman, another severed employee and the head of the Optics and Design division who is drawn to Irving.[4]
  • Patricia Arquette as Harmony Cobel, the manager of the severed floor at Lumon, who has a false identity outside of work as Mrs. Selvig, Mark's next-door neighbor.

Recurring

[edit]
  • Yul Vazquez as Peter "Petey" Kilmer, a former severed worker and Mark's best friend, who left Lumon under mysterious circumstances.
  • Michael Cumpsty as Doug Graner (Season 1), the head of security on Lumon's severed floor.
  • Nikki M. James as Alexa, Devon's midwife and one of Mark's love interests.
  • Sydney Cole Alexander as Natalie, Lumon's PR representative and speaker for the mysterious Board.
  • Nora Dale as Gabby Arteta, the wife of Senator Angelo Arteta. She underwent severance to avoid the pain of childbirth.
  • Claudia Robinson as Felicia, Optics employee at Lumon.
  • Mark Kenneth Smaltz as Judd, security guard at Lumon.

Guest

[edit]
  • Marc Geller as Kier Eagan, the founder of Lumon Industries, who is worshipped with cult-like devotion within the company. Despite his death, he is represented through sculptures, paintings, and recordings.
  • Cassidy Layton as June Kilmer, Petey's daughter.
  • Joanne Kelly as Nina, Petey's ex-wife.
  • Ethan Flower as Angelo Arteta, a Lumon-backed state senator who supports legalizing the severance procedure and is married to Gabby Arteta, with whom he has three children.
  • Karen Aldridge as Reghabi, a former Lumon surgeon who reintegrated Petey.
  • Michael Siberry as Jame Eagan, the current CEO of Lumon Industries.
  • Gwendoline Christie (season 2)
  • Bob Balaban as Mark W. (season 2), a new member of MDR[5]
  • Merritt Wever (season 2)
  • Alia Shawkat as Gwendolyn Y. (season 2), a new member of MDR[5]
  • Robby Benson (season 2)
  • Stefano Carannante as Dario R. (season 2), a new member of MDR[5]
  • Ólafur Darri Ólafsson (season 2)
  • John Noble (season 2)
  • Sarah Bock (season 2)

Ben Stiller has an uncredited voice cameo as an animated version of Kier Eagan.[6]

Episodes

[edit]
SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
First airedLast aired
19February 18, 2022 (2022-02-18)April 8, 2022 (2022-04-08)
210[2]January 17, 2025 (2025-01-17)[2]March 21, 2025 (2025-03-21)[2]

Season 1 (2022)

[edit]
No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal release date
11"Good News About Hell"Ben StillerDan EricksonFebruary 18, 2022 (2022-02-18)
Mark Scout, who works in Lumon Industries' Macrodata Refinement (MDR) division, discovers he is being promoted to department head in light of coworker Petey's sudden departure. His first task is to orientate Helly, the replacement, who wakes up in a conference room with no memory of who or where she is. After being given an orientation and learning her name, she demands and is allowed to leave but finds she is unable to do so. She then sees a video explaining that she has undergone the "severance" procedure, which split her memories to create a version of herself that will only exist inside the workplace. The "outside" version of Mark, a former professor grieving his wife's death and living in the Lumon-subsidized town of Kier, encounters a man claiming to be Petey who gives him a letter with cryptic instructions. Mark returns home and interacts with his neighbor Mrs. Selvig, unaware that she is his boss, senior manager Harmony Cobel.
22"Half Loop"Ben StillerDan EricksonFebruary 18, 2022 (2022-02-18)
The previous day, Helly undergoes the severance procedure as a new employee, implanting a microchip inside her brain. At the office, the severed Helly is introduced to her new coworkers, Dylan and Irving, and is instructed that her job is to sort encrypted numbers into digital bins as part of "macrodata refinement". During a welcome party headed by floor manager Milchick, Helly becomes uncomfortable and attempts to escape by writing her outside self (or "outie") a note of resignation, but the elevator shuts down. Mark claims this is due to Lumon's built-in "code detectors" which prevent unauthorized communication between selves. Mark claims responsibility and is put into the "break room" as punishment. Later, Irving hallucinates a black liquid covering his desk and is administered a "wellness check", where counselor Ms. Casey recites various facts about Irving's outie, with Irving forced to react neutrally. At the wellness center, Irving also meets Burt, the head of the two-person Optics and Design department. Outside, Mark once again meets with Petey, who explains that he has "reintegration sickness" from reversing his severance. Petey tells Mark of the break room and plays a recording of himself repeatedly reading out a stringent apology, with Milchick forcing him to repeat the lines. Mark gives Petey shelter in his house. As he is taking a shower, Petey suffers hallucinations and collapses.
33"In Perpetuity"Ben StillerAndrew ColvilleFebruary 25, 2022 (2022-02-25)
Petey tells Mark that mysterious benefactors helped him undergo the reintegration procedure. While Mark is at work, his sister Devon and brother-in-law Ricken deliver a book authored by the latter to his doorstep, which Mrs. Selvig steals and takes to Lumon to check for hidden messages. As she searches Mark's house, Petey recognizes her as Cobel and flees the house, suffering more hallucinations and eventually collapsing at a convenience store. At the office, Helly learns her resignation request sent to her "outie" has been denied. Mark thwarts her various attempts to smuggle other messages to her outie. To help Helly understand why she is working at Lumon, Irving suggests they show her the office's Perpetuity Wing, which documents the history of Lumon's founder, Kier Eagan, and his succeeding dynasty. After attempting another escape, Helly is brought to the break room, where Milchick forces her to repeatedly recite an apologetic passage. After his shift, Mark follows ambulance traffic to the convenience store and witnesses Petey being carried away by paramedics after his breathing stops. Mark rushes home to hide evidence of Petey's stay, but is interrupted when Petey's abandoned cellphone rings.
44"The You You Are"Aoife McArdleKari DrakeMarch 4, 2022 (2022-03-04)
Mark misses the call on Petey's phone and stashes it, noticing several missed calls from the same blocked number. The next day, Irving visits Optics & Design, where he grows closer to Burt and discovers Ricken's book left behind by Milchick during Helly's attempted escape. Mark decides to keep the book despite promising to give it to management. Helly returns from the break room after being forced to read her apology over a thousand times; she finds a paper cutter and threatens Cobel with self-mutilation unless she is granted a recorded resignation request. However, her outie sends back a recording firmly denying the request. Later that night, Mark receives a news notification reporting that Petey died from an "unknown ailment"; Petey's phone rings shortly after. Cobel attends the funeral as Mrs. Selvig and extracts Petey's severance chip prior to his cremation. She then has Ms. Casey perform a "special" wellness check on Mark, which she watches remotely. Casey has Mark sculpt his emotional state out of clay; Mark sculpts a tree, which his outie visited in remembrance of his late wife Gemma after the funeral. Irving discovers that O&D actually has at least seven employees, working in a massive unlabelled back room. Dylan finds Ricken's book hidden in Mark's files. Helly smuggles out an extension cord and hangs herself in an elevator shaft.
55"The Grim Barbarity of Optics and Design"Aoife McArdleAnna Ouyang MoenchMarch 11, 2022 (2022-03-11)
Helly is injured by her suicide attempt, but ultimately survives; she returns to work three days later. Mark continues to read Ricken's book, which carries strong anti-establishment sentiments. Outside work, Devon gives birth. When Helly returns, Cobel orders Ms. Casey to watch her closely, but Mark sneaks Helly out of MDR and reveals he has been recreating Petey's map. Helly agrees to help Mark with recreating the map after they discover a previously unknown department in which a single employee feeds baby goats. Burt admits to Irving and Dylan that he lied about the size of O&D due to MDR being seen as untrustworthy; they realize Lumon is pitting the departments against one another. Burt takes the two to O&D's back room and introduces them to his employees.
66"Hide and Seek"Aoife McArdleAmanda OvertonMarch 18, 2022 (2022-03-18)
Lumon security chief Doug Graner calls Cobel to inform her he has identified ex-employee Reghabi as the one responsible for Petey's reintegration. Irving and Burt admit their feelings to one another, but the former admits he is not ready to commit to a relationship. After learning Ms. Casey was sent to the break room for failing to watch him and Helly, Mark has Irving introduce MDR to O&D, where he calls for the departments to work together to uncover Lumon's secrets. However, Milchick finds them and sends Mark to the break room. Milchick later briefly awakens Dylan's innie inside his outie's home to locate a card Dylan stole from O&D, leading Dylan's innie to discover he has a son. Devon meets Gabby, a woman she met at the birthing lodge, but Gabby does not recognize her; Devon later learns Gabby's husband Angelo Arteta is a Lumon-backed state senator who supports legalizing severance. Cobel, as Mrs. Selvig, gets close to Devon and Ricken by acting as their lactation consultant. Mark goes on a date with Alexa, Devon's midwife, to a concert by Petey's daughter's punk-rock band, and sings along to an anti-Lumon protest song. Later, Mark finally answers Petey's phone and is contacted by Reghabi to meet in person at a nearby university. Cobel orders a keycard-locked door to be installed at the entrance to MDR.
77"Defiant Jazz"Ben StillerHelen LeighMarch 25, 2022 (2022-03-25)
While Mark is meeting with Reghabi, Graner enters the building – following a tip from campus security – and tells Mark he works with him. Reghabi kills Graner and gives Mark his access card, telling him to bring it to his innie. Devon tells Cobel (posing as Mrs. Selvig) that she suspects Gabby severed her memories to avoid the pains of childbirth. Milchick engages in a "Music Dance Experience" with the department as a prize for Helly; Dylan refuses to participate and eventually attacks Milchick, enraged that he cannot know any more information about his child. Milchick leaves to report the incident to Cobel. Dylan tells the department about Lumon's ability to wake them up outside the severed floor, known as the "overtime contingency". Mark and Helly scheme to find the security office; inside, they find Lumon strictly monitors all of its employees, and that the overtime contingency is activated using two levers. Dylan offers to stay behind after hours to wake Mark and Helly up on the outside. Irving departs to O&D, worried about Burt's safety. Upon arrival, he discovers that Burt is retiring, and openly berates the non-severed Milchick for exploiting the severed employees. After work, Alexa visits a drunken Mark, who scares her off after ripping up a photo of Gemma. After she leaves, Mark reassembles the photo, revealing it to be of Ms. Casey.
88"What's for Dinner?"Ben StillerChris BlackApril 1, 2022 (2022-04-01)
Irving's outie is shown to be living alone in an apartment, where he spends much of his time painting identical images of a dark corridor. Helly reaches 100% on her data refinement file, thereby meeting MDR's quota for the quarter. Cobel schedules Mark for a final wellness session with Ms. Casey, and appears disappointed when Mark and Ms. Casey fail to remember each other as husband and wife. She then orders Ms. Casey sent back down to the "testing floor", whose entrance is shown to be the same corridor in Irving's paintings. While MDR celebrates quota, Cobel is suspended by the board for withholding knowledge of Helly's suicide attempt and her extracurricular activities as "Mrs. Selvig". The MDR team prepares for Dylan to remotely awaken them on the outside; Helly kisses Mark before departing. Mark's outie attends Ricken's book-reading party and tells Mrs. Selvig that he plans to quit Lumon; she encourages him to do so. Dylan receives a "waffle party" as a reward for meeting quota, in which he dons a Kier Eagan head and sits within a replica of Kier's bedroom in the Perpetuity Wing while ritualistic and seductive dances are performed in front of him. Dylan leaves midway to access the security office and activates the overtime contingency to awaken Mark, Irving, and Helly's innies in the outside world.
99"The We We Are"Ben StillerDan EricksonApril 8, 2022 (2022-04-08)
Mark's innie awakens in Devon's home and finds himself hugging Cobel. While excusing himself to find Devon, he calls Cobel by name, alerting her that the overtime contingency has been activated. Cobel calls Milchick and has him check the security office. Mark privately reveals to Devon that he is in innie form; Devon tells him of Gemma's death, and learns that "Mrs. Selvig" is Mark's boss. Devon encourages Mark to report Lumon's misdeeds to the press as Lumon likely controls the police. Irving wakes up in his apartment, discovering his outie's paintings and background in the U.S. Navy, and finds a map and employee directory in the closet which he uses to locate Burt. Helly wakes up at a Lumon gala where she learns that her outie is Helena Eagan – daughter of Lumon CEO Jame Eagan – who underwent severance to build public support for legalizing the procedure. Cobel races to the gala and attempts to stop Helly from making a scheduled speech. Milchick reaches the security office and cuts his way through the makeshift restraints Dylan has placed on the door. Helly gets onstage and tells the crowd of the innies' subjugation and torment. Irving arrives at Burt's house only to find he is already in a relationship. Mark finds a photo confirming Ms. Casey to be Gemma. He rushes to tell Devon, but is only able to say "She's alive!" before Milchick tackles Dylan, deactivating the overtime contingency and reverting the three to their outie state.

Season 2

[edit]
No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten by [7]Original release date [2]
101TBABen Stiller[8]Dan EricksonJanuary 17, 2025 (2025-01-17)
112TBASam Donovan[9]Mohamad El MasriJanuary 24, 2025 (2025-01-24)
123TBATBAWei-Ning YuJanuary 31, 2025 (2025-01-31)
134TBATBAAnna Ouyang MoenchFebruary 7, 2025 (2025-02-07)
145TBASam Donovan[10]TBAFebruary 14, 2025 (2025-02-14)
156TBAUta Briesewitz[11]Erin WagonerFebruary 21, 2025 (2025-02-21)
167TBATBADan Erickson & Mark FriedmanFebruary 28, 2025 (2025-02-28)
178TBATBAAdam Countee and K. C. PerryMarch 7, 2025 (2025-03-07)
189TBAUta Briesewitz[12]Dan EricksonMarch 14, 2025 (2025-03-14)
1910TBATBADan EricksonMarch 21, 2025 (2025-03-21)

Ben Stiller directs five episodes; Jessica Lee Gagné also directs.[2]

Production

[edit]

Background

[edit]

While studying English at Western Washington University, Dan Erickson became interested in the theater department, writing short plays and other creative works. Soon after, Erickson attended New York University, where he got a master's degree in television writing.[13] In 2016, his screenplay for the pilot of Severance appeared on Blood List's survey results of the best unproduced genre screenplays.[14] Erickson had worked in an office job before writing the show, stating in an interview, "The initial ideas came to me while I was working a really bad office job and going through a somewhat depressive state."[15] Erickson said his job was so mind-numbing that he wished he could "skip the eight hours of the workday, to disassociate and just get it over with", which became the premise of the show.[16] Erickson is close with his siblings, stating they were inspirations for some of the characters on the show.[17]

Development

[edit]
Ben Stiller photographed in NYC by Jiyang Chen, November 2010.
Ben Stiller directed six episodes of the first season.

Ben Stiller first read the screenplay to the pilot episode at least five years before the show premiered, calling it "the longest thing I've ever worked on." The script was submitted by Dan Erickson as a writing sample to Stiller's production company Red Hour Productions, and passed to Stiller by development executive Jackie Cohn. Stiller said he enjoyed the story's contributions to the workplace comedy.[18] In January 2017, Stiller invited Adam Scott to star.[19] In November 2019, Apple TV+ gave Severance a series order, with Stiller directing and Scott cast in the leading role.[20] Stiller was only attached to direct the pilot but he decided to direct several more episodes as the series entered development.[21]

On April 6, 2022, Apple renewed the series for a second season.[22] In April 2023, it was reported that Beau Willimon had been hired as an executive producer and writer for the second and potential third season.[23]

Filming

[edit]
Aerial view of Bell Labs Holmdel Complex.
The Bell Labs Holmdel Complex in New Jersey stood in for Lumon HQ.

The COVID-19 pandemic postponed the initial production start of March 2020.[18] Principal photography for the first season started in New York City under the working title Tumwater on November 8, 2020, the day after the U.S. presidential election was called.[24][25] The opening scene of the show was shot on January 6, 2021.[25] The series filmed for a few days in Nyack in February and in Kingston and Beacon in March.[26][27] In April, filming moved to central New Jersey, mainly in the Bell Labs Holmdel Complex which stood in for Lumon HQ.[28][29] Filming was scheduled to conclude on June 23, 2021.[30]

Production designer Jeremy Hindle blended corporate looks from the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s for the show's distinctive look, and cited modernist architect Eero Saarinen as influential for the building design.[29] Erickson said the mix of cars and technologies from different eras was meant to "give a slight sense of disorientation" and make Lumon "feel unmoored from time and space".[31][32] Stiller said the prop master reconstructed old computers so the actors could actually do the work presented on the show in order to get adjusted to the office setting.[33] These computers lacked an escape key, as a metaphor for the lack of control the Innies have while in Lumon's offices.[34]

The second season began filming on October 3, 2022, in New York City, and was set to wrap on May 12, 2023. However, on May 8, 2023, production of the season was shut down due to the 2023 Writers Guild of America strike.[35] Production had resumed by May 13, 2023, with filming occurring in Newfoundland.[36] Filming was later shut down again due to the dual actors and writers strike, but resumed on January 29, 2024,[37] and wrapped on April 23, 2024.[38]

Casting

[edit]

In January 2020, Patricia Arquette,[39] Britt Lower,[40] Jen Tullock, and Zach Cherry were added to the cast.[41] Tramell Tillman joined in February 2020,[42] and John Turturro and Christopher Walken were added in November 2020.[43][44] Dichen Lachman was cast in December 2020.[45] Turturro said he recommended Walken for the role of Burt because he had known him for "a long time and I don't have to really act like we're friends."[46]

On October 31, 2022, Gwendoline Christie, Bob Balaban, Merritt Wever, Alia Shawkat, Robby Benson, Stefano Carannante, Ólafur Darri Ólafsson and John Noble were announced to have joined the cast for season two.[47]

Influences

[edit]

Relatively recent media that influenced Severance include the online urban legend known as The Backrooms, the computer game The Stanley Parable, films including Office Space, The Truman Show, Being John Malkovich, and Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, and the comic strip Dilbert.[48][49][50] Older influences include the existential hell in the Jean-Paul Sartre play No Exit and the totalitarian dystopia in the George Orwell novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.[51] Aesthetically, the series was influenced by the films Brazil, Dark City, and Playtime.[52]

Regarding the real-world influences of the show, Erickson remarked that "the same frustrations that led us to this moment as a country [United States] and as a world are the ones that I was feeling when I wrote this because I was working office jobs, and I was dealing with all these increasingly insane requests that are made of workers. This was born of that." He added that "employees are the ones who are expected to give and give and give, with the understanding that this is a family—you’re doing this out of love, but then that is often not returned by the employers in any kind of a substantive way".[53]

Reception

[edit]

Critical response

[edit]

Severance met with critical acclaim upon its release. On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 97% of 111 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 8.6/10. The website's consensus reads: "Audacious, mysterious, and bringing fresh insight into the perils of corporate drudgery, Severance is the complete package."[54] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 83 out of 100 based on 36 critics, indicating "universal acclaim".[55]

The series received a rating of 5 out of 5 stars from Lucy Mangan of The Guardian and Rachael Sigee of I,[56][57] 4 out of 5 stars from Huw Fullerton of Radio Times, John Nugent of Empire, Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone and Anita Singh of The Telegraph,[58][59][60][61] and 3.5 out of 4 stars from Patrick Ryan of USA Today.[62] In her review, Mangan praised Stiller's direction, the writing, and the performances of the cast (particularly those of Arquette, Turturro, Walken, and Tillman).[56] Sigee also praised the performances, especially Scott's, Arquette's, Turturro's and Walken's, and wrote, "Severance moves slowly but surely, allowing time to absorb both the impressive world-building and stunning visuals, [...] [and] its breathtaking cinematography and design. With an exceptional cast [...], this is an original, weird, thought-provoking and beautifully crafted story that asks just how much of ourselves we should give over to our jobs." Fullerton also praised Scott's performance and called the series "an impressive creation."[57] Nugent praised the direction, performances of Scott, Arquette, Turturro and Walken, and chemistry between the latter two.[59] Sepinwall also praised Stiller's direction and the cast's performances (most notably those of Scott, Turturro, Walken, Lower and Tillman), in addition to the production design, tone, and season finale.[61]

Grading the series an "A", Carly Lane of Collider wrote, "the most engrossing element of Severance is the many mysteries it presents, wrapped up in silent overarching questions of philosophy, morality, and free will versus choice, and as the series demonstrates, some of those questions aren't so easily solved, but some issues aren't as black-and-white as initially presented either."[63] Also grading it an "A", Ben Travers of IndieWire wrote, "Whether you invest in the allegory, character arcs, or both, 'Severance' hits its marks. [...] Erickson and his writing staff deserve a ton of credit. The season plays out cleanly and efficiently; episodes range from nearly 60 minutes to a crisp 40; cliffhangers abound, but they’re earned. [...] This is serialized storytelling that knows how to make the most of its episodic format."[64] Stephen Robinson of The A.V. Club gave it an "A-" grade and praised Stiller's direction and the cast, with the performances of Lower, Scott, Tillman, Turturro, Walken, Tullock and Cherry singled out.[65] For Entertainment Weekly, Kristen Baldwin graded it a "B+" and highlighted the performances of Scott, Lower and Tillman, writing, "Scott is a superb fit for Severance's central everyman, [...] Lower brings an effective vulnerability to the acerbic Helly, and Tramell Tillman is an absolute force of charisma as Milchick."[66]

Giving the series an "amazing" score of 9 out of 10, Samantha Nelson of IGN wrote in her verdict, "Severance [...] uses a clever premise and excellent cast to set up an intriguing mystery that leaves plenty of room for the characters to evolve."[67] Writing for Paste, Shane Ryan gave it an 8.1 out of 10 and praised the performances of Scott, Arquette and Tillman as well as Stiller and McArdle's direction.[68] Kyle Mullin of Under the Radar gave it an 8 out of 10 and said, "Severance's writer/creator Dan Erickson is another newcomer who pens scenes with veteran-level aplomb. Every scene is a Golden Age of TV gem in its own right. But Severance's dramatic heart resides at the workplace, where it also becomes a white-knuckle thriller. This is where director Ben Stiller especially shines, training his lens and setting the scenes [...]. He certainly brings the best out of his cast."[69]

The American Film Institute named it one of the ten best television programs of the year.[70]

Critics' top ten list

[edit]

Accolades

[edit]
Accolades received by Severance
Award Year Category Recipient(s) Result Ref.
AACTA International Awards 2023 Best Drama Series Severance Nominated [73][74]
American Film Institute Awards 2022 Top 10 Programs of the Year Severance Won[b] [70]
Art Directors Guild Awards 2023 Excellence in Production Design for a One-Hour Contemporary Single-Camera Series Jeremy Hindle (for "Good News About Hell") Won [75]
Artios Awards 2023 Outstanding Achievement in Casting – Television Pilot and First Season Drama Series Rachel Tenner, Bess Fifer, Rick Messina Nominated [76]
Cinema Audio Society Awards 2023 Outstanding Achievement in Sound Mixing for Television Series – One Hour Bryan Dembinski, Bob Chefalas, Chris Fogel, George A. Lara (for "The We We Are") Nominated [77]
Critics' Choice Awards 2023 Best Drama Series Severance Nominated [78]
Best Actor in a Drama Series Adam Scott Nominated
Critics' Choice Super Awards 2023 Best Actor in a Science Fiction/Fantasy Series, Limited Series or Made-for-TV Movie Adam Scott Won [79]
Best Actress in a Science Fiction/Fantasy Series, Limited Series or Made-for-TV Movie Patricia Arquette Won
Directors Guild of America Awards 2023 Outstanding Directorial Achievement in Dramatic Series Aoife McArdle (for "Hide and Seek") Nominated [80]
Ben Stiller (for "The We We Are") Nominated
Dorian Awards 2022 Best TV Drama Severance Nominated [81]
Most Visually Striking Show Severance Nominated
Golden Globe Awards 2023 Best Television Series – Drama Severance Nominated [82]
Best Actor in a Television Series – Drama Adam Scott Nominated
Best Supporting Actor in a Television Series – Comedy/Musical or Drama John Turturro Nominated
Golden Reel Awards 2023 Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing – Broadcast Long Form Dialogue and ADR Jacob Ribicoff, David Briggs, Gregg Swiatlowski (for "The We We Are") Nominated [83][84]
Outstanding Achievement in Music Editing – Broadcast Long Form Missy Cohen, Sam Zeines, Felipe Pacheco (for "The We We Are") Nominated
Gotham Independent Film Awards 2022 Breakthrough Series – Long Form Severance Nominated [85]
Outstanding Performance in a New Series Britt Lower Nominated
Hollywood Critics Association TV Awards 2022 Best Streaming Series, Drama Severance Won [86]
Best Actor in a Streaming Series, Drama Adam Scott Nominated
Best Actress in a Streaming Series, Drama Britt Lower Won[c]
Best Supporting Actor in a Streaming Series, Drama Zach Cherry Nominated
Tramell Tillman Nominated
John Turturro Won
Christopher Walken Nominated
Best Supporting Actress in a Streaming Series, Drama Patricia Arquette Nominated
Dichen Lachman Nominated
Best Directing in a Streaming Series, Drama Aoife McArdle (for "The You You Are") Nominated
Ben Stiller (for "The We We Are") Won
Best Writing in a Streaming Series, Drama Dan Erickson (for "The We We Are") Won
Hollywood Music in Media Awards 2022 Original Score — TV Show/Limited Series Theodore Shapiro Nominated [87]
Hugo Awards 2023 Best Dramatic Presentation, Long Form Dan Erickson, Ben Stiller, Aoife McArdle, and writing staff Nominated [88]
Irish Film & Television Awards 2023 Director – Television Drama Aoife McArdle Nominated [89]
Independent Spirit Awards 2023 Best New Scripted Series Severance Nominated [90]
Best Lead Performance in a New Scripted Series Adam Scott Nominated
Best Supporting Performance in a New Scripted Series Tramell Tillman Nominated
Peabody Award 2022 Entertainment Severance Won [91]
People's Choice Awards The Bingeworthy Show of 2022 Severance Nominated [92]
Primetime Creative Arts Emmy Awards 2022 Outstanding Casting for a Drama Series Rachel Tenner and Bess Fifer Nominated [93]
Outstanding Main Title Design Oliver Latta and Teddy Blanks Won
Outstanding Music Composition for a Series (Original Dramatic Score) Theodore Shapiro (for "The We We Are") Won
Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music Theodore Shapiro Nominated
Outstanding Production Design for a Narrative Contemporary Program (One Hour or More) Jeremy Hindle, Nick Francone, Angelica Borrero-Fortier,
and Andrew Baseman (for "Good News About Hell")
Nominated
Outstanding Single-Camera Picture Editing for a Drama Series Erica Freed Marker and Geoffrey Richman (for "In Perpetuity") Nominated
Geoffrey Richman (for "The We We Are") Nominated
Primetime Emmy Awards 2022 Outstanding Drama Series Ben Stiller, Nicholas Weinstock, Jackie Cohn, Mark Friedman, Dan Erickson, Andrew Colville, Chris Black, John Cameron, Jill Footlick, Kari Drake, Adam Scott, Patricia Arquette, Aoife McArdle, Amanda Overton, and Gerry Robert Bryne Nominated [94]
Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series Adam Scott (for "Good News About Hell") Nominated
Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Drama Series John Turturro (for "Defiant Jazz") Nominated
Christopher Walken (for "The Grim Barbarity of Optics and Design") Nominated
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Drama Series Patricia Arquette (for "What's for Dinner?") Nominated
Outstanding Directing for a Drama Series Ben Stiller (for "The We We Are") Nominated
Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series Dan Erickson (for "The We We Are") Nominated
Producers Guild of America Awards 2023 Outstanding Producer of Episodic Television, Drama Severance Nominated [95]
Satellite Awards 2023 Best Drama Series Severance Nominated [96]
Best Actor in a Drama / Genre Series Adam Scott Nominated
Saturn Awards 2022 Best Streaming Horror/Thriller Television Series Severance Nominated [97]
[98]
Best Actor in a Streaming Television Series Adam Scott Nominated
Best Actress in a Streaming Television Series Britt Lower Nominated
Best Supporting Actor in a Streaming Television Series Zach Cherry Nominated
John Turturro Nominated
Best Supporting Actress in a Streaming Television Series Patricia Arquette Nominated
Screen Actors Guild Awards 2023 Outstanding Performance by a Male Actor in a Drama Series Adam Scott Nominated [99]
Outstanding Performance by an Ensemble in a Drama Series Patricia Arquette, Michael Chernus, Zach Cherry, Michael Cumpsty, Dichen Lachman, Britt Lower, Adam Scott, Tramell Tillman, Jen Tullock, John Turturro, Christopher Walken Nominated
Set Decorators Society of America Awards 2022 Best Achievement in Décor/Design of a One Hour Contemporary Series Andrew Baseman and Jeremy Hindle Nominated [100]
Society of Composers & Lyricists Awards 2023 Outstanding Score for Television Theodore Shapiro Nominated [101]
Television Critics Association Awards 2022 Program of the Year Severance Nominated [102]
Outstanding Achievement in Drama Nominated
Outstanding New Program Nominated
Individual Achievement in Drama Adam Scott Nominated
Venice TV Awards 2023 Best TV Series Severance Nominated [103]
Visual Effects Society Awards 2023 Outstanding Supporting Visual Effects in a Photoreal Episode Vadim Turchin, Nicole Melius, David Piombino, David Rouxel (for "Pilot") Nominated [104]
Webby Awards 2022 Best Actor Adam Scott Won [105]
Writers Guild of America Awards 2023 Drama Series Chris Black, Andrew Colville, Kari Drake, Dan Erickson, Mark Friedman, Helen Leigh, Anna Moench, Amanda Overton Won [106]
New Series Won
Episodic Drama Dan Erickson (for "The We We Are") Nominated

The first season was recognized with The ReFrame Stamp for hiring people of underrepresented gender identities, and of color.[107]

Marketing

[edit]

The second season was teased during the Apple Event on September 7, 2022, which featured Helly (Britt Lower).[108] The first footage from season 2 was released on June 10, 2024, as part of a promo for upcoming Apple TV+ programming.[109]

On July 9, 2024, a post on the Apple TV+ account on social media platform X teased an announcement about season 2.[110] In the video, a light appears to blink in Morse code and spell out the word "tomorrow." The next day on July 10, Apple TV+ confirmed that season 2 will debut on January 17, 2025.[2] The first trailer for season 2 was released on October 23, 2024.[111]

Home media

[edit]

The first season was released in the UK on Blu-ray and DVD on December 2, 2024,[112] and in Australia on December 4, 2024.[113] It will be released in the United States on Blu-ray on December 17, 2024.[114]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Known as Endeavor Content for season 1
  2. ^ This award does not have a single winner, but recognizes multiple series.
  3. ^ Tied with Laura Linney for Ozark.

References

[edit]
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