I've seen six episodes of #Severance Season 2. Early contender for the best TV show of 2025 and – if it sticks the landing – the best show of the decade. Amazing stuff. Here's my review (no spoilers, of course): https://t.co/ilBBFthuKg
— Cameron Frew (@FrewFilm) January 7, 2025
I'm cautiously optimistic that Alan thought it was great because I used to trust his reviews implicitly but I've differed with him wildly on a few shows over the last few years. That being said, he's still the best TV reviewer out there IMO.walton91 said:
https://bsky.app/profile/sepinwall.bsky.social/post/3lf5sqwx6tk23
SEVERANCE S2…..beautifully deranged, weirder, darker, BETTER??? It’s on a heater this season. Doesn’t miss a beat in its confident and meticulous approach to this world. Emotionally rich and complex. All of those fun narrative possibilities you only imagined? Buckle up. pic.twitter.com/KCHa12Y3pG
— sam (@burritoprophet) January 7, 2025
'Severance' Season 2 review: This masterpiece will exceed your wildest dreams (and nightmares) https://t.co/Q6AB1mKWJq pic.twitter.com/twIFgxmVgY
— Decider (@decider) January 7, 2025
'SEVERANCE' Season 2 is Generational TV in the making.
— ScreenTime (@screentime) January 7, 2025
A flawless showcase of craft, performance, and taut, compulsive storytelling. If it sticks the landing, it belongs in the highest echelon of television – and we should feel jubilant at its ascendance. pic.twitter.com/FgnkZxtd5m
'Severance' Season 2 Is Surreal, Stylish and Worth the Wait: TV Review https://t.co/raXJ7Cvkun
— Variety (@Variety) January 7, 2025
#Severance S2 debuts to 100% on Rotten Tomatoes — based on 33 reviews
— Culture Crave 🍿 (@CultureCrave) January 7, 2025
It's now Certified Fresh 🍅 pic.twitter.com/GAlaWhvMUP
Quote:
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." 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.
Man, I've had jobs like this. Fortunately, not for long and not in a long time. The days would crawl by at an absolute snails pace. Then spend the evening dreading the next day. Fun stuff.TCTTS said:
It's an original story.
Creator Dan Erickson wrote the pilot on spec (meaning on his own time/no one commissioned him to write it), it eventually made its way to Ben Stiller, and the rest is history.
According to Wikipedia:Quote:
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." 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.
So every morning they take her comatose body and shove it in the elevator, which re-awakens her for her severed work day/sessions/hours/whatever. Then she gets back in the elevator, goes comatose, and then they wheel her body back to a hospital room? Not sure I buy that one.AustinAg2K said:
- The wife is in a coma and is only being left alive to be part of severance. There really was a car accident, and Lumon took her body and did a severance to see if they could keep people alive. In season 2, Mark is going to have to choose between shutting down Lumon and killing his wife, or keeping his wife alive and keeping hundreds of others in severance.
They made it clear that you don't have to go into the elevator to be severed with the lady who was preggo and got severed.AggieOO said:So every morning they take her comatose body and shove it in the elevator, which re-awakens her for her severed work day/sessions/hours/whatever. Then she gets back in the elevator, goes comatose, and then they wheel her body back to a hospital room? Not sure I buy that one.AustinAg2K said:
- The wife is in a coma and is only being left alive to be part of severance. There really was a car accident, and Lumon took her body and did a severance to see if they could keep people alive. In season 2, Mark is going to have to choose between shutting down Lumon and killing his wife, or keeping his wife alive and keeping hundreds of others in severance.
I've seen six episodes of #Severance Season 2. Early contender for the best TV show of 2025 and – if it sticks the landing – the best show of the decade. Amazing stuff. Here's my review (no spoilers, of course): https://t.co/ilBBFthuKg
— Cameron Frew (@FrewFilm) January 7, 2025
‘SEVERANCE’ Season 2 currently sits at 100% on Rotten Tomatoes with 40 reviews 🍿
— ScreenTime (@screentime) January 8, 2025
“Generational TV in the making” pic.twitter.com/a2ABvpa1Iw