Mark dirige une équipe d'employés dont les souvenirs ont été divisés entre leur travail et leur vie personnelle. Lorsqu'un mystérieux collègue apparaît en dehors du travail, il commence un v... Tout lireMark dirige une équipe d'employés dont les souvenirs ont été divisés entre leur travail et leur vie personnelle. Lorsqu'un mystérieux collègue apparaît en dehors du travail, il commence un voyage pour découvrir la vérité sur son travail.Mark dirige une équipe d'employés dont les souvenirs ont été divisés entre leur travail et leur vie personnelle. Lorsqu'un mystérieux collègue apparaît en dehors du travail, il commence un voyage pour découvrir la vérité sur son travail.
- Création originale
- Stars
- Récompensé par 10 Primetime Emmys
- 42 victoires et 180 nominations au total
Parcourir les épisodes
Résumé
Reviewers say 'Severance' has an intriguing premise, detailed world-building, and profound themes of work-life balance, corporate dystopia, and identity. Many praise Adam Scott's standout performance, supported by a strong ensemble cast. The cinematography, direction by Ben Stiller, and atmospheric score receive acclaim. However, some critics find the pacing slow and the plot convoluted, questioning its coherence and resolution. Despite mixed opinions on the second season, the first season is widely regarded as exceptional.
Avis à la une
Never seen anything like it, it's a must watch.
If you wanna to be late for work because you can't stop watching a series this is the series.
If you're feeling down and wanna escape for some time this is it.
The cinematography is inspirational, the acting is amazing, the music is spot on.
10/10 It's perfect.
If you wanna to be late for work because you can't stop watching a series this is the series.
If you're feeling down and wanna escape for some time this is it.
The cinematography is inspirational, the acting is amazing, the music is spot on.
10/10 It's perfect.
I can't remember the last time I was so invested in a TV show. I was hooked from the first episode, and constantly impressed with the directing, visuals, acting, and plot developments. It's like a cross between Black Mirror and 1984, but it might be better than both of those works of art. This is truly something special and I COULD NOT be more excited for season 2.
After watching two seasons of Severance, one thought stuck in my mind - there is something familiar about this. Many years ago, I was hooked on a TV show named Lost. Back then, those breaks between episodes left me confused and hungry, and each new-season release was a Christmas. Episodes felt like falling dominoes, piling mystery on mystery.
As I kept watching Severance, I realized it plays a different game than Lost ever did. Lost thrived on chaos - a glorious, intoxicating mess of riddles stacked on riddles. Severance, on the other hand, is almost surgical. Every scene feels measured, every shot carries intention, and every silence is louder than shouting. It's not trying to overwhelm you; it's trying to get inside your head.
What impressed me most is how the show weaponizes mundanity. A corporate hallway, a wellness session, a waffle party - everything looks harmless until it suddenly isn't. The world of Lumon is built on tiny, carefully controlled details, and the more we learn, the more wrong everything feels. It's like being trapped inside an IKEA catalog curated by Kafka.
It may sound ridiculous, but the last thing I want is for Severance to repeat the fate of Lost. That ending broke the hearts of many fans around the world, and the reasons are irrelevant. The world of Severance is a fascinating creation. Yet there's beauty in knowing when to stop, and it is better to leave the audience puzzled rather than frustrated.
As I kept watching Severance, I realized it plays a different game than Lost ever did. Lost thrived on chaos - a glorious, intoxicating mess of riddles stacked on riddles. Severance, on the other hand, is almost surgical. Every scene feels measured, every shot carries intention, and every silence is louder than shouting. It's not trying to overwhelm you; it's trying to get inside your head.
What impressed me most is how the show weaponizes mundanity. A corporate hallway, a wellness session, a waffle party - everything looks harmless until it suddenly isn't. The world of Lumon is built on tiny, carefully controlled details, and the more we learn, the more wrong everything feels. It's like being trapped inside an IKEA catalog curated by Kafka.
It may sound ridiculous, but the last thing I want is for Severance to repeat the fate of Lost. That ending broke the hearts of many fans around the world, and the reasons are irrelevant. The world of Severance is a fascinating creation. Yet there's beauty in knowing when to stop, and it is better to leave the audience puzzled rather than frustrated.
I can't even describe the show. It's unlike anything I have ever seen.
Remember that feeling you had after watching The Truman Show or The Sixth Sense for the very first time? The feeling that you had experienced something unique? It's the exact same sensation Severance gave me. It's odd, it's smart, it's fresh and I loved every single minute of it. It's the best writing and acting I have seen in years.
Every episode makes you hungry for the next one, and the next one, and... well, you get the point. All I can say is, stop scrolling through these reviews and go watch it, because you're in for a treat.
Remember that feeling you had after watching The Truman Show or The Sixth Sense for the very first time? The feeling that you had experienced something unique? It's the exact same sensation Severance gave me. It's odd, it's smart, it's fresh and I loved every single minute of it. It's the best writing and acting I have seen in years.
Every episode makes you hungry for the next one, and the next one, and... well, you get the point. All I can say is, stop scrolling through these reviews and go watch it, because you're in for a treat.
Severance is not simply a TV series.
It is a quiet, relentless dissection of the human spirit-an unsettling meditation on identity, memory, and the unbearable gentleness with which a system can erase a person. It is one of those rare stories that does not just entertain; it lingers. It clings to you. It whispers in the dark corners of your mind long after the screen goes black.
At its core, Severance asks a question so fragile, yet so violent:
If you split a person in two-one who works and one who lives-who is the real you? And which half deserves freedom?
A Story Told Like a Slow-Burning Nightmare
Every frame of Severance feels intentional, meticulously crafted like a piece of minimalist surrealist art. The sterile hell of Lumon Industries looks clean, but the cleanliness becomes terrifying-an erasure of individuality, of emotion, of anything human. White walls become prisons. Hallways become labyrinths. Desks become confessionals where nobody is allowed to confess.
The show moves with a quiet, unnerving patience, letting dread build invisibly in the spaces between dialogue. It does not rush-because the horror it presents is not dramatic; it is administrative. It is procedural. It is polite.
The most chilling realization is this:
The world of Severance feels possible. Too possible.
The Emotional Violence of the "Innie"
The "innie"-the severed consciousness trapped in Lumon's fluorescent womb-is one of the most heartbreaking ideas modern television has created.
This version of you lives only to work.
It never sees sunlight, never hugs a friend, never remembers love or childhood or summer air.
It is born every day inside a cubicle.
It dies every evening when the elevator doors close.
And yet... it hopes.
It rebels.
It dreams of a life it has never lived.
That is the emotional genius of the show: it reveals that the desire for dignity does not come from memory-it comes from some primal, unkillable part of being human.
A Study of Trauma, Compliance, and the Fragility of Choice
Mark's grief, Helly's rage, Irving's faith, Dylan's loyalty-all are expressions of people attempting to survive when the truth is too unbearable for the conscious mind. Severance is not just a sci-fi device; it's a metaphor for coping, for compartmentalizing pain, for choosing numbness when reality becomes too heavy to carry.
But the innie brings forward a gut-wrenching truth:
No part of us wants to be locked away-even the part created to suffer.
The Finale - A Heart Punch Wrapped in Silence
The final episodes feel like falling through ice. The tension is suffocating. Every second is a countdown toward a truth the characters are not ready to hold.
And when that truth hits, it is devastating-not because it surprises us, but because it confirms our deepest fear:
Freedom is never given. It is taken-inch by inch, scream by scream, elevator by elevator.
The last shot leaves you breathless, mid-heartbeat. It doesn't end; it detonates.
Why Severance Matters
Severance is one of the rare shows that confronts modern alienation without preaching. We all sever ourselves, in small ways. We split our lives into "professional" and "real." We sacrifice our emotions to survive systems that demand obedience over humanity.
The series holds up a mirror and asks:
How much of yourself have you given away without noticing?
And what would it take to get it back?
Final Verdict
A masterpiece of emotional horror, philosophical depth, and world-building precision.
Severance is not just watched-it is experienced, endured, and remembered.
One of the most haunting, human, and breathtaking series of our time.
It is a quiet, relentless dissection of the human spirit-an unsettling meditation on identity, memory, and the unbearable gentleness with which a system can erase a person. It is one of those rare stories that does not just entertain; it lingers. It clings to you. It whispers in the dark corners of your mind long after the screen goes black.
At its core, Severance asks a question so fragile, yet so violent:
If you split a person in two-one who works and one who lives-who is the real you? And which half deserves freedom?
A Story Told Like a Slow-Burning Nightmare
Every frame of Severance feels intentional, meticulously crafted like a piece of minimalist surrealist art. The sterile hell of Lumon Industries looks clean, but the cleanliness becomes terrifying-an erasure of individuality, of emotion, of anything human. White walls become prisons. Hallways become labyrinths. Desks become confessionals where nobody is allowed to confess.
The show moves with a quiet, unnerving patience, letting dread build invisibly in the spaces between dialogue. It does not rush-because the horror it presents is not dramatic; it is administrative. It is procedural. It is polite.
The most chilling realization is this:
The world of Severance feels possible. Too possible.
The Emotional Violence of the "Innie"
The "innie"-the severed consciousness trapped in Lumon's fluorescent womb-is one of the most heartbreaking ideas modern television has created.
This version of you lives only to work.
It never sees sunlight, never hugs a friend, never remembers love or childhood or summer air.
It is born every day inside a cubicle.
It dies every evening when the elevator doors close.
And yet... it hopes.
It rebels.
It dreams of a life it has never lived.
That is the emotional genius of the show: it reveals that the desire for dignity does not come from memory-it comes from some primal, unkillable part of being human.
A Study of Trauma, Compliance, and the Fragility of Choice
Mark's grief, Helly's rage, Irving's faith, Dylan's loyalty-all are expressions of people attempting to survive when the truth is too unbearable for the conscious mind. Severance is not just a sci-fi device; it's a metaphor for coping, for compartmentalizing pain, for choosing numbness when reality becomes too heavy to carry.
But the innie brings forward a gut-wrenching truth:
No part of us wants to be locked away-even the part created to suffer.
The Finale - A Heart Punch Wrapped in Silence
The final episodes feel like falling through ice. The tension is suffocating. Every second is a countdown toward a truth the characters are not ready to hold.
And when that truth hits, it is devastating-not because it surprises us, but because it confirms our deepest fear:
Freedom is never given. It is taken-inch by inch, scream by scream, elevator by elevator.
The last shot leaves you breathless, mid-heartbeat. It doesn't end; it detonates.
Why Severance Matters
Severance is one of the rare shows that confronts modern alienation without preaching. We all sever ourselves, in small ways. We split our lives into "professional" and "real." We sacrifice our emotions to survive systems that demand obedience over humanity.
The series holds up a mirror and asks:
How much of yourself have you given away without noticing?
And what would it take to get it back?
Final Verdict
A masterpiece of emotional horror, philosophical depth, and world-building precision.
Severance is not just watched-it is experienced, endured, and remembered.
One of the most haunting, human, and breathtaking series of our time.
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Bande-son
Écoutez un extrait de la bande originale ici et continuez à l'écouter sur Amazon Music.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesTo promote the second season, a replica of the Macrodata Refinement office was constructed in a glass box at Grand Central Station, with Adam Scott, Zach Cherry, Britt Lower, Tramell Tillman, and Patricia Arquette performing their roles live.
- GaffesBurt's outie husband is a completely different actor (or at least has a radically different appearance in Season 2.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Welcome to Lumon (2021)
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Cắt Rời Ký Ức
- Lieux de tournage
- Bell Laboratories - 101 Crawfords Corner Road, Holmdel Township, New Jersey, États-Unis(Lumon Building, Exterior and Interior scenes)
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 50min
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.39 : 1
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