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Ruptura (2022)

Avaliações de usuários

Ruptura

1.696 avaliação
9/10

Loved It, But the Ending Made Me Shout at the Screen

Severance Season 1 completely hooked me. The vibe, the mystery, the weird tension, I loved all of it. Every episode pulled me deeper in, and the whole world they built felt so unique and creepy in the best way.

But I have to be honest: the ending frustrated me. Not because it was bad, but because the main character suddenly felt way too slow or clueless when everything was literally falling apart. I kept thinking, "Come on, man, MOVE!" It didn't ruin the show for me, but it did pull me out of the moment a bit.

Still, the season as a whole is fantastic. The twists, the atmosphere, the characters, it's all so well done. And that last scene? Yeah, I need Season 2 immediately.
  • PatriciaB-510
  • 10 de dez. de 2025
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10/10

As good as everyone says it is

Severance is every bit as good as everyone says it is. All you have to do is read through the reviews from both critics and the audience to see how much people think of this series. It's on every "best of shows of the year" list out there and has been nominated for a ton of awards for a reason. Adam Scott leads an amazing cast who all do a fantastic job. It's just such an original show that will keep you wanting more. The first episode may start a little slow for some but stick with it because I promise that you won't regret it. If you stay with it I guarantee it will become one of your favorite shows of the year. The only negative is waiting so long between seasons, but I guess it's better they do it right than rush it out there and be disappointed. I can't wait to see where this show goes next.
  • Supermanfan-13
  • 11 de dez. de 2025
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10/10

Outstanding

I don't even know where to begin in describing how much I loved this show. I've watched it all the way through twice now and can't find anything wrong. I was worried that season 2 would have a drop off in quality after how good season 1 was but I shouldn't have worried at all because if anything season 2 was even better. This show is amazing and I can't wait until season 3 gets here.
  • Freakazoid1175
  • 11 de dez. de 2025
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10/10

Season 2 shows why questions are more dangerous than answers

  • batyuatesz
  • 12 de dez. de 2025
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10/10

Incredibly well done!

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.
  • pontuskarlsson-41013
  • 5 de dez. de 2025
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10/10

Severance - the Soul's Quietest Earthquake

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.
  • idadiani2007
  • 4 de dez. de 2025
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A Masterclass in Tension, Mystery, and Existential Dread

Severance isn't just good television, it's a revelation. In an era where prestige TV often mistakes slow pacing for depth, this Apple TV+ series delivers something genuinely profound: a high-concept thriller that's as intellectually rigorous as it is viscerally gripping.

The premise hooks you immediately. Employees at the mysterious Lumon Industries undergo a procedure that separates their work memories from their personal lives. Your work self has no idea who you are outside the office, and vice versa. What starts as an intriguing workplace dystopia evolves into something far more unsettling. A meditation on identity, consciousness, and the soul-crushing nature of modern corporate culture.

Dan Erickson's writing is extraordinary. Every line of dialogue feels purposeful, every scene meticulously crafted. The script trusts its audience completely, refusing to spoon-feed explanations or rush reveals. It builds its world through detail and implication, creating a sense of unease that burrows under your skin. The questions it raises about autonomy, memory, and what makes us 'us' linger long after each episode ends.

Ben Stiller's direction deserves every accolade. The visual language he establishes is haunting and precise. Those endless white corridors, the retro-futuristic office design, the oppressive fluorescent lighting. Every frame feels deliberate. He creates an atmosphere of sterile menace that makes even mundane office tasks feel ominous. The pacing is impeccable, knowing exactly when to let scenes breathe and when to ratchet up tension.

Adam Scott gives a career-best performance playing Mark Scout and his 'innie' counterpart. The subtlety with which he differentiates these two versions of the same person is remarkable. Different posture, different speech patterns, different energy entirely. You always know which Mark you're watching without it ever feeling like caricature. It's masterful work that deserves far more recognition than it's received.

But the entire ensemble elevates the material. Patricia Arquette brings a chilling banality to her corporate overseer, making pleasantries sound like threats.

Christopher Walken delivers one of his most nuanced performances in years. Restrained, vulnerable, deeply human. Britt Lower, Zach Cherry, and John Turturro each create fully realized characters who feel like actual people, not plot devices. Tramell Tillman's Milchick is terrifyingly affable, a middle manager who embodies corporate evil with a smile.

What truly sets Severance apart is its commitment to its own strange logic. The show never winks at the camera or apologizes for its weirdness. The bizarre corporate rituals, the retro technology, the unsettling cheerfulness of it all. It's played completely straight, which makes it all the more disturbing. This is a world with its own internal rules, and the show respects them absolutely.

The production design deserves special mention. Every detail of Lumon Industries feels both familiar and alien. The break room interrogations, the Wellness Sessions, the bizarre corporate perks. Its recognisable office culture pushed just far enough into the absurd to become nightmarish. The show understands that true dystopia doesn't need laser guns and flying cars; fluorescent lights and middle management will do just fine.

Theodore Shapiro's score is another highlight, unsettling, atmospheric, perfectly calibrated to amplify the show's mounting dread without overwhelming the visuals. It knows when to surge and when to pull back, when to be melodic and when to be abrasive.

This is patient storytelling at its finest. Some episodes end on devastating cliffhangers, others on quiet moments of human connection. The show earns every revelation, every emotional beat. When it does deliver those big moments they land with genuine force because the groundwork has been so carefully laid.

Severance is what happens when a bold creative vision meets a production willing to support it completely. It's weird, unsettling, thought-provoking, and unlike anything else on television right now. If you have any appreciation for intelligent sci-fi, psychological thrillers, or just exceptionally well-crafted television, this is essential viewing.
  • jamesnymanaolcom
  • 13 de dez. de 2025
  • Link permanente
10/10

Snake

This show is a sidewinder. It slaps you around and I love it. Absolutely nutty with having so much going on with different directors. I absolutely hope they do another season, and even if they end it here, it was a good ending. This whole goddamn show is a real character study. Its fascinating. The actors could not be more believable.
  • MichaelEMJAYARE
  • 4 de dez. de 2025
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10/10

Woooww

First of all, I hope everyone could feel what im feeling right now, the sensation of "give me more, i need more" is so outstanding, so perfect.

The chosing of director during the all show is so thorough, the second season take me thinking about a lot of things, about how we feel the others pain, how we saw the world. Im a mariage man and i can understand all two marks.

I cant wait the next season.
  • Junior-6828
  • 30 de nov. de 2025
  • Link permanente
8/10

The Beauty of a Carefully Built Mystery.

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.
  • StanZolo1980
  • 2 de dez. de 2025
  • Link permanente
9/10

This is brilliant

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.
  • doomedmac
  • 7 de abr. de 2022
  • Link permanente
9/10

A Workplace Nightmare Done With Mastery

Severance is one of the smartest, most unsettling, and most meticulously crafted series in years. I rated it 9 out of 10 only because the middle stretch eases off the gas a bit, but the overall impact is undeniable.

The concept alone is brilliant. Splitting your mind between work and personal life sounds clean and harmless until the show slowly reveals how disturbing that idea really is. Every episode builds tension with precision. The mystery unfolds at a pace that keeps you constantly thinking, constantly questioning, constantly uneasy.

The visual style is a knockout. The sterile office spaces, the minimalist production design, the bizarre corporate architecture all create a world that feels familiar and completely alien at the same time. Cinematography is sharp, controlled, and loaded with meaning. Nothing is shot without intention.

The sound design and score amplify everything. Cold, distant, unnerving. It sets a mood that never lets you relax. Performances are exceptional across the board. Adam Scott delivers his career-best work, and the supporting cast elevates every scene. There is not a weak link.

Severance is tense, clever, stylish, and genuinely original. When the final episodes hit, they hit hard. It is the kind of show that stays with you long after the credits roll and makes you think about your own life more than you expect.

One of the best series of the decade.
  • sevenlee1014
  • 27 de nov. de 2025
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6/10

So close to being so good.

I wanted to like this show so bad. Every episode I was telling myself "well this is where things are really going to get interesting-"

Two seasons/19 episodes later and I'm sorry but this show simply isn't worth the hype. It could've been a captivating mini-series. But instead the writers take their one or two interesting ideas and spend the rest of the show milking suspense out of hours and hours of filler. The oddity gimmick loses it's flavor quickly, and the characters simply aren't compelling enough to make up for the sluggish pace in story progression.

Which is such a shame because there are incredible actors, amazing cinematography, and more than enough seeds of fascinating ideas that easily could've filled the time. But you spend far more time anticipating something interesting watching this show than actually watching something interesting.

As much as I wanted to love it, the potential simply isn't the reality.
  • goodwritingiseverything
  • 28 de abr. de 2025
  • Link permanente
5/10

It's so slow. It's so boring. Season 2, what's wrong?

I was thoroughly impressed by the first season of Severance; its unique concept and suspenseful storytelling kept me eagerly anticipating each episode. However, the second season has been a letdown. The pacing has slowed to an excruciating crawl, making it difficult to stay engaged. Scenes feel unnecessarily prolonged, and the plot seems to lack direction. The once-intriguing narrative now feels diluted, overshadowed by excessive focus on atmosphere rather than meaningful progression. Unfortunately, this season fails to live up to the high standards set by its predecessor. 10 stars to 1season and 1 to second one.
  • tonyjonyk
  • 9 de abr. de 2025
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10/10

Incredible Masterpiece!

Initial title and looks of this TV series made me think that it would be a boring show, but I was so wrong!

Original, creative, and captivating! Wow - design, style, casting, character development, directing, cinematography, story, writing, editing! I cannot find any faults.

It might feel slow at times, but you will be surprised once you are hooked to their worlds! I can't get enough! Very cerebral, while not feeling that way as well when you are watching it. Super recommended! Definitely a precious gem! Incredible masterpiece by the entire team behind this show.
  • jjfilms72
  • 24 de nov. de 2025
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10/10

Stays with you

I can honestly say that, ever since The Leftovers, no other show has hit me this deeply. This one will stay with me for the rest of my life. It's beautifully written and brought to life with such raw, honest performances. The reflections of our everyday struggles are endless, and I can't help but feel that this is exactly what the creators wanted-to hold up a mirror to our own lives. And it's impossible not to feel it.
  • Feral4
  • 24 de nov. de 2025
  • Link permanente
9/10

Gripping Psychological Thriller

The first few episodes are slow and feel very strange because of the cold, perfect office world. I almost stopped watching.

But once the mystery begins, the show becomes completely addictive.

The slow start is worth it for the brilliant payoff. The final episodes are non-stop tension and deliver one of the most shocking season finales in years.
  • bilalabdulahi
  • 20 de nov. de 2025
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10/10

BEST SHOW IN THE WORLD

  • Akiros-0
  • 25 de nov. de 2025
  • Link permanente
8/10

The Mind Divided, The Soul Unseen

Some doors are closed not to keep us out, but to keep ourselves in.

Severance is a series that doesn't just tell a story , it dissects the human mind with surgical precision.

The show takes you into a world where work and life are surgically separated, but the cracks between them reveal the most profound truths: fear, desire, and the ghost of identity we carry silently through our routines.

The performances are quietly mesmerizing. Adam Scott anchors the narrative with a tension that's both restrained and magnetic, showing how a man can exist in two worlds without ever feeling fully alive in either. Patricia Clarkson and John Ortiz illuminate the shadows around him , their characters haunting in ways words alone cannot capture. Every glance, every pause, every subtle inflection feels intentional, as if the actors are speaking the language of unspoken conscience.

The series doesn't offer catharsis or easy answers. It's a meditation on control, autonomy, and the fragile architecture of selfhood. The workplace isn't just a setting , it's a mirror reflecting the compromises we make, the corners of our minds we hide, and the cost of surrendering even a fraction of our freedom.

Severance is unsettling, meticulous, and hypnotic. It's not a show to watch casually; it's a show to experience, where every silence and shadow is deliberate, and every character is a study in the human condition.

  • Kamyar Matthew
"I write where films stop and the soul begins."
  • KamyarMatthew
  • 16 de nov. de 2025
  • Link permanente
9/10

On another level!

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.
  • cliffmerayah
  • 28 de set. de 2022
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10/10

Seminal TV, potentially a ground-breaking classic

  • bosporan
  • 24 de mar. de 2022
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8/10

A masterclass in world-building and psychological tension, Severance is one of the most innovative and unsettling series of the decade

A haunting, cerebral, and visually striking sci-fi thriller that dissects corporate control, identity, memory, and the cost of partitioning the self. All wrapped in eerie minimalism and razor-sharp storytelling.

.

🎬 Series Summary (Spoiler-Free) Severance follows Mark Scout, an employee at the enigmatic megacorporation Lumen Industries, who undergoes a highly controversial procedure known as severance: a surgical separation of his memories into two distinct personas.

The "Outie" version of Mark lives his life outside, grieving personal loss and seeking normalcy.

The "Innie" Mark exists only at work with no memory of the outside world, trapped in a corporate labyrinth built on fear, routine, and manipulation.

Inside Lumen, Mark and his quirky yet increasingly anxious coworkers, Dylan, Helly, and Irving, begin to question their reality as strange rituals, cryptic rules, and unsettling contradictions emerge. Outside, Mark's relationships slowly intertwine with Lumen's secrets, creating a dual narrative of conspiracy and awakening.

The show steadily unravels a chilling question: If your work self is a separate person, what do they owe you... and what do you owe them?

.

✅ What Worked

1. Stunning production design: brutalist, sterile, uncanny

2. Adam Scott's career-best dramatic performance

3. Exceptional supporting cast (Patricia Arquette, Britt Lower, John Turturro, Christopher Walken)

4. Rich, layered mystery that rewards close attention

5. Clever balance of dark humor and dread

6. Strong philosophical core about autonomy, identity, and corporate ethics

7. One of the most tense, flawlessly executed finales in modern TV

.

❌ What Didn't Work

1. Slow pacing may feel glacial to impatient viewers

2. Sparse answers can frustrate during long waits between seasons

3. Some plot threads remain intentionally ambiguous

4. The dual narrative can be disorienting at first

5. Emotional stakes rely heavily on viewers catching subtle clues

.

💬 Favorite Moments (Spoiler-Free)

1. Helly's first day: disturbing and unforgettable

2. The "music dance experience"

3. Irving discovering deeper truths about Lumen

4. The outie/innie contrasts driving emotional tension

5. Dylan's heroic moment in the finale

6. Mark's revelations about his personal life

7. The finale's edge-of-your-seat split-reality sequence

.

✨ Fun Facts

1. The show's office design was inspired by real 1960s corporate layouts and brutalist architecture.

2. Ben Stiller directed most episodes, emphasizing minimalism and psychological precision.

3. The script was in development for years before Apple TV+ picked it up.

4. Actors were deliberately kept unaware of certain plot points to preserve authenticity.

5. The labyrinth-like Lumen office was built practically, not digitally.

.

👀 If You Liked This, You Might Also Enjoy

1. Black Mirror

2. Westworld (Season 1)

3. Devs

4. Mr. Robot

5. Maniac

6. Homecoming

7. Brazil (1985)

.

🎯 Final Thoughts Severance is a bold, chilling, and deeply emotional exploration of what makes us whole. With impeccable craftsmanship and a gripping mystery, it stands as one of the most original sci-fi series of the 2020s.

⭐ 8.3/10. A visionary, unsettling triumph that lingers in your mind long after the credits roll.
  • DarklyDreamingFan
  • 22 de nov. de 2025
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6/10

Season 1- a masterpiece Season 2- a muddled mixed bag

  • rjvnatl
  • 19 de mai. de 2025
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2/10

The new «Lost»

This is going to be the new «Lost», and I mean that in a negative way. Just Like Lost, it had a great start, but it also just keeps throwing new weird, mysterious things at us that never is explained.

The first season started weird, but I stuck with it because of all the positive reviews I've heard. And finally, the last two episodes were great, finally something happened and it seemed great.

Season 2 started slow, but I kinda anticipated that. So I stuck with it and hoped things will be explained and that it would pick up pace. But episode 7,8 and 9 is just so slow and stupid, this should have been one episode. And the last episode doesn't explain much at all, new weird things still come that are not explained, and it just ruined the whole show.

Don't waste your time on this as I have done.
  • jlnepal
  • 22 de abr. de 2025
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10/10

To me it's a masterpiece

If you think about it in a deeper sense the Severance corporation is a metaphor of for how trapped workers are in their job, that's my theory. I love it all I'm surprised a few hated it something about waiting for something that's ridiculous or they know the nothing, seems to be a buildup and a lot to learn about the series regardless the show is magnificent! The thriller aspect is glorious and I'm a couple episodes in. When the show first released it had a 7.2 and jumped to 8.2 that's well deserved!
  • UniqueParticle
  • 23 de mar. de 2022
  • Link permanente

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