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Severance

  • TV Series
  • 2022–
  • 12
  • 50m
IMDb RATING
8.7/10
364K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
18
4
Adam Scott in Severance (2022)
Watch Official Trailer - Season 2
Play trailer2:36
23 Videos
99+ Photos
Conspiracy ThrillerDystopian Sci-FiPsychological DramaPsychological ThrillerWorkplace DramaDramaMysterySci-FiThriller

Mark leads a team of office workers whose memories have been surgically divided between their work and personal lives. When a mysterious colleague appears outside of work, it begins a journe... Read allMark leads a team of office workers whose memories have been surgically divided between their work and personal lives. When a mysterious colleague appears outside of work, it begins a journey to discover the truth about their jobs.Mark leads a team of office workers whose memories have been surgically divided between their work and personal lives. When a mysterious colleague appears outside of work, it begins a journey to discover the truth about their jobs.

  • Creator
    • Dan Erickson
  • Stars
    • Adam Scott
    • Britt Lower
    • Zach Cherry
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.7/10
    364K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    18
    4
    • Creator
      • Dan Erickson
    • Stars
      • Adam Scott
      • Britt Lower
      • Zach Cherry
    • 1.6KUser reviews
    • 87Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Top rated TV #115
    • Won 10 Primetime Emmys
      • 42 wins & 180 nominations total

    Episodes20

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated

    Videos23

    Tramell Tillman Through the Years
    Clip 0:30
    Tramell Tillman Through the Years
    "Welcome Back"
    Clip 0:41
    "Welcome Back"
    "Welcome Back"
    Clip 0:41
    "Welcome Back"
    How Adam Scott Makes the "Severance" Elevator Switch Believable
    Clip 3:36
    How Adam Scott Makes the "Severance" Elevator Switch Believable
    Our Favorite New TV Characters From 2022
    Clip 3:10
    Our Favorite New TV Characters From 2022
    The Rise of Adam Scott
    Clip 3:48
    The Rise of Adam Scott
    All About Britt Lower
    Clip 1:08
    All About Britt Lower

    Photos328

    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    View Poster
    + 324
    View Poster

    Top Cast99+

    Edit
    Adam Scott
    Adam Scott
    • Mark Scout
    • 2022–2025
    Britt Lower
    Britt Lower
    • Helly R
    • 2022–2025
    Zach Cherry
    Zach Cherry
    • Dylan George
    • 2022–2025
    Tramell Tillman
    Tramell Tillman
    • Seth Milchick
    • 2022–2025
    Jen Tullock
    Jen Tullock
    • Devon Scout-Hale
    • 2022–2025
    Dichen Lachman
    Dichen Lachman
    • Ms. Casey
    • 2022–2025
    Patricia Arquette
    Patricia Arquette
    • Harmony Cobel
    • 2022–2025
    Michael Chernus
    Michael Chernus
    • Ricken Hale
    • 2022–2025
    John Turturro
    John Turturro
    • Irving Baliff
    • 2022–2025
    Christopher Walken
    Christopher Walken
    • Burt Goodman
    • 2022–2025
    Marc Geller
    Marc Geller
    • Kier Eagan
    • 2022–2025
    Sarah Bock
    Sarah Bock
    • Miss Huang
    • 2025
    Yul Vazquez
    Yul Vazquez
    • Petey Kilmer…
    • 2022–2025
    Michael Cumpsty
    Michael Cumpsty
    • Doug Graner
    • 2022
    Sydney Cole Alexander
    Sydney Cole Alexander
    • Natalie Kalen
    • 2022–2025
    Claudia Robinson
    Claudia Robinson
    • Felicia
    • 2022–2025
    Mark Kenneth Smaltz
    Mark Kenneth Smaltz
    • Judd
    • 2022–2025
    Ólafur Darri Ólafsson
    Ólafur Darri Ólafsson
    • Mr. Drummond
    • 2025
    • Creator
      • Dan Erickson
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews1.6K

    8.7363.9K
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    Summary

    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.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    9PatriciaB-510

    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.
    jamesnymanaolcom

    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.
    9sevenlee1014

    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.
    8StanZolo1980

    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.
    10Freakazoid1175

    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.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      To 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.
    • Goofs
      Burt's outie husband is a completely different actor (or at least has a radically different appearance in Season 2.
    • Connections
      Featured in Welcome to Lumon (2021)

    Top picks

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    Greatest Character Actors of All Time

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    FAQ20

    • How many seasons does Severance have?Powered by Alexa
    • When is the third season going to emerge?
    • Are Harmony Cobel (Patricia Arquette) and Seth Milchick (Tramell Tillman) severed?
    • Is the procedure known as severance possible? Will it ever be?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 18, 2022 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Cắt Rời Ký Ức
    • Filming locations
      • Bell Laboratories - 101 Crawfords Corner Road, Holmdel Township, New Jersey, USA(Lumon Building, Exterior and Interior scenes)
    • Production companies
      • Fifth Season
      • Red Hour Films
      • Westward Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 50m
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.39 : 1

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