An old romance intersects with a deadly present threat.An old romance intersects with a deadly present threat.An old romance intersects with a deadly present threat.
Zach Cherry
- Dylan George
- (credit only)
Sarah Bock
- Miss Huang
- (credit only)
John Turturro
- Irving Baliff
- (credit only)
Christopher Walken
- Burt Goodman
- (credit only)
Patricia Arquette
- Harmony Cobel
- (credit only)
Ólafur Darri Ólafsson
- Mr. Drummond
- (as Darri Ólafsson)
Daniel Cioffoletti
- Blood Drive Worker
- (uncredited)
Mitchell Hochman
- Irving Watcher
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
Severance is a miracle, the fact that this show works as well as it does is truly groundbreaking. Episode 7 takes what some could consider to be filler, and turns it into a gutwrenching backstory that pushes the main goals of the season into a necessity. I will avoid spoilers, but the story we got this episode truly put me personally in the shoes of our main character, and I am heartbroken.
I can't go any longer without mentioning the cinematography of this episode, oh my god? This should come as no surprise as the show's lead cinematographer made her directorial debut, and she knocked it out of the park.
Adam Scott gives a career performance, which could be said for many episodes this season. I am in awe of the character work and writing that Ben stiller and co. Have crafted here.
I can't go any longer without mentioning the cinematography of this episode, oh my god? This should come as no surprise as the show's lead cinematographer made her directorial debut, and she knocked it out of the park.
Adam Scott gives a career performance, which could be said for many episodes this season. I am in awe of the character work and writing that Ben stiller and co. Have crafted here.
One of the most beautifully crafted episodes of television ever, and the most emotional episode of Severance yet.
It's hard to talk about how amazing this episode is without spoiling anything but god the way it just weaves this mind-bending torturous sci-fi story with this beautiful Orpheus and Eurydice analogy of two lovers mourning each other, not knowing how close they really are. Just absolutely heart wrenching.
As many lore bombs as someone could hope for, impeccable cinematography, set design, acting, writing, just absolutely beautiful from the top down.
There are still three episodes left and whole season(s?) ahead of this show and this still feels like the Magnum Opus of Severance.
In my opinion, this is the greatest episode of television ever, and this cements Severance as my favourite show of all time.
It's hard to talk about how amazing this episode is without spoiling anything but god the way it just weaves this mind-bending torturous sci-fi story with this beautiful Orpheus and Eurydice analogy of two lovers mourning each other, not knowing how close they really are. Just absolutely heart wrenching.
As many lore bombs as someone could hope for, impeccable cinematography, set design, acting, writing, just absolutely beautiful from the top down.
There are still three episodes left and whole season(s?) ahead of this show and this still feels like the Magnum Opus of Severance.
In my opinion, this is the greatest episode of television ever, and this cements Severance as my favourite show of all time.
This episode is nothing but perfection and for Severance standards that is a high bar. I truly believe Severance is one of if not the best show ever made (at least in my opinion) and this episode proves why I love this show. It hit me in the feels, it gave me adrenaline, it made me smile, laugh even, and of course it made me cry. This episode is the core reason why Severance is what it is and why it asks more questions instead of answers them, because when they finally answer them it feels better than if they resolved this story in episode 1. Best episode of the season so far and possibly one of the best episodes of television ever created.
10jjhawk02
This show just went from amazing to a completely whole new level. I really can't remember the last time I watched an episode of any tv show and felt this intrigued. Each scene seems so well crafted it really seems like every single line of dialogue has had tons of thought and consideration behind it. Also, the way the show stays totally unpredictable is actually incredible. I genuinely watch every scene with no idea where it'll go next. And the more I watch the more I realize how much planning and attention to detail has been put into the whole story. Best episode of the season and maybe the entire series.
It's kind of insane to think this was originally inspired by the backrooms. Almost every scene leaves you mind blown with the camera work, set design, color grading. Everything is phenomenal. The transitions are so constantly creative you are siting there wondering how did they do that nearly every other scene. As far as story telling goes this is easily the most abstract and non-linear severance has ever been. It's unclear who's memories we are looking at half the time and who's perspective we are watching, and yet it still makes senses. We see more of lumon and what they are doing but there is still pieces missing, everything is there but it isn't quite connecting yet. I think most importantly this episode effectively sells Gemma as a character and it sells Mark and Gemmas relationship as something we should care about. This show continues to push television as a median forward and I'm on the edge of my seat to what comes next.
Did you know
- TriviaThe song that plays throughout Gemma's and Mark's montage is called " La valse à mille temps".
- GoofsWhen Gemma is getting her blood drawn in the room; it shows a close up of the nurse taping down the needle. It's clearly shown the needle is almost all of the way out of her arm.
Details
- Runtime50 minutes
- Color
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