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
Take a bow Jessica Lee Gagné! Everything about this episode - the plot, the pace, the sets and most importantly, cinematography is 10/10.
I have never seen better 50 minutes of television - and rarely 50 continuous minutes of any motion picture.
It has the dead wife montage. But it blooms in a way that we feel like the honeybee flying around in anticipation.
It opens up the Severance lore more than any other episode (barring S1 finale). But it makes it even more eerie.
We see more of the sterile Lumon but with georgious aesthetics. It is menacing with a friendly facade. Its clinical precision is handled by steely grip. It takes you to a prison of hope - that you volunteered into but cannot escape.
This episode should be (and I hope, will be) studied in art schools for ages.
I have never seen better 50 minutes of television - and rarely 50 continuous minutes of any motion picture.
It has the dead wife montage. But it blooms in a way that we feel like the honeybee flying around in anticipation.
It opens up the Severance lore more than any other episode (barring S1 finale). But it makes it even more eerie.
We see more of the sterile Lumon but with georgious aesthetics. It is menacing with a friendly facade. Its clinical precision is handled by steely grip. It takes you to a prison of hope - that you volunteered into but cannot escape.
This episode should be (and I hope, will be) studied in art schools for ages.
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.
Wow, episode 7 of Severance deserves an Emmy!
It's nice to see that they gave their cinematographer, Jessica Gagnea, a chance to direct this episode and ended up delivering the best episode of the season. I was so intrigued the whole episode - the camera work, the transitions and the emotional journey was truly a work of art.
This episode also givesDichen Lachman (Gemma) the spotlight she deserves and she proves how talented she is. She perfectly shifts between her innie, outie and past self, showing her incredible range. It's also wonderful to see more asian actors getting more screen time.
It's nice to see that they gave their cinematographer, Jessica Gagnea, a chance to direct this episode and ended up delivering the best episode of the season. I was so intrigued the whole episode - the camera work, the transitions and the emotional journey was truly a work of art.
This episode also givesDichen Lachman (Gemma) the spotlight she deserves and she proves how talented she is. She perfectly shifts between her innie, outie and past self, showing her incredible range. It's also wonderful to see more asian actors getting more screen time.
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.
As a starter, this episode is directed by the cinematographer Jessica Lee Gagné, and if she reads this: thank you! They could easily tell whole story plainly but this way, just just amazing. The transitions, how timeline goes one to another. Details that make you remember old episodes and exact moments... I hope she directs more in the later episodes.
It's been an episode where we go in depth of the story. The story that led us to see S1E1, so loong back. But also we were able to see current moments and had a chance to find connections. It gives us a solid idea of the relationship between Mark&Gemma and how all this happen. The transitions and all cinematic details help you to understand whole story lot easier if you ask me.
I believe that was a common idea that innies were a lot positive people than outies. We seen a lot of scenes that support this idea rather than Gemma, imo.
In conclusion, lots of anger, sadness, hard-to-describe-without-spoilers moments wait for you and this is the episode that is worth every single second of it.
It's been an episode where we go in depth of the story. The story that led us to see S1E1, so loong back. But also we were able to see current moments and had a chance to find connections. It gives us a solid idea of the relationship between Mark&Gemma and how all this happen. The transitions and all cinematic details help you to understand whole story lot easier if you ask me.
I believe that was a common idea that innies were a lot positive people than outies. We seen a lot of scenes that support this idea rather than Gemma, imo.
In conclusion, lots of anger, sadness, hard-to-describe-without-spoilers moments wait for you and this is the episode that is worth every single second of it.
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.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 77th Primetime Emmy Awards (2025)
Details
- Runtime
- 50m
- Color
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