Season 2 has been, in large part, about the slow, agonising realisation that the innies matter — not as mere extensions of their outies, but as real people, with real desires, real fears, real heartbreaks. And no one embodies that struggle more than Mark and Helly.
Helly, who once threatened death (or a few fingers) rather than remain a corporate pawn, has spent the latter half of this season doing the unthinkable: carving out something resembling an identity within Lumon’s walls. She’s stopped trying to escape and started trying to live — which, in her case, means resisting Helena Eagan’s conniving control with everything she has. Britt Lower has been extraordinary this season, capturing Helly’s fire-and-ice contradiction — she’s a woman born in captivity, burning for freedom, terrified of what it might mean when she gets it.
Severance Season 2 (English)
Creator: Dan Erickson
Cast: Adam Scott, Britt Lower, Tramell Tillman, John Turturro, Zach Cherry, Dichen Lachman
Episodes: 10
Runtime: 45-75 minutes
Storyline: Mark leads a team of office workers whose memories have been surgically divided between their work and personal lives
Adam Scott has spent the past two seasons playing a man at war with himself, and in Cold Harbor, he gives his most incredible performance yet. The grieving, guilt-ridden Outie Mark, wants his life (wife) back. Innie Mark, who’s been slowly realising that he exists as more than an indentured labourer, wants a life, period. The two communicate in a video relay that plays like a hostage negotiation, with innie Mark forced to confront the brutal truth: His outie is willing to sacrifice him if it means getting Gemma back.
Mark and Helly have become each other’s lifelines — not in the ‘will-they-won’t-they’ sense (though the electricity in the way they look at each other is devastating), but in the sense that they are the only two people in the world who truly understand what it is to be born into an office and told to be grateful for it. The final grainy shot of the two of them tearing through Lumon’s stark hallways, bathed in feverish crimson, should feel like pure doom — two lab rats scurrying through a maze with no exit. And yet, paradoxically, it’s one of the most hopeful, tender images of the entire season. Orpheus and Eurydice running hand-in-hand, once more into the fray.
A still from ‘Severance’ Season 2
| Photo Credit:
Apple TV
The tragedy here is almost biblical. We’re used to stories where a person fights for their freedom, but the innie battle is against the horrifying possibility that they may never have been real to begin with, let alone deserve a happily ever after. Mark’s decision to stay in Lumon, even as Gemma is freed, is an act of defiance that is tragic, but so exhilarating.
Milchick (the ever-excellent Tramell Tillman) continues to be Severance’s most unnervingly versatile instrument — one moment, a ruthless corporate enforcer with an ineffable composure; the next, a slightly pitiable tragicomic functionary, forced into humiliating displays of faux camaraderie. And, of course, let’s not forget his true calling: the greatest office party dancer in television history. For the love of Kier, give Milkshake the Emmy.
Ben Stiller stages the entire affair with meticulous control that makes the whole operation feel airtight but simultaneously on the verge of collapse. And the marvellous Jessica Lee Gagne’s wide-shot zoom-ins and tracking dolly’s through Lumon’s antiseptic hallways, keeps the atmosphere thick with dread, but also ripping at the seams with emotion.
A still from ‘Severance’ Season 2
| Photo Credit:
Apple TV
If Cold Harbor has a flaw, it’s the same flaw that has defined much of Severance’s second season — a willingness to delay gratification in favour of unease. The questions are piling up faster than the answers, and while that’s part of the show’s episodic charm, it’s also an increasingly risky gamble. There’s only so long an audience can sit with a mystery before it starts to feel like a stalling tactic (or worse, Tim C. cuts funding).
And yet, when the credits roll, it’s impossible to deny Severance’s power. Every episode of this season has wrung every last nerve dry, leaving TV Twitter in a state of collective cardiac arrest. It may not have given us the answers we wanted just yet — just enough to keep you compliant, never enough to let you leave — but hey, at least Emille is okay.
Season 3 cannot come soon enough. See you at the Equator.
All episodes of Severance Season 2 are currently streaming on Apple TV
Published – March 22, 2025 12:40 pm IST
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