Severance creator explains how season 1’s reaction influenced where the story went in season 2: “What makes the show so special is Mark, Helly, Irving, and Dylan”

Estimated read time 3 min read


Three years ago, Severance season 1 concluded on quite the cliffhanger, as our favorite Macrodata refiners figured out a way to awaken their innies in the outside world. With that, we’ve been assuming that the Apple TV Plus thriller’s upcoming second season would continue to reveal more about their real identities and what their mysterious employer, Lumon, is up to…

Instead, the follow-up looks at the more personal impact of the breach from the season 1 finale, which we delve into in our Severance season 2 review, and the ripples of tension its created between the core four. As Severance creator Dan Erickson tells SFX magazine: “After season 1, we had to take a step back and ask ourselves, ‘What exactly was it that made that work the way that it did?’ It was the smaller things, more so than the big things. 

“I think we all have an impulse to know what it is Lumon does; what are the goats, and all of that. But at the end of the day, I think what makes the show so special is Mark, Helly, Irving, and Dylan,” he adds with a smile. “And also Milchick, and Cobel, and Devon and Ricken… It’s the heart, it’s the beating human heart at the center of this cold world. Of course, the innies sort of blew up the status quo at the end of season 1, so we had to respect that and we had to let that propel us into a new situation but we knew we didn’t want to lose the small conflicts, like arguing over pencil erasers or finger traps.” 

Severance

(Image credit: Apple TV Plus)

Directed in part by Ben Stiller, Severance centers on colleagues Mark (Adam Scott), Helly (Britt Lower), Dylan (Zach Cherry), and Irving (John Turturro), who all work at a biotech company called Lumon Industries. Before being employed there, each of them agreed to undergo ‘severance’, a surgical procedure that splits one’s consciousness between work and, well, not work. But during the course of season 1, the quartet began to grow suspicious of their overlords and frustrated with their compartmentalized existences. 



Source link

You May Also Like

More From Author

+ There are no comments

Add yours