
Why ‘Severance’ Season 2 took three years to make and what’s coming with the ‘darker’ return of Apple TV+
It feels like Season 2 of Severance has been going on forever, but we’re only a month away. A new interview reveals more about why it took so long for the show to return and what’s to come in its second Apple TV+ run.
What to expect from Severance Season 2
vanity fair Featuring new interviews with Severance’s two creative leaders, creator and writer Dan Erickson and director and executive producer Ben Stiller. In this article, Anthony Breznican delves into various details related to the hit series.
Expect some serious tension to surface between the ins and outs of the characters.
New episodes delve deeper into the split identities of the four central characters, whose personal lives are technically separated from their workplace memories. This essentially turns each person into two different people, sometimes with conflicting interests.
The first season of Severance was already pretty dark, but the show’s creator Dan Erickson has teased an even darker season two.
I think things will get even darker. Season 1 ends with the bear being poked, so we wanted to put our heroes in a scarier place. They organize this little rebellion and they’re able to have some success with it, but the question in season two was, what happens when the bears charge back? What impact did this victory have on them? Without giving too much away, I think the consequences are dire.
One event in season 2 could take things in a particularly strange direction. It’s Lemon’s corporate training camp.
Apparently, “the core Innie team took a break from the Macro Data Improvement Department to go on a field trip to the snowy landscape.”
Stiller teases: You always have to think several steps ahead to understand how Lumon intends to control its employees with its corporate philosophy. I think there are other team building exercises and dynamics that ultimately serve a different purpose. ”
Why did it take so long to make the next season?
When asked about the nearly three-year gap between Severance’s first and second seasons, both Erickson and Stiller agreed.
The answer is basically a combination of two things. They are perfectionists who want to take all the time necessary to get things right, and the unfortunate delay due to the Hollywood strike.
Erickson said:
Sometimes I would come up with something that worked perfectly on paper, but until I got there and shot it, I realized it wasn’t perfect. We never wanted to allow it to be anything less than perfect…the whole place we were going to have (we had). We had already built them, or had partially built them, when we realized, “Oh, that doesn’t work.” Calls with studios aren’t always fun
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It took a while to write season two. It then started filming in October 2022, but was shut down in May 2023 due to a strike. At that point, we had completed about seven of the ten episodes, but had to regroup after the strike. Preparing for a show takes time. So filming didn’t start until January 2024. We then shot from January to May and completed the final three episodes.
The full interview is worth reading for Severance fans.
“Severance” Season 2 debuts with the first episode on Friday, January 17th. You can watch the entire first season on Apple TV+ now.
What do you think about the new Season 2 details? Are you looking forward to Severance’s return? Let us know in the comments.