When Season 2 of Severance starts, you are immediately thrown back into Lumon with Mark S. as he sprints through the hallways. This sequence is almost two minutes long, and it bas
Bryan Cranston shattered expectations as Walter White, and Adam Scott’s gripping performance in Severance shows his formidable, dramatic skills.
Severance is back and hitting the ground running in its Season 2 premiere, “Hello, Ms. Cobel,” which picks up in Lumon’s offices, moments after Mark’s ( Adam Scott) innie is reactivated following Season 1’s fateful revelation.
Emmy-nominated actor Adam Scott opens up about season 2 of "Severance" on Apple TV+ and his ongoing work behind-the-scenes, as well.
Severance' director and EP Ben Stiller breaks down the opening scene from Season 2 alongside star Adam Scott. Ben provides an explanation of how they captured the precise movement and momentum using a bolt arm,
Drew Barrymore revealed during Ben Stiller, Adam Scott and Britt Lower's Tuesday, Jan. 21 appearance on her show that she calls Stiller — whom she costarred with in 2003's 'Duplex' — "Benjamin Rabbit.
The three year wait for the second season of the hit AppleTV+ series Severance has proven to be worth it, as the show not only as a 98% critics score on
Apple TV+’s sci-fi workplace drama Severance had won the hearts of both critics and viewers alike when it premiered in 2022.
As we saw in the season 2 teaser trailer, the latest season kicks off with Mark (Scott) sprinting through Lumon's eerily white halls looking for the wellness center after the trou
For an opening scene that seems pretty seamless, Ben Stiller has revealed that season 2 of “Severance” was the result of months of work. After ending the first season on a massive cliffhanger, the drama series returned after almost three years to a two-minute-long sequence that looks like it takes place in one take.
Adam Scott reveals Tom Cruise inspired his performance in heart-pounding Severance scene - The opening sequence of ‘Severance’ season two took five months to shoot
The much-anticipated return of the series sharply satirising work-life balance is convoluted but still skewers the quiet violence of the corporate world