A quiet, unsettling, slow-burn series about a corporation that has solved the problem of bringing work home — by surgically removing the part of you that remembers it.
"Severance" is the name of an elective medical procedure offered by Lumon Industries, a centuries-old biotech firm with the polished calm of a 1970s insurance brochure. A small implant in the temple cleaves your memories along a single, clean seam: work and life.
Inside the Lumon building you are an "innie" — an employee who knows nothing of the outside world. The moment the elevator rises and the doors open onto the lobby, that consciousness goes dark and the "outie" — the rest of your life — takes over. You will never remember a single day at the office. You will also never remember a single bad one.
It is, on paper, a beautiful idea. Mark Scout, a quiet widower played by Adam Scott, signed up for exactly that reason. The series begins on the day his ordered, dual existence stops feeling ordered.
Every episode plays with the same uncanny question: if a version of you exists that you will never meet, that you have effectively imprisoned in a windowless office for eight hours a day — is that person you? Do they owe you obedience, or do you owe them a life?
Wakes up on a conference-room table. Has never seen the sun, eaten a meal of their own choosing, or known their own surname. Knows only the white-lit corridors of the severed floor, the four colleagues at their pod, and the strange, soothing rules of Lumon. Every workday, for them, is their whole life.
Drives to the parking lot. Steps into the elevator. Eight hours later steps back out as if no time has passed, paycheck deposited, weekend free, work-stress entirely absent. Knows nothing of what their innie thinks, feels, fears, or longs for. Begins to wonder, slowly, whether that should bother them.
"The work is mysterious and important." — A Lumon corporate maxim
Brutalist office geometry. Off-white corridors that bend at impossible angles. Mid-century furniture in lonely, oversized rooms. A retro-futurist palette of putty, sage, and fluorescent green. Every frame composed like an Edward Hopper painting in which the lonely figure is also you.
Patient. Frequently funny. Occasionally beautiful. Rarely in a hurry. The horror is administrative. The jokes are mostly delivered to no one. The dread accumulates the way dust accumulates on a filing cabinet.
Consent, identity, and the strange contract you sign every Monday morning when you agree to spend a third of your waking life as someone else's tool. It is the rare workplace show that takes the workplace, and what it does to a person, completely seriously.
Anyone who has ever wondered who they would be if their job vanished tomorrow. Fans of Mad Men, Black Mirror, The Office, and Charlie Kaufman. Anyone willing to trade fast plot for atmosphere and ideas. Probably not for viewers who need every episode to end in a chase.
Two seasons are available now. Season one is a complete, deliberate, near-perfect arc — start there. Season two picks up immediately after, deepens the world, and gives the supporting cast room to breathe.
Watch on Apple TV+