Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read a lot of the posts, but, agree that I feel puzzled by what decade it is meant to be set in as well as location. All desolate. Constant winter. Weird light at all times. What are we supposed to be taking away from all of that?
I've entertained the idea that the outies are all actually the first layer down in Severance world, a la The Matrix. So the real world is actually a construct, and not physical, which is why everything is slightly off, it's always winter, etc. But there are a lot of things that also contradict that idea.
I just get the impression that Mark is not a hapless victim of Lumon.
One other thing in hung up on—has there been any indication of what knowledge or information the innies vs. outties retain? I couldn’t work out that the innies believed the waterfall they saw during their outdoor adventure thingy was the biggest one in the world. They seem to possess some sort of baseline knowledge of the world-mark knew what sex was, and when we were introduced to Hellie, we didn’t see her go through some of start up programming to inform her baseline intellect. I guess I feel like I can’t reconcile that bit. Did I fall asleep at some point and miss something?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read a lot of the posts, but, agree that I feel puzzled by what decade it is meant to be set in as well as location. All desolate. Constant winter. Weird light at all times. What are we supposed to be taking away from all of that?
I've entertained the idea that the outies are all actually the first layer down in Severance world, a la The Matrix. So the real world is actually a construct, and not physical, which is why everything is slightly off, it's always winter, etc. But there are a lot of things that also contradict that idea.
I just get the impression that Mark is not a hapless victim of Lumon.
I'm quoting my own post here, but this episode solidified for me that the outie world is a closed world of some type. Lumon is a company town. It appears that Lumon owns an extremely vast amount of land and has different towns under its jurisdiction. I was fascinated by Bert telling Irving that he bought him a ticket for as far as he could go.
I think I'm pretty well off of the Matrix-like construct theory, but the part with the train, when it turned into the hallway that they can't escape/come back through, I don't know.
How did they all end up here? And some of them are at least second generation. Is this just an alternate world, but close enough to ours that we are only now catching on? Is it some M. Night Shamaylan The Village situation? Did they all volunteer? No one's outie talks about leaving, or even about going on vacation or a weekend away. I'm still thinking that the outies are actually all severed and are voluntarily in Lumon land.
Anonymous wrote:In the last scene, in the cabin, I wondered if Harmony has an innie and that was her innie that we were seeing looking so evil.
Anonymous wrote:In the last scene, in the cabin, I wondered if Harmony has an innie and that was her innie that we were seeing looking so evil.
Anonymous wrote:In the last scene, in the cabin, I wondered if Harmony has an innie and that was her innie that we were seeing looking so evil.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Haven’t read a lot of the posts, but, agree that I feel puzzled by what decade it is meant to be set in as well as location. All desolate. Constant winter. Weird light at all times. What are we supposed to be taking away from all of that?
I've entertained the idea that the outies are all actually the first layer down in Severance world, a la The Matrix. So the real world is actually a construct, and not physical, which is why everything is slightly off, it's always winter, etc. But there are a lot of things that also contradict that idea.
I just get the impression that Mark is not a hapless victim of Lumon.
Anonymous wrote:I am getting a little tired of the work it is taking to follow the plot.
It is like once a week we are given a few crumbs to decipher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This episode wasn't for me. I feel like we didn't need a whole episode dedicated to what basically amounted to one revelation that I'm not terribly sure changes the narrative much.
I think this changes the narrative a lot, or has the potential to. Cobel is going to align with MDR against Lumon, and unlike Reghabi, she has the knowledge to make re-integration successful. She also knows all the Lumon secrets.
I agree this episode didn't have a lot of action, but it was visually stunning and sets up a promising season finale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hated this episode. Physical and psychological torture for an hour +, no relief or explanation. It felt claustrophobic which I guess was the point.
I felt like this had a lot of explanation, compared to where we've been until now.
I didn’t think so. It was pretty clear Gemma was held on a different floor. Now we know she somehow signed up for it but not why and we know the files are rooms/specific fears but still not how it helps Lumon. The idea of her stuck there is way worse than the severed floor.
No, we don't know that she signed up for it. We don't know how she got there.
She said she signed up as an experimenal test subject with Lumon after the miscarriage. But she may not have known exactly what she signed up for before they hacked her brain.