Three years after Mark (Scott) took Helly on a mental health walk and stumbled upon a mysterious baby goat department, the dynamic MDR duo returned to the goat room in Season 2, E
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' 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,
Emmy-nominated actor Adam Scott opens up about season 2 of "Severance" on Apple TV+ and his ongoing work behind-the-scenes, as well.
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.
"When Ben [Stiller] said to me that I was in charge of the goats, I can't really convey how thrilled I was and am," Christie says with a laugh.
After the third episode of season two of Severance, what is the goat department and what does it mean? Read on for all the details.
Severance has overcome the relative obscurity of Apple TV+ to launch into mainstream television discourse with the debut of its critically acclaimed second season. Ben Stiller is behind the scenes writing and Adam Scott stars as the lead in an ensemble cast about a group of office workers that starts to figure out the truth about their job: their employer has split their personalities between home and at work.
Collider is thrilled to bring you an exclusive sneak peak of Ms. Cobel asking Helena Eagan for her job back in Severance Season 2, Episode 3.
The much-anticipated return of the series sharply satirising work-life balance is convoluted but still skewers the quiet violence of the corporate world
According to neuroscientists, mind-altering brain chips are less far-fetched than they seem. But how far off are they - and would they find a market?