Yeah, that would be my guess.Maybe it’s as simple as TPTB can turn the chip off when they want?
Yeah, that would be my guess.Maybe it’s as simple as TPTB can turn the chip off when they want?
I was wrong before. The person in the background isn't Milchick because he was wearing that dark blue turtleneck right after that moment when Mark arrived at Macrodata Refinement. The person in the background was wearing a regular white collar shirt.That is very curious.
Speaking of Stiller dropping hints, he made a perhaps innocuous, perhaps not, comment at the end of the Vanity Fair video I linked.
He comments on the guy we see in the out-of-focus, far background when Mark is at Wellness. "There's a guy back there. Looks kind of like you [Adam Scott], but not really" and both Stiller and Scott laugh. It's probably nothing and the guy in the background is probably just Milchick.
...but perhaps there's something more going on there.
Honestly, like I said in my review, I'm much, much more reminded of Counterpart and how its world had two sides of everything.There is a part of me that feels like this show is expanding on what Tatiana Maslany did in Orphan Black. In that show, she was playing multiple characters but it was the same actress and they were clones. Still, she had to give each character a different personality and different characteristics. Here, it feels like that is happening on a much broader scale with all basically this entire cast. It's amazing watching the differences in the innie and outie world, especially with Helena and Dylan. Even Mr Milchik has to act differently between the two worlds, and they talked a lot about that on the behind the scenes clip. I'm really excited to see this season expand on that, and I wonder if this episode confirmed that Helly R really is Helly R. Maybe there will be something else to it, but we saw each of them go into the elevator, unless the elevator screened Helena didn't effect her.
Honestly, like I said in my review, I'm much, much more reminded of Counterpart and how its world had two sides of everything.
I'm curious as to that piece of casting and its significance, if any.was sad how Dylan's interview with Great Doors went, going from pathetically low to satisfying just good enough to oops, bad joke to oh, you're severed, get the fuck out. What a roller coaster of a scene and I loved how they paired Zach Cherry with the wonderful Adrian Martinez (loved him in the short-lived Stumpton).
One thing I noticed, I actually paused it and showed my son, the Lumon parking lot. All those cars are from the 70's. But again, we see a smartphone. What year is this????
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Yup. We've seen a lot of this kind of cosmetic set-up in recent shows that deliberately don't want to root themselves in a specific time period or even "same reality as our own." I know there are more examples of it but the one that stands out the most to me is The Umbrella Academy (although even it throws a wrench into the works when it goes back in time to the very time-specific of 1963 Dallas).I don't think the show is supposed to take place in our future (or past for that matter) but in a universe slightly different from ours in a lot of ways. The clash between modern technology and 70's aesthetics + the differences we've seen in world geography seem to serve that atmosphere. Going from the MDR room with its extremely retro modems and chunky keyboards to seeing Mark text his sister on an iPhone is super jarring, though.
I don't think the show is supposed to take place in our future (or past for that matter) but in a universe slightly different from ours in a lot of ways. The clash between modern technology and 70's aesthetics + the differences we've seen in world geography seem to serve that atmosphere.
BTW: whatever happened to the woman who killed Graner? She seems to have vanished.
"Great Doors" looked decidedly not great. And was that guy Dylan's dad or what?
Thanks for this, and confirming my thinking, expressed upthread, there is definitely a resemblance to Scott.in a Vanity Fair BTS video Ben Stiller called out a figure in the background of the opening shot of the season who "looks kinda like" Adam Scott "but not really."
I don’t know why I read that last word as “Mannix” at first glance.Thanks for this, and confirming my thinking, expressed upthread, there is definitely a resemblance to Scott.
I'm wondering whether the severance system even really works as described. Could it be virtual reality of the kind in The Matrix?
TV is melting our brains?I don’t know why I read that last word as “Mannix” at first glance.![]()
I'm wondering whether the severance system even really works as described. Could it be virtual reality of the kind in The Matrix?
The outside seems to be almost as weird as the inside, with the entire town seemingly being owned by Lumon and all the weird interactions with Ricken's entourage and with Cobel/Selvig etc.I'm wondering whether the severance system even really works as described. Could it be virtual reality of the kind in The Matrix?
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