SeveranceSeason 2,Oh Mi episode 7 finally gave us an insight into what's happening to Gemma (Dichen Lachman) on the ominous "testing floor" — and as you probably already guessed, none of it's good.
We've already broken down "Chikhai Bardo" in detail, with theories on everything from what those different doors mean (and how they connect to the MDR files) through to what Lumon is actually trying to accomplish by putting Gemma through all this.
SEE ALSO: Can consent exist in 'Severance'?Other fans have made similar speculations since the episode aired, with Reddit user u/MysteryRawDog arguing that Lumon's main aim appears to be completely severing a person from any negative life experiences.
When Mashable's Belen Edwards spoke to Severancecreator Dan Erickson about episode 7, his comments seem to support this theory.
"I will say what's interesting here is that she's going through these painful or unpleasant experiences and then she's leaving, and the question that's being asked throughout the episode by Dr. Mauer (Robby Benson) is, to what degree is anything leaking through?" Erickson said. "Is she walking out of that room with any emotional echo of what she was going through in that room? So far it seems that she's not, so that's the throughline that I think is happening with what's going on in those rooms."
Another big question, however, concerns the final door. What about "Cold Harbor", the room that Gemma has yet to go in, but which shares a name with the file Mark (Adam Scott) is working on?
Well, following on from the idea that each room represents a different form of suffering, one commenter on Reddit speculated that "Cold Harbor" might be related to death.
"I think Cold Harbor will be the death of another, and the miscarriage scene was foreshadowing," they wrote.
It makes sense, doesn't it? The name "Cold Harbor" already evokes the concept of death, and it's also one of the most intense experiences of suffering a person can experience. If Lumon is trying to sever feelings of grief, it seems likely that this would be one of the final negatives life events that they work a test subject like Gemma up to. Mark and Gemma also have their own personal connections to grief — Gemma through the miscarriage, and Mark through the miscarriage and the loss of Gemma. Would this make them the ideal test subjects?
Severance Season 2 is now streaming on Apple TV+, with a new episode every Friday.
Topics Severance
Groupon and Grubhub join forces to get you hooked on food deliveryLatest 'Final Fantasy XV' update lets you dress up like an invincible badassLatest 'Final Fantasy XV' update lets you dress up like an invincible badassWhich one of you purchased the $109 Arcade Fire fidget spinner?Inspiring breastfeeding photoshoot turns the tables on rude commentsIncredible Chester Bennington mural is stopping people in their tracksWhat does Bran Stark know about Sansa that we don't?George and Amal Clooney to help 3,000 Syrian refugee children go to schoolMajor recall after thousands of iPhone cases cause chemical burnsWhich one of you purchased the $109 Arcade Fire fidget spinner?Clothing brands are making dedicated AirPod pockets now, if that makes sense to you'Game of Thrones' power rankings: 'Queen's Justice' editionHow 12 guys used peanut butter to escape from jail...yHow Tastemade has eaten the internet with Facebook and SnapchatGoogle Chrome's native ad blocker debuts in experimental browser'Miles Morales: SpiderHilarious optical illusion makes groom look like a centaurBefore Kim Kardashian, there was Angelyne. Now her identity has been revealed.I'm Littlefinger from 'Game of Thrones' and I'm weird as shitTyphoon Noru looks like a monster from space Out of Time by The Paris Review Watch the Staples Jr. Singers Perform Live at The Paris Review Offices by The Paris Review Mathematics of Brutality by The Paris Review Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Nonfiction by Alexis Pauline Gumbs Our Staff’s Favorite Books of 2021 by The Paris Review Back to the Essence by The Paris Review Redux: Couples at Work by The Paris Review Redux: Naked Lightbulb by The Paris Review Jesse McCarthy, Nonfiction by Jesse McCarthy Diary, 2022 by Catherine Lacey Jamaica Kincaid’s Rope of Live Wires by Maya Binyam Remembrance Day by Spencer Matheson Cooking with Virginia Woolf by Valerie Stivers Redux: Functionally Insane by The Paris Review On Thomas Bernhard and Girls Online by The Paris Review Chestnut Trees by Hermann Hesse Rhetoric and Rhyme: On Rap by Daniel Levin Becker Daniel Galera on “The God of Ferns,” the Review’s Holiday Reading by The Paris Review Cooking with Sergei Dovlatov by Valerie Stivers How to Choose Your Perfume: A Conversation with Sianne Ngai and Anna Kornbluh by Jude Stewart