Welcome to Into The Void, a weekly pilgrimage into, well, whatever happens to be going on in the horror-obsessed (and unfortunately opinionated) mind of Scott Wampler, officially licensed opinion-haver and co-host of the FANGORIA Podcast Networkโ€™s The Kingcast. All sales are final. No refunds will be issued.


Iโ€™ve adopted a new approach to my viewing habits during quarantine, and itโ€™s one that has proved unexpectedly beneficial over time. Namely: Iโ€™m mostly ignoring every new series that comes along (there are, quite simply, too goddamn many of these things to keep track of anymore), then waiting to see which ones catch on among my circle of close friends, who tend to take their appointment TV viewings quite a bit more seriously than I do. Assuming your own crewโ€™s tastes tend to align with your own, and assuming you donโ€™t care about watching everything the day it becomes available (these are, admittedly, two very large assumptions), itโ€™s an approach thatโ€™s saved me untold hoursโ€™ worth of time and drawn me towards a number of shows that mightโ€™ve otherwise slipped through the cracks.

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Showtimeโ€™s Yellowjackets is a prime example of this. Iโ€™d seen the trailer, I knew which network it was on, and I knew it offered an impressive roster of talent both in front of and behind the camera, but it took a good friend of mine bullying me for several weeks straight about not having started Yellowjackets (โ€œI AM TELLING YOU THIS IS EXTREMELY YOUR SHIT,โ€ an average late night text might read) to get me to actually start watching Yellowjackets. And yโ€™know what? They were right. Yellowjackets was extremely my shit. Same goes for Amazon Primeโ€™s recently-launched Outer Range, a sort-of metaphysical western revolving around Josh Brolin and his rancher family livinโ€™ out on the prairie and discoverinโ€™ a big olโ€™ hole to nowhere (well, not exactly โ€œnowhere,โ€ but letโ€™s not spoil anything) out in the fields behind their modest homestead. A couple of friends pushed me towards that one, as well, and by the end of the second episode, Iโ€™d already decided this was a show Iโ€™d be sticking with โ€˜til the bitter end.

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This also recently occurred with Severance, the Dan Erickson-created horror/sci-fi/dark comedy/thriller series that wrapped its first season on Apple+ earlier this month. Of course Iโ€™d seen everyone rhapsodizing about the show on social media since at least mid-February, but it took a few friends signing off on it (and, to be frank, the announcement that Apple+ was giving the show a second season; Iโ€™m far more inclined to hop onboard a new series when it seems unlikely it will be canceled before Iโ€™ve finished watching the first few episodes) to get me to set aside an entire day over the past weekend to get all caught up with it. Once again, my pals were right, but it is worth pointing out that any one of โ€˜em couldโ€™ve talked me into tuning in immediately if theyโ€™d simply told me how much The Prisoner DNA Severance contains.

To be fair, I donโ€™t expect everyone to know what The Prisoner is. Itโ€™s a TV series (really, itโ€™s a single seasonโ€™s worth of a TV series) that originally debuted all the way back in 1967, and while you can find it streaming on Tubi, IMDb TV, Roku and the like, it simply isnโ€™t a reference point for most people living their lives through pop culture in 2022. Itโ€™s also odd in a way that might turn some viewers off, defies easy categorization, and its Austin Powers-esque costumes, sets and special effects will feel very โ€ฆ oh, letโ€™s say quaint to modern eyes. But if you can shrug off those sorts of things (and you damn well should!), youโ€™ll find one of the most profoundly influential genre shows ever made.

You can get a taste of this showโ€™s tone through its incredible intro, presented here:

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One part spy thriller, two parts aggressive surreality, and one part sinister sci-fi nightmare about a man fighting against an unknowable organization with a penchant for playing deviously elaborate mind games, The Prisoner tells the story of a secret agent (Patrick McGoohan) who wakes up one morning in The Village, a picture-perfect little town (the very real location of Portmeirion, Wales) where everyone gets a number rather than a name. Our hero, newly christened Number Six, must figure out why heโ€™s been brought here, whoโ€™s pulling the strings, and what the hell is going on with that gigantic floating security system named โ€œRoverโ€ that always seems to be popping up just as he starts making headway on an escape attempt.

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Number Six is frequently caught by that roving security balloon (which, by the way, is a direct precursor to Lostโ€™s infamous Smoke Monster), but heโ€™s also stymied by the Village leadership, who spend the duration of the series trying to break Sixโ€™s mind so that he will, โ€œby hook or by crook,โ€ give up whatever โ€œinformationโ€ resides in his mind. This isnโ€™t quite the story of Severanceโ€™s Mark S. (Adam Scott), a worker toiling away at the Lumon Corporation. In Markโ€™s case, he signed up โ€“ willingly, I might add โ€“ to be part of the companyโ€™s โ€œSeverance Program,โ€ which separates a workerโ€™s consciousness into two distinct halves, neither of which have any memory of the other: the hours they spend on the clock for Lumon, and the hours in which they arenโ€™t at work.

Turns out, the version of Mark thatโ€™s been trapped in the โ€œwork hoursโ€ half of his consciousness has been having a rough go of things lately. His old pal Petey recently stopped showing up at the office, a new hire immediately rejects the Severance process and sets about trying to escape in an escalating series of desperate maneuvers and the work theyโ€™ve been doing for Lumon has begun to feel somewhat ominous. Possibly even dangerous. So, sure, Mark got himself into this mess, whereas Number Six was taken against his will, and that is a crucial difference, but beyond that fact, the pair share quite a few similarities โ€“ as do each of these shows.

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To wit, both the Villageโ€™s residents and the workers in Lumonโ€™s Severance program are under constant surveillance, and they generally go about their days doing whatโ€™s expected of them. Breaking the regular rhythms of either space will get security called down on you with a quickness (Rover for the Villagers, Mr. Milchik for those on Lumonโ€™s โ€œsevered floorโ€). In certain cases a more powerful punishment might get meted out (the Village has all manner of ways of breaking its stubborn citizens, while going too far over the line will get you sent to Severanceโ€™s โ€œbreak roomโ€). Both shows withhold key pieces of information from their audiences, overflow with striking production design, and seem preoccupied with the concept of control. If thereโ€™s any doubt that one is informing the other, consider that Severance ends one late-in-the-game episode with a needle-drop of Billie Holidayโ€™s โ€œIโ€™ll Be Seeing You,โ€ a direct nod to The Prisonerโ€™s oft-uttered Village catchphrase, โ€œBe seeing you.โ€ I donโ€™t think we can read The Prisonerโ€™s tea leaves for any hints as to where things might be headed on Severance, to be sure, but Iโ€™d bet good money the folks behind the latter are big fans of the former.

Iโ€™ve got a few episodes of Severance left before Iโ€™ll have completed season one, but Iโ€™m so delighted to have a show like this to look forward to (of course, now I gotta wait in between seasons, which means Iโ€™ll be foaming at the mouth by the time season two rolls around, but I can be mostly patient). This series scratches a few of the same itches The Prisoner did back when I first stumbled across it over twenty years ago. Iโ€™ll be eager to see if Severance makes any further explicit nods to the series Iโ€™m certain (at least partially) inspired it, and I canโ€™t wait to find out where the hell this weird little journeyโ€™s gonna take us. Really, thereโ€™s no telling. I mean, who knows โ€“ maybe itโ€™ll all build to Mark somehow reversing the Severance process and waking up in Portmeirion.

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