Separation Apple TV’s Distopian Work Place the weekends have been weekends at the end of the season, and some are not handling it well. Don’t make a mistake, “Cold Harbor” was a thrilling time and television change that ended the season on an incredible note. May argue that it could act as a The end of the uncomfortable and tragic seriesBut Apple has other projects. When we wait for Season Three, fans leave rumors at the end of two season and they are very divided, especially at the end of the last five minutes. At these last minute, the issue of moral Kundram Mark S (Adam Scott) is interesting to discuss, but the reaction may also indicate that some people are not engaged in the topics of the show, and instead of seeing the tunnel -linked “ship wars”.
If you are just tingling and immediately wants to recover why your timeline is screaming about a mattress named Mark and she’s not going home with her wife Jema (Dachin Lachman), let’s break the basics. Separation. In this show, people who work in a company called Lomon are tied up so that they have two separate memory banks. His “Ani” only has memories of his time that are on the floor in his office, while his “out” does not remember anything from his work day and he goes about his life without any care in the world. The show sometimes finds questions about whether or not parts of one’s personality or inclinations are natural, but as far as the world is the world Separation The relationship is, these are the two people who are involved in the body. The pyys are allowed to see or know the outside world only in a controlled environment, and the biggest mystery of this show is born of this division. When they come down the walls and are able to communicate in Mark’s Ani and Out “Cold Harbor”, it becomes clear that the two take one body and a little.
Outmark told his Ani to protect his wife from the depths of disconnected floor testing, which would probably be exhibited by Lumon’s corruption, dissolution of the company, and the “deaths” of each of them working there. Mark, explaining that he is in the process of “re -integration” and combining both memories, tries to make his own self feel at a sense of security, but not only is it like half a measure with anyone who does not want to be overwhelmed by his life. Through their entire conversation, it is clear that Mark looks as a means to end his name, as a complete person with his hopes, dreams and desires. So when it comes to performing the project, which requires cooperation from both signs, when they cross the floor, they have a dispute because whether or not they weigh, they are willing to commit suicide as well as kill the rest of them, so that they can save their outfits and happily save them.

All of this is established until the last minute, in which Jema has been successfully taken out of Lumon, and all her mark has to leave her with her and return her out. But then he hears Hailey (Brit Lower) calls his name. This is the woman whom she loves, whose name cannot be bothered to recover in her conversation by her name. Why should he quit some other moments with her so that her out can get her life. It was decided, Ani Mark goes to Haley and takes it by hand, and they run into the depths of the cutting floor, which has no plans that they do not plan ahead of fighting each other for every second. Meanwhile, Jema is calling on her husband, apparently unaware that she has been disconnected, and has requested her to join her on the other hand. It is a brutal, tragic and romantic declaration that is different from the personality of the nineteen.
This is a tough scene, and it’s found Separation The fans were divided into the middle. Did Mark S did the right thing? This is definitely not the most satisfying result for those who wanted Mark and Jema to live a happy life, but this is a very thematically appropriate result for a season that is focused on the sovereignty of this season and how it looks at their workplace as second -class citizens.
It is valuable to discuss the morality of everyone involved, but surprisingly, to discuss Mark’s decision somehow has been boiled in the shipping battle, with some Separation Fans are putting their team on Haley or Team Jima T -shirts and standing two women against each other. Friends, it feels like we have lost the plot again. Separation In the two seasons, it is just that there are different people with separate identity, targets and living experiences, while establishing it. The mark we are seeing is not raising Haley than Jema, he is choosing himself on his out. Jema is a suicide attack, but the mark inside Lumon is not her husband, and she is not her wife. The internal riots of Mark have been made clear by these two women on the heads of the office hall, but they are not literally making a decision between them. It did not stop the discussions from becoming a fiancé of ship war, full of fans who are missing the jungle for trees.
Yes, Jema will probably have some more trauma to work, when she saw her long -missing husband walking with another woman, but Mark’s “raising a woman to another woman” or “abandoning her wife” is missing both, and it shows that some people who see some of them are not only. At the end of the entire season, nineteen have been shown that they declare their sovereignty about Lumon and their wishes. This is not all text. Hailey stands on a table and has rallied a group of disconnected workers saying that they have only been given half a life but is able to fight for it. The idea that Mark is choosing Haley compared to Jema, both have a disappointing reading because it is deeply sympathetic to the plight of an oppressed class, and because it has reduced the complex of the weather in the triangle of small love.
SeparationThe end of the season is not a satisfying result that some fans were possibly hoping, which ended with Mark and Jema, and his out was made a good sacrifice to ensure that it had happened. But it was in accordance with everything Separation Ever said about how the nineteen have just been tools in their eyes. You can only be considered by people who have brought you into the world for so long before you fight. And sometimes fighting for yourself is to choose yourself, even for a few moments. This is a very interesting lens through which the end is more than one to discuss the importance of the show only two women to stand against each other.