The
first
season
of
Silo
ended
on
a
truly
great
cliffhanger.
The
Apple
TV
Plus
series,
an
adaptation
of
Hugh
Howey’s
trilogy
of
postapocalyptic
novels,
tells
the
story
of
the
remnants
of
humanity,
who
live
deep
underground
in
silos
designed
to
protect
them
from
a
poisoned
planet.
Season
1
had
the
feeling
of
a
small-town
mystery,
as
mechanic-turned-sheriff
Juliette
(Rebecca
Ferguson)
stumbled
upon
a
secret
that
completely
upended
her
worldview.
Her
quest
to
uncover
that
mystery
ultimately
led
her
outside
of
the
silo’s
protective
walls,
which
is
right
where
the
season
ended.
Silo’s
second
season
picks
up
in
the
aftermath
and
ramps
things
up
by
both
raising
the
stakes
and
raising
a
big
heap
of
new
mysteries
to
obsess
over.
This
piece
contains
spoilers,
including
details
of
Silo’s
season
1
finale.
First,
a
little
reminder
about
how
we
got
here.
The
show
is
set
at
some
point
in
the
future,
and
the
silo
is
home
to
a
carefully
controlled
population
of
10,000
residents,
who
follow
a
strict
set
of
rules
ostensibly
designed
to
keep
them
safe
from
the
grim
landscape
outside.
That
landscape
is
ever-present
on
huge
displays
inside
the
silo,
and
certain
residents
are
punished
by
being
forced
to
go
outside,
while
everyone
else
watches
as
they
walk
out
into
the
scorched
world
and,
a
few
moments
later,
inevitably
collapse.
But
after
reluctantly
being
thrust
into
the
role
of
sheriff,
Juliette
learned
that
the
outside
might
not
be
so
dangerous
after
all.
A
complex
series
of
events
leads
to
Juliette
herself
leaving.
But
she
doesn’t
collapse
—
and
her
steps
over
the
hill
into
a
vast
expanse
set
the
silo
aflame.
Season
2
picks
up
right
in
the
moment
when
she
takes
those
steps,
and
it
creates
two
parallel
threads.
On
one
side,
there’s
Juliette,
who
learns
that
her
home
is
just
one
of
many
silos.
Eventually,
she
makes
her
way
to
a
seemingly
abandoned
one
not
far
from
her
own.
The
path
there
is
littered
with
dead
bodies;
she
steps
over
corpses
and
crunches
a
few
skulls
on
the
journey.
The
new
silo
is
seemingly
empty,
and
much
of
it
is
flooded,
though
somehow
the
power
is
still
working.
After
investigating
and
meeting
the
sole
survivor
(played
by
Steve
Zahn,
a
wonderful
new
addition
to
the
cast),
she
quickly
learns
that
this
silo
died
because
of
a
violent
uprising.
And
what
started
it?
Someone
going
outside
and
surviving.
So
despite
all
of
the
initial
effort
to
get
to
this
new
place,
she
sets
to
work
heading
right
back.
It
shouldn’t
be
too
surprising,
then,
that
things
aren’t
going
well
at
home.
Tensions
are
rising
as
the
mayor
Bernard
(Tim
Robbins)
uses
every
trick
at
his
disposal
in
an
attempt
to
quell
a
rebellion
from
the
lower
levels.
Meanwhile,
Juliette’s
friends
—
spurred
on
by
her
bold
steps
outside
—
become
rightfully
convinced
that
they’re
being
lied
to
about
the
reality
of
their
world.
There
are
violent
clashes
on
the
massive
spiral
stairs
that
connect
all
of
the
silo’s
levels
and
all
kinds
of
clandestine
meetings
between
different
factions.
The
tight
confines
of
the
silo
make
many
of
these
moments
feel
claustrophobic
and
intense.
What
becomes
clear
pretty
quickly
is
that
the
silos
aren’t
just
arks
meant
to
save
humanity
from
a
postapocalyptic
wasteland.
They’re
also
exceedingly
complex
psychological
experiments.
And
those
two
things
go
hand
in
hand;
every
strange
or
unexpected
thing
that
happens
in
the
silo,
it
seems,
is
actually
part
of
an
intricate,
manipulative
plan
to
keep
the
population
in
check
and
avoid
a
deadly
disaster.
That
became
obvious
toward
the
end
of
the
first
season,
and
the
complexity
ramps
up
here.
There
are
multiple
layers
of
deceit
and
mystery,
which
are
compounded
by
the
fact
that
nobody
in
the
silo
actually
knows
the
full
picture.
They’re
just
doing
the
best
they
can
with
the
information
they
have.
Even
seemingly
small
revelations
—
like
the
quality
of
a
certain
kind
of
tape
—
can
have
major
implications.
For
season
2’s
first
half
(I’ve
watched
five
of
the
10
episodes
so
far),
this
makes
for
a
compelling
watch
that
steadily
expands
on
what
made
Silo
so
great
initially.
It
simply
expands
the
scale.
And
as
the
mysteries
shift
and
grow,
so,
too,
does
the
tension.
Silo’s
second
season
starts
streaming
on
Apple
TV
Plus
on
November
15th.
(Originally posted by Andrew Webster)
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