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A Philadelphia couple is in mourning after an unspeakable tragedy creates a rift in their marriage and opens the door for a mysterious force to enter their home.
Servant bypasses the sophomore slump to deliver a compelling character-driven season that ups the ante on the gripping mystery while fearlessly getting more unhinged than ever.
It is starting to become difficult to believe some of the decisions these characters make but I for one am prepared to continue on this ride to see just how crazy things are going to get.
If season one was the foundation, then in this season those foundations are literally cracking to expose a rot we didn't know existed, revealing deeper layers.
It takes four episodes for things to really get cooking (no pun intended), and everything that happens after that is implausible to the point of laughable.
To say where the show goes in its second season would be to quickly enter spoiler territory; by the end of the third episode, enough startling twists have generated sufficient material for an average series' entire season.
The sophomore season seems to be building steadily toward another chaotic and awful reckoning with Leanne, and this is one nightmare I'm in no rush to escape.
Shyamalan has created a work that both intrigues and consumes his audience while leaving perhaps a few audience members mildly mystified over the plot.