Well, I reviewed just about every episode of the first season Silo back in the Spring and Summer of 2023, and then the first episode of the second season this past November 2024, and then ... there was something about this second season that made me feel I wanted to know more before I wrote another review, and here I am with a review of the rest of season two, including the finale, up on Apple TV+ just a few days ago.
[And there will be no Silo spoilers ahead until the very end ... ]
What especially struck me about this second season of Silo, as it progressed, is that it had a cadence and essence that reminded me of Isaac Asimov's Foundation trilogy (and I mean the original printed trilogy, not the series, now waiting for its third season, also on Apple TV+, which in many crucial ways is a very different story than the one in the novels).
Now, Silo takes place on Earth, and a very limited part of it, at that, while Foundation takes place in the galaxy writ large, so what could the two have in common? For me, one of the best parts of the Foundation trilogy is the search for Second Foundation, which requires Ebling Mis to spend the rest of his life looking for answers in the library on Trantor. [And here I guess I should warn you about spoilers for the Foundation trilogy, in case you haven't read it.] Ebling pores of over countless documents, to say the least, trying desperately to glean information from a galactic culture that no longer exists.
And as people in both silos start to do that in this second season of Silo -- more in the second silo than the first, but really in both -- I got the same feeling I did when I read equivalent passages of the very different story, in a very different settling, in the Foundation trilogy. (And here I should say again -- as I've said in reviews of previous episodes -- that I haven't actually read Hugh Howey's stories.) But there's something very powerful -- emotionally as well as intellectually -- in the struggle to make sense of what's right before your very eyes, what your forebears have left for you, intentionally or not, which offers life-saving, civilization-saving information. It doesn't matter whether it's presented in codes or symbols or letters of an alphabet. The effect is the same.
It gets, in my mind, to magic of written words, and all written communication, whether on paper in books or on screens. These squiggles on surfaces provide essential keys to our very existence, and the science fiction stories which focus on them are narratives in which these words and numbers are as much as or even more than the heroic people who must decode them.
[Ok, now I'll talk about the very end of the 10th episode of the second season ... ]
This is of one the better twists I've seen in a science fiction story on the television in quite awhile. The jump to our outside world in Washington DC -- pretty literally our world -- was stunning stuff. It reminded me of I think the finale of the 3rd season in Lost, when we suddenly saw our world, back in Los Angeles, not in the past, not in a flashback, but in the present, as three people from the island made it back home.
The move in both series -- Silo and Lost -- was at once jolting and immensely refreshing. And I'll see you back when Season 3 of Silo is up on the screen.
See also Silo 2.1: The Post-Apocalyptic Ladder
And see also Silo 1.1-1.2: A Unique Story, Inside and Out ... Silo 1.3: Like Chernobyl, Repaired ... 1.4: Truth, Not Quite ... 1.5: Revelations ... 1.6-1.7: The Book and the Water ... 1.8: What Really Happened ... 1.9: I knew It! But What Then? ... Silo 1.10: Three Truths