Silo [ Certified ]
Rebecca Ferguson delivers a career-best performance as Juliette, an engineer turned reluctant rebel. She’s not a superhero—she’s a grease-stained mechanic who fixes broken generators and, in doing so, starts to question why the silo’s history is written in disappearing ink. Her quiet determination is magnetic. Opposite her, Tim Robbins as the shadowy Head of IT Bernard is chillingly soft-spoken—a villain who believes his lies are kindness.
If there’s a flaw, it’s that some supporting characters get lost in the shadows, and the plot occasionally repeats beats of “don’t trust anyone” a little too neatly. Also, be warned: the season ends on a gut-punch cliffhanger that will have you shouting at your screen. Opposite her, Tim Robbins as the shadowy Head
Beneath the Surface, a Masterclass in Slow-Burn Paranoia Rating: ★★★★☆ (4.5/5) Beneath the Surface, a Masterclass in Slow-Burn Paranoia
The show’s brilliance lies in its central question: What if the thing protecting you is actually the prison? Every reveal (the secret order of the “Pact,” the forbidden relics from the past, the strange algorithm that decides who lives and dies) peels back a layer of paranoia. The pacing might frustrate viewers craving non-stop action—there are episodes where a single conversation in a dark hallway feels like a chess match for survival. But that slow drip of information makes the final stretch of the season absolutely electrifying. Based on Hugh Howey’s Wool trilogy
What makes Silo extraordinary is its patience. This is not a show that hands you answers; it makes you feel the weight of every rivet, every stairwell, every whispered rumor. The production design is breathtakingly oppressive—corrugated metal corridors, flickering lights, and a massive, spiraling staircase that doubles as the city’s nervous system. You can almost taste the recycled air and feel the collective anxiety of 10,000 people trapped in a tin can.
If you’ve ever wondered what would happen if George Orwell and Isaac Asimov co-wrote a claustrophobic thriller, Silo is your answer. Based on Hugh Howey’s Wool trilogy, this Apple TV+ gem doesn’t just tell a dystopian story—it entombs you in one.


