Related: New on Netflix in March 2026 — The Full List of Movies and TV Shows
News
Netflix Just Added 1 of the Best — and Scariest — Sci-Fi Shows of the Last 10 Years
In 2015, The Man in the High Castle was one of the first original series on Prime Video. As of this week, it’s got a new streaming home on Netflix.
The show is based on the 1962 sci-fi novel by Philip K. Dick, the writer whose work inspired Blade Runner and other hits.
This series is set in an alternate timeline where the German and Japanese forces defeated the United States during World War II and carved up America in its wake.
Now, Watch With Us shares three reasons why you need to watch The Man in the High Castle on Netflix in March.
The Premise Is Dark and Intriguing
The world of The Man in the High Castle isn’t one we’d want to live in, but there is something fascinating about the way the world changed on the show. Japan controls most of the West Coast of the United States, while Germany took the majority of the East Coast and the central states. Only a small neutral zone separates the two empires in the Rocky Mountains.
Not every citizen accepts the world as it is. The late Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa — who had such a famously menacing role as the villain in Mortal Kombat — has an affecting turn as Japanese Trade Minister Nobusuke Tagomi. His people are seemingly in control of their own fate, but Tagomi sees that becoming masters of America has led to more harm than good. His acts of resistance are less overt than others, but he has a key part to play in the story. However, most of the show’s spotlight goes to Juliana Crain (FBI: Most Wanted‘s Alexa Davalos), one of the Americans living under the Japanese occupation.
Alexa Davalos Gives a Standout Performance
Although Davalos has worked regularly as an actress for over two decades, she’s rarely received the spotlight that she had on this show. That’s unfortunate because Davalos is magnetic and compelling in this role. She initially portrays Juliana as a loyal citizen who has embraced Japanese culture. It’s only when she witnesses the cruelty of the regime firsthand that she rebels. Juliana is also one of the handful of characters who become aware of newsreels from other worlds that depict the defeat of the Nazis.
Over time, Juliana takes on bigger risks to bring down the Nazis, even when it may cost her the love of her boyfriend, Frank Frink (Bridgerton‘s Rupert Evans). She also captures the romantic attention of Joe Blake (Luke Kleintank), a man with his own dubious loyalties.
The Characters Exist in Morally Ambiguous Territory
Ironically, Frank’s acts of rebellion go even further than Julianna’s, and without spoiling early events in the show, the Japanese regime brought that on itself through its own acts of cruelty. To attack the Japanese controlling his home, Frank has to morally compromise himself.
Regardless, Frank looks like a saint compared to John Smith (Rufus Sewell), a former American soldier turned Nazi collaborator. Thanks to his ruthlessness, Smith has become an SS Obergruppenführer and one of the leaders of the Nazi regime in America. Smith isn’t some cartoonish villain, even though he routinely does things that are evil. Sewell gives Smith an underlying humanity that lets him acknowledge the cost of his betrayal and his ideology. Smith even risks his life and standing to protect one of his family members from his fellow Nazis, only to see it backfire. Smith pays a high price for his power, and his story is one of the most interesting aspects of the show’s four-season run.
The Man in the High Castle is streaming on Netflix.
Read the full article here
-
TV5 days agoFamous costume designer exposes vile A-listers, including one ‘major a–hole’
-
News5 days agoJenna Dewan Made This Comfy Push-Up Bra a Key Piece of Her Spring Outfit — And It’s 30% Off
-
News5 days agoChristina Haack Gushes Over ‘Supportive’ Boyfriend Chris LaRocca: ‘A Nice, Easy Man to Be Around’ (Exclusive)
-
Movies5 days agoChadwick Boseman’s widow shares 2021 Oscars speech she would have given if ‘Black Panther’ star won
-
TV5 days agoKris Jenner reveals what Kylie ‘spent every dime’ of her ‘KUWTK’ earnings on at age 17
-
Royals5 days agoPrince Harry, Meghan Markle slam allegations in new book
-
TV6 days ago‘Summer House’ newbie Dara Levitan talks KJ romance, Lindsay Hubbard with ‘VRT’
-
Celebrity5 days agoOprah Winfrey claps back after she’s trolled at Paris Fashion Week