EPISODE
SEASON
Following the second World War that ends with defeating America, so it is dominated by the German and Japanese forces, a young woman finds a mysterious movie that will change the incidents down, the thing that makes her fear and challenges her, so she does her best, in order to save the movie to achieve her goal.
8 June 1982, Santa Monica, California, USA
2 June 1951, Wainwright, Alberta, Canada
28 August 1973, Jasper, Alberta, Canada
4 March 1963, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA
22 April 1985, Hennigsdorf, Brandenburg, Germany
2 April 1971, Toronto, Canada
17 November 1951, Sarasota, Florida, USA
November 18, 2015
The best new show of the fall season (and there is no close second) is not on a broadcast network... The honor belongs to... Amazon and its luminous series version of The Man in the High Castle.
September 25, 2015
There are a few flaws in the six episodes Amazon made available for review, but none of them undermines the depth and power of Dick's premise.
September 21, 2015
If you were looking for a reason to sign up for Amazon Prime, this is it.
October 26, 2015
The best new drama of this 2015 crop, and a show well worth supporting.
March 11, 2015
The direction hid the episode's big surprise well, and the drama continued to promise more.
September 17, 2015
The pilot was very strong on world-building, less so on characterization, so we'll have to see if Spotnitz can fill this fascinating reality with equally fascinating people.
September 18, 2015
Former X-Files producer Frank Spotnitz is just the guy to take on Phillip K. Dick's novel of Nazis and the Japanese splitting up the United States after winning World War II, and the pilot concludes on a hell of a twist.
October 26, 2015
The first episode of this new Amazon Prime Instant Video series is slow-paced, but intriguing enough to make me want more.
October 26, 2015
With brooding British actor Rufus Sewell leading a strong cast, this history-twisting dystopian fantasy is must-see streaming TV.
February 01, 2015
"The Man in the High Castle" immediately grabs you with one of the more evocative opening credits sequences in recent memory.

