“Don’t let that man near our children.” That’s the kind of detail that humanises his Nazi enforcer so horrifyingly well. “If I don’t come back alive,” he tells his wife. Smith is cautious, not just because he’s loyal, but because he’s unsure about where this path is leading. He’s summoned by Heydrich to go hunting, where he’s informed that the Fuhrer is weak and Heydrich plans to depose him. But Sewell, undoubtedly the most menacing man in a cardigan since Tom Hardy in Lawless, increasingly emerges as uncertain as the rest of them. The girl, of course, is Juliana Craine (Alexa Davalos), who’s sucked into the resistance and whose relationship with Joe continues to blossom, much to the displeasure of her husband, Frank (Rupert Evans). “I know you’ve been lying to me,” Smith informs his double-agent, Joe Blake (Luke Kleintank). He has the intimidating air of a man who knows everything. Compared to his recent role in ITV’s Victoria, the actor’s as unrecognisable and versatile as he is relentless charming. ![]() Rufus Sewell has been key to that, his Obergruppenführer John Smith becoming more complex and nuanced with every minute he spends on screen. The mystery surrounding the film reels has only grown as the season has continued, a puzzle that’s as ambiguous as the Nazis we see on screen. “Take this,” Juliana was told way back at the start of the show, as she was handed a film reel by someone in the resistance. But the very act of world-building is precisely what the people within this world are doing Imperial Japan and the Reich are both crafting their empires amid an unseen Cold War, determined to stop the people on the ground asking that same question. It dares to ask the question “What if?” – and then it answers it too. Ever since its opening episode, with its jaw-dropping shot of Time Square, world-building has been the biggest strength of the series, creating something creepily believable and wonderfully immersive. ![]() From there, it’s possible to really admire just how gigantic this world is. ![]() Yes, that’s where the end of Season 1 of Amazon’s gripping, fascinating, disturbing alt-history thriller takes us – all the way to the top of the Reich, in more ways than one. The fact that he’s saying it to Adolf Hitler only adds to the weight of it. “A wise man once said to me, fate is fluid, destiny is in the hands of man,” says Rudolph Wegener as The Man in the High Castle comes to a close. With Season 2 of The Man in the High Castle on the way, we look back at the final episodes of Season 1.
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