The Man In The High Castle - Season 4 Today
Then, the portal explodes—not into destruction, but into life. As the final shot pans out, a crowd of ordinary Americans looks up to see a sky filled with thousands of people walking through from other dimensions. The screen cuts to black.
Our protagonists are scattered. Juliana Crain (Alexa Davalos) is now a reluctant true believer, haunted by the Traveler’s films and hiding out in the Neutral Zone. John Smith (Rufus Sewell) has achieved his ultimate ambition: he is the Reichsführer of North America, but he finds the throne is made of broken glass. His son Thomas’s death in Season 3 has hollowed him, and the Nazi machine demands he sacrifice the last shreds of his humanity. The Man in the High Castle - Season 4
The season’s biggest liability is what it does with its protagonist. Juliana Crain, after three seasons as the moral center, is sidelined for much of the first half. She wanders the Neutral Zone in a spiritual fugue, delivering cryptic monologues about the nature of fate. Her arc, which involves her becoming a quasi-mystical figure who can literally see into alternate timelines, feels like a different show—one far less interesting than the political thriller we signed up for. When the climax hinges on her ability to "walk between worlds," the gritty alt-history drama tips into metaphysical abstraction that it can’t fully support. Then, the portal explodes—not into destruction, but into
Is this a hopeful image of infinite possibility? A symbol of peaceful integration across realities? Or a logistical nightmare—an invasion that will cause chaos? The show refuses to answer. For some fans, this is a profound, poetic ending that honors the theme of “the grasshopper lies heavy.” For others, it’s a cop-out, a deus ex machina that avoids showing the actual cost of liberation. Our protagonists are scattered
After three seasons of slow-burn world-building, moral ambiguity, and the ever-present dread of Axis rule, The Man in the High Castle arrives at its final season with a daunting task: stick the landing. Season 4, released in 2019, is a season of contradictions. It is simultaneously the show’s most urgent and its most rushed, its most emotionally resonant and its most narratively frustrating. While it delivers moments of genuine power and a hauntingly beautiful finale, it stumbles under the weight of its own mythology and some questionable creative pivots.
If there is one reason to watch Season 4, it’s Rufus Sewell. His John Smith is the tragic heart of the series, and this season is his tragedy played to its bitter end. Sewell navigates the character’s icy pragmatism and buried guilt with surgical precision. Watching him confront his own creation—the genocidal empire he helped build—is masterful. His final scene, a quiet, devastating act of defiant love, is the single best moment in the entire series. It’s a Shakespearean exit that redeems many of the season’s earlier missteps.