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  1. 2 days ago · “June Zero” tells the story through three characters: a 13-year-old Jewish Libyan immigrant to Israel, the Jewish Moroccan prison guard who guarded Eichmann’s cell, and a Holocaust survivor who went on to participate in gathering evidence in the case against Eichmann. Eichmann appears as a character, although the audience never sees his face.

  2. 2 days ago · 4 min. 0. ( 3 stars) Jake Paltrow’s soul-searching “July Zero” starts in 1961 Israel with reports that Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann has been sentenced to death. Eichmann was found ...

  3. 1 day ago · 13-year-old Libyan immigrant David (Noam Ovadia) is a marvelous, hot-tempered scamp who must keep his morbid after-school job a secret in “June Zero.”. Courtesy of Cohen Media Group. Jake ...

  4. 2 days ago · Noam Ovadia plays an Israeli boy caught up in the Eichmann trial. David is probably the most intriguing character in this emotionally intense movie. Although he has lived in Israel for only about a year, he already speaks fluent Hebrew, unlike his father Yaki (Yaakov Zada Daniel), and is comfortable with his new identity as an Israeli.

  5. 19 hours ago · As Gordon F. Sander points out in Serling: The Rise and Twilight of TV's Last Angry Man, the haunting (both literally and figuratively) exploration of the Third Reich's genocidal machinations and the importance of remembering the Holocaust, "Deaths-Head Revisited" was written by Serling as a reaction to the high-profile trial of Adolf Eichmann, which was nearing its end by the time the episode ...

  6. 2 days ago · The Man in the High Castle is an American dystopian alternate history television series created for streaming service Amazon Prime Video, depicting a parallel universe where the Axis powers of Nazi Germany and the Empire of Japan rule the world after their victory in World War II.

  7. 4 days ago · Captured in Argentina and sentenced to hang by Israel’s supreme court in the early 1960s, Holocaust-organizing Nazi Adolf Eichmann’s state-sanctioned killing is pretty justifiable, so Jake Paltrow’s “June Zero” doesn’t really question that. But the film finds fascinating moral gnarls on the periphery of the case.