Tehran | |
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Genre |
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Created by |
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Written by |
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Directed by | Daniel Syrkin |
Starring |
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Composer | Mark Eliyahu |
Country of origin | Israel |
Original languages |
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No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 16 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Cinematography | Giora Bejach |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | Kan 11 |
Release | 22 June 2020 present | –
Tehran (Hebrew: טהרן) is an Israeli spy thriller television series created by Moshe Zonder for the Israeli public channel Kan 11.[1] Written by Zonder and Omri Shenhar and directed by Daniel Syrkin,[2] the series premiered in Israel on 22 June 2020[3] and 25 September internationally on Apple TV+.
Featuring dialogue in Hebrew, Persian and English, the series follows an Iranian-Jewish Mossad agent on her first mission in Iran's capital Tehran, which is also the place of her birth.
On 26 January 2021 it was announced that the series had been renewed by Apple TV+ for a second season.[4][5][6] On 22 June 2021, it was announced that Glenn Close had joined the cast.[7][8] The second season was released on 6 May 2022.[9] On 8 February 2023, it was announced that the series had been renewed by Apple TV+ for a third season, with Hugh Laurie joining the cast.[10]
At the International Emmy Awards ceremony held in November 2021, Tehran received the award for best drama series, becoming the first Israeli series to win this award.
Protagonist Tamar Rabinyan, a young Jewish woman born in Iran but raised in Israel, is a Mossad agent and computer hacker on an undercover mission in the Iranian capital to disable a nuclear reactor.[1] Her objective is to take down the Iranian air defences for long enough to enable the Israeli Air Force to bomb a nuclear plant, and so prevent Iran from obtaining an atomic bomb.[11] When she arrives in Iran, she switches identities with Zhila Gorbanifar, a Muslim employee of the local electric company. In Zhila's place she enters the electric company station and connects to the computer network. Then she tries to cut electric power to the Iranian radar system, to facilitate an ongoing Israeli Air Force attack. Her mission fails because her boss, who thinks she is Zhila, tries to rape her and is killed in the ensuing struggle. After escaping, Tamar goes into hiding. Being born in Iran and having moved to Israel when she was six, Tamar now discovers her local roots, goes to see her aunt, and befriends Iranian pro-democracy activists.[3] Meanwhile, she is hunted by Faraz Kamali, head of investigations of the Revolutionary Guards.
Prior to being smuggled out of Iran to start a new life in Canada, Tamar accepts a mission to rescue one of the Israeli pilots captured after the failed reactor mission. At the hospital where the pilot is being held, she encounters Marjan Montazami, a British psychotherapist and local agent for Mossad, who aids in her escape. Tamar's aunt is executed for assisting her, and a devastated Tamar agrees to stay in Tehran with Milad to undertake a new mission: the assassination of Qasem Mohammadi, who has been promoted to head of the Revolutionary Guards. Tamar works to gain access to Mohammadi by getting close to his son, Peyman. Faraz Kamali continues his relentless pursuit of Tamar, but finds himself compromised as Marjan begins working as a psychotherapist for his wife following her abduction and release by Mossad. In spite of Faraz's reluctant assistance, Tamar's attempt to poison Mohammadi fails, as does an attempt to kill him with a booby-trapped phone. Mossad Director Yulia Magen calls off the mission, but Tamar and Milad try to take control of Mohammadi's sports car as he races against his son, which only results in Peyman's death. Marjan is poisoned by Nahid, Faraz's wife. Tamar manages to kill Mohammadi with the explosive mobile phone. Milad is killed by a car bomb planted by Mossad in the escape car, leaving Tamar alone and trapped in Iran with no one to trust.
Series | Episodes | Originally released | ||
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First released | Last released | |||
1 | 8 | 22 June 2020 | 27 July 2020 | |
2 | 8 | 6 May 2022 | 16 June 2022 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "Emergency Landing in Tehran" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 22 June 2020 |
2 | 2 | "Blood on Her Hands" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 22 June 2020 |
3 | 3 | "Yasamin's Girl" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 29 June 2020 |
4 | 4 | "Shakira and Sickboy" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 29 June 2020 |
5 | 5 | "The Other Iran" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 6 July 2020 |
6 | 6 | "The Engineer" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 13 July 2020 |
7 | 7 | "Tamar's Father" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 20 July 2020 |
8 | 8 | "Five Hours Until the Bombing Run" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 27 July 2020 |
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
9 | 1 | "13,000" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 6 May 2022 |
10 | 2 | "Change of Plan" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 6 May 2022 |
11 | 3 | "PTSD" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 13 May 2022 |
12 | 4 | "The Rich Kids" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 20 May 2022 |
13 | 5 | "Double Fault" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 27 May 2022 |
14 | 6 | "Faraz's Choice" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 3 June 2022 |
15 | 7 | "Betty" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 10 June 2022 |
16 | 8 | "Blood Funeral" | Daniel Syrkin | Moshe Zonder & Omri Shenhar | 17 June 2022 |
Production began on 28 October 2019.[14] Some of the actors playing Iranians were born in Iran, and speak the language as their mother tongue. Niv Sultan, who plays Tamar, studied Persian for four months. In addition, she studied Krav Maga, an Israeli self-defence system. The series was shot entirely on location in Athens.[15] Filming for Season 2 began in August 2021.[16]
Originally the series aired on Kan 11 in Israel and is available for streaming on the Kan 11 website in Hebrew. In July 2019, Cineflix acquired exclusive global distribution rights for the series.[17] On 16 June 2020, Apple TV+ bought international rights to the series outside of Israel,[18][19] and will serve as the exclusive streaming home to the series worldwide.[20]
The show's distributors claim that the series was popular with audiences in India, Japan and Singapore.[21]
In September 2020, it was announced that Moshe Zonder, the series co-creator, had signed a first-look deal with Apple.[22] In October 2020, Niv Sultan signed with WME.[23]
On 10 September 2020, it was announced that co-creator Moshe Zonder had signed a multi-year "first look" deal to create projects for Apple TV+.[24]
In December 2020, executive producer Julien Leroux said that production had begun on a second season though it had not been officially approved.[21] Almost two months later, on 26 January 2021, Apple TV+ confirmed that the series had been renewed for the second season.[25] In June 2021, it was reported that [[[Glenn Close]] would be joining the cast.[26]
Season 2 was released on 6 May 2022, as per confirmed reports with the first two episodes released that day and later episodes on a weekly basis.[27]
On 28 February 2023, Apple TV+ announced that Tehran had been renewed for a third season, with Hugh Laurie set to join the ensemble cast.[13]
The show's producers and Kan 11 reached an interim agreement to allow production of the third season to continue during the 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike.[28] The third season, produced by both Apple TV+ and KAN 11, wrapped shooting in Greece in the summer of 2023 and was supposed to premiere around April of 2024, but the release was delayed due to the Israel–Hamas war and the ensuing Iran–Israel conflict.[12][29] In November 2024, the season premiere was announced for 9 December 2024 on KAN, but remained unannounced for Apple TV+.[29]
Tehran has received positive reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, season one holds a rating of 94% based on 18 reviews, with an average rating of 7.3/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Tehran's expertly plotted twists further elevate a geopolitical thriller deftly balanced between the global and the personal."[30] On Metacritic, the show has a score of 72 out of 100, based on six critics.[31]
Writing in The Guardian, Rebecca Nicholson gave the second series four out of five, praising Close's performance and describing the series as "a solid thriller, often breathlessly exciting, [that] has cracked the code of relentless tension".[32]