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Euphoria (Israeli TV series)
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Euphoria (Israeli TV series)

Euphoria
Hebrewאופוריה
GenreTeen drama
Created byRon Leshem
Written by
  • Ron Leshem
  • Daniel Amsel
Directed byDafna Levin
Starring
Country of originIsrael
Original languageHebrew
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes10
Production
CinematographyShai Goldman
Running time52 minutes
Production companies
  • Tedy Productions
  • Hot
Original release
NetworkHot 3
Release30 November 2012 (2012-11-30) –
1 February 2013 (2013-02-01)

Euphoria (Hebrew: אופוריה, Oforia) is an Israeli teen drama television miniseries created and written by Ron Leshem and directed by Dafna Levin, broadcast on Hot 3 from 30 November 2012 to 1 February 2013. Levin, Leshem and Tmira Yardeni are credited as creators.[1] The series follows a group of 17-year-olds who spend their time carelessly having sex and taking drugs, with seemingly no parental authority. Adults appear in the series only rarely, and are always filmed at an angle that obscures their faces. Some of the series plot is based on a true story.[2][3] Skins has been named as an influence on the creators of the series.[3] The show was met with controversy by Israeli officials such as Orli Yehezkel of the Cable and Satellite Broadcasting Council who called for the miniseries to be taken off the air.[4]

In 2019, Euphoria was adapted into an American television series of the same name by Sam Levinson,[3] which premiered on HBO on 16 June 2019.[5] Leshem and Levin also joined the production as executive producers.[6][7]

Plot

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The story, set in the 1990s, follows a group of high school students, as they attempt to cope with an uncertain future through the use of drugs and sex.[8][9] It is based on the true story of a teenager who was murdered outside of a club, and the series takes place one year later.[1]

Cast and characters

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  • Roni Dalumi as Hofit, a drug-addicted girl and cutter who blames herself for Raanan's death.
  • Kosta Kaplan as Ra'anan, a 16-year-old murdered the year before the events of the series, based on the 2004 murder of Ra'anan Levy.[10]
  • Dekel Adin as Kino, Ra'anan's childhood friend, lives alone while his parents are in Shanghai, has an active imagination and is mostly seen sleeping and in a dream world where he spends his time with Ra'anan in search of "Mirando Al Cielo" in South America.
  • Maor Schwitzer as Osher Gimpel, nicknamed "Shamen" (fatty), a self-conscious boy addicted to pornography, experiences impotence as a result. He has sex with the house maid and eventually buys a sex doll.
  • Dolev Mesika as Deker Eldar, nicknamed "Tzehubon" (yellow), a shy boy who uses his knowledge of chemistry and online instructional videos to produce and sell hallucinogenic drugs, is in love with Hofit, whom he later rapes when she rejects him. He tries to get into the pilot course in the IDF.
  • Roy Nik as Elkana Eldar, Deker's older brother, an IDF defector who spends most of his time having casual sex and giving advice to the others.
  • Amit Erez as Noy Cohen, a lonely, obese girl who begins having casual sex with men per Elkana's advice and is subsequently diagnosed as having HIV.
  • Avi Mazliah as Uriel, nicknamed "Mastuli" (stoned), an openly gay drifter/couch surfer who has left home and moves from place to place. Per request, he takes Noy's virginity and later stays with Shuki, who tries to perform conversion therapy on him.
  • Uriel Geta as Tomer Samigura, nicknamed "Tomeriko", a young drug dealer and Orthodox Jew who later murders Yizhar, Ra'anan's killer, and broadcasts it live on the internet.
  • Tawfeek Barhom as Dudu, a 17-year-old Arab and aspiring veterinarian, lives in Kino's apartment building.
  • Ofer Hayoun as Shuki Samiguara, Tomeriko's religious older brother, tries to convert Mastuli.

Reception

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The show received mixed reviews in Israel, and was cancelled after one season. Yedioth Ahronoth critic Einav Schiff partially credits the cancellation to the show's late time slot, in a time before streaming television or delayed watching was as common in Israel, making it difficult for Euphoria to find an audience.[11]

References

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