Gideon Raff
Gideon Raff (Hebrew: גדעון "גידי" רף; born 10 September 1972) is an Israeli director, screenwriter, and producer.[1][2] Born in Jerusalem to a Jewish family, he spent part of his early years in Washington, D.C., before returning to Israel, where he served in the Israel Defense Forces and later earned a degree in directing from a film school in Tel Aviv.[3][4] Raff gained international recognition for creating, writing, and directing the Israeli thriller series Prisoners of War (Hatufim, 2009–2012), which achieved the highest ratings for any drama in Israeli television history and secured nine Israeli Academy Awards.[2][5] The series served as the basis for the American adaptation Homeland (2011–2020), for which Raff co-wrote the pilot episode and received the 2012 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series.[6][7] His subsequent projects include executive producing the FX series Tyrant (2014–2016) and directing the Netflix film The Red Sea Diving Resort (2019), which dramatizes a real-life Mossad operation to smuggle Ethiopian Jews to Israel.[7][8]Early life and education
Childhood in Jerusalem
Gideon Raff was born on 10 September 1972 in Jerusalem, Israel, to a Jewish family.[1] His father, Eitan Raff, served as an economic advisor at the Israeli embassy in Washington, D.C., leading the family to relocate there when Raff was two years old.[9] They returned to Jerusalem when he was six, after which he was raised in the city.[4][3] Limited public details exist regarding specific childhood experiences or education during these Jerusalem periods, though his upbringing in the city preceded mandatory military service and later studies in film.[4]Israeli Defense Forces service
Gideon Raff, born in Jerusalem, completed mandatory national service in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), enlisting as required for Israeli male citizens.[4] He served for three years as a paratrooper, a role involving rigorous airborne infantry training and operations within the IDF's elite units.[2] Raff's paratrooper service exposed him to the psychological and operational demands of military life in Israel, including potential risks of capture and combat stress, which resonated with themes in his subsequent work.[10] Following his discharge, he relocated to Tel Aviv to pursue studies in film directing at Tel Aviv University, marking the transition from military obligations to creative endeavors.[4]Studies in film and initial influences
Following his mandatory service in the Israel Defense Forces as a paratrooper, Raff pursued formal education in film at Tel Aviv University, earning a degree in the field.[11] This program provided foundational training in filmmaking techniques and storytelling, aligning with his emerging interest in narrative-driven projects.[9] Subsequently, Raff relocated to Los Angeles to attend the American Film Institute (AFI) Conservatory, where he specialized in directing and graduated in 2003.[4] During this period, he shifted focus from an initial aspiration in acting—which he briefly explored in school but deemed unsuitable—to directing, influenced by hands-on coursework emphasizing practical production.[12] His time at AFI also exposed him to American industry practices, prompting early professional steps such as assisting director Doug Liman on the 2005 film Mr. & Mrs. Smith.[4] Raff's initial foray into filmmaking drew from personal experiences, including his IDF service and Jewish heritage, which instilled themes of conflict and resilience evident in his debut short film The Babysitter (2003).[4] Prior to full commitment to film, he worked in advertising and briefly in information technology during the dot-com era, experiences that honed his commercial storytelling skills before transitioning to horror genre experiments as an entry point into independent production.[11][12] These early influences prioritized visceral, character-focused narratives over abstract experimentation, setting the stage for his later pivot to thriller and espionage formats.[9]Early career in film
Short films and debut features
Raff's earliest recognized work in film was the 2003 short The Babysitter, a 15-minute coming-of-age comedy depicting one night shared by a shy 15-year-old babysitter and a precocious 10-year-old girl, exploring themes of loneliness and revelation.[13] [14] Produced as his graduate thesis project, the film premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York City, where it garnered attention sufficient to secure him a position as a director's assistant on Doug Liman's feature Mr. & Mrs. Smith (2005).[11] [15] Transitioning to features, Raff made his directorial debut with The Killing Floor (2007), a psychological thriller he also co-wrote and co-produced, centering on a literary agent who relocates to a penthouse apartment once inhabited by a serial killer, unraveling amid escalating paranoia.[16] [17] Starring Marc Blucas and Shiri Appleby, the film received U.S. distribution through ThinkFilm and was released in over 40 countries.[4] His follow-up feature, Train (2008), a horror-thriller involving American medical students encountering body parts on a freight train in Eastern Europe, further established his early style in genre filmmaking before his pivot to television.Relocation to Los Angeles and independent projects
In 2003, Raff relocated to Los Angeles to pursue a graduate degree in directing at the American Film Institute (AFI), graduating that year with the short film The Babysitter.[11][18] His original plan for a two-year stay extended to approximately seven years, during which he immersed himself in the U.S. film industry before returning to Israel in 2009.[19] Raff's feature-length directorial debut came with the 2007 psychological horror thriller The Killing Floor, which he also co-wrote and co-produced.[20] The film stars Marc Blucas as a literary agent who moves into a luxury penthouse and begins experiencing eerie disturbances suggestive of a stalker, blending elements of paranoia and urban isolation.[16] Shot on a modest budget, it marked his transition from shorts to narrative features amid the competitive independent filmmaking scene in Los Angeles.[12] He followed this with Train in 2008, a slasher-style horror film that he directed and wrote solo.[21] Starring Thora Birch as a college wrestler, the story follows a group of American athletes who board a mysterious train in Europe after missing their scheduled one, only to encounter a gang involved in organ trafficking.[22] Produced independently with international locations including Bulgaria, the film emphasized visceral tension and survival horror tropes, reflecting Raff's early experimentation in the genre before shifting toward more dramatic television work.[23] These projects, completed during his extended time in Hollywood, garnered limited theatrical release but established his versatility in low-to-mid-budget genre filmmaking.[17]Breakthrough with Israeli television
Creation of Prisoners of War (Hatufim)
Gideon Raff conceived Prisoners of War (Hatufim) as a dramatic exploration of the psychological and societal challenges faced by Israeli prisoners of war upon their return after prolonged captivity, drawing from what he described as an "open wound" in Israeli society regarding the reintegration of soldiers and the national obsession with retrieving captives.[19] [24] The idea emerged during his time living in Los Angeles, where feelings of personal exile intersected with reflections on real Israeli POW cases, such as the long-missing pilot Ron Arad (captured in 1986), the 2006 kidnapping of Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev, and Gilad Shalit's 2011 release after five years.[25] [24] He selected a 17-year captivity timeframe to underscore profound life disruptions, such as returning soldiers confronting adult children and fragmented families.[25] To develop authentic portrayals, Raff conducted extensive research, interviewing approximately 1,500 former Israeli POWs—many held in Syria, Lebanon, or Egypt—their families, therapists, and military interrogators, which informed depictions of post-traumatic stress, guilt over prisoner exchanges, and societal taboos around critiquing returning heroes.[24] [10] One interviewee, released in a deal involving 1,400 Palestinian prisoners, expressed remorse over subsequent terrorist acts enabled by those freed, highlighting the moral complexities Raff sought to address without endorsing political narratives.[10] This research revealed Israel's cultural reluctance to probe POW vulnerabilities, such as potential security risks or domestic strains, which the series confronted head-on despite initial controversy for breaching national sensitivities.[19] [24] Raff wrote the script and directed every episode of the first season as a passion project, determining that the narrative's depth exceeded a feature film's scope and suited serialized television to build tension through psychological flashbacks emphasizing mental over physical torture.[25] [19] Produced by Keshet Media Group for Israel's Channel 2 with a budget of around $200,000 per episode, the series centered on three returning soldiers and their families, casting relatively unknown theater actors like Yoram Toledano and Ishai Golan to prioritize emotional authenticity over star power.[24] [25] Filming occurred entirely in Israel, capturing the intimate, gritty tone reflective of the country's compact societal dynamics.[19] The first season premiered on March 6, 2010, airing weekly through May on Channel 2, where it ignited public discourse on POW trauma and reintegration, fulfilling Raff's aim to give voice to survivors while advancing Israeli television toward sophisticated, character-driven thrillers.[10] [25] A second season followed in late 2012, expanding the narrative amid ongoing real-world events like Shalit's release, though Raff later contemplated but did not immediately pursue further installments.[10]Domestic reception and awards in Israel
Hatufim premiered on Israel's Channel 2 via Keshet Broadcasting in 2009 and achieved a 40% market share in its debut season, marking it as the highest-rated drama series in Israeli television history.[26][27] The series resonated deeply with domestic audiences due to its exploration of prisoner-of-war repatriation, drawing on Israel's real historical experiences with captured soldiers, which amplified its emotional and cultural impact.[28] Viewership remained strong into the second season, surpassing the first in ratings and solidifying its status as a landmark in Israeli programming.[29] The series received widespread critical acclaim in Israel for its psychological depth, tight scripting, and portrayal of post-trauma reintegration, earning praise for elevating local television standards.[30] Gideon Raff, as creator, director, and writer, was recognized for his contributions, with the show collectively winning nine awards from the Israeli Academy of Television, including Best Drama Series in 2010.[31][32] Specific accolades encompassed Best Director for Raff, Best Actor for Yishai Golan, and Best Actress for Yaël Abecassis, highlighting the ensemble's performances in the 2010 ceremony.[33] These honors underscored Hatufim's dominance in the domestic awards landscape, distinguishing it from contemporaries in comedy-heavy categories.[33]International adaptations and collaborations
Homeland adaptation and Emmy involvement
Gideon Raff's Israeli series Prisoners of War (Hatufim), which premiered on Channel 2 in 2009, served as the basis for the Showtime adaptation Homeland, developed by Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon after Keshet Media Group sold the format rights to 20th Century Fox Television in 2010.[24][34] Raff translated the original Hatufim scripts into English to facilitate the U.S. version's development, preserving core elements such as the plot involving returned prisoners of war suspected of psychological compromise, while Gansa and Gordon restructured it around CIA operations and counterterrorism themes.[28] He contributed as a consulting producer and writer on Homeland's first season, which aired starting October 2, 2011, and retained close involvement as an executive producer across subsequent seasons.[35][7] The adaptation process highlighted Raff's original narrative's influence, with Homeland's pilot episode mirroring key scenes from Hatufim, including the protagonists' release and reintegration challenges, though expanded with American geopolitical contexts post-9/11.[24] Raff has noted that the U.S. version amplified suspense through larger-scale production but maintained the psychological depth of trauma and doubt central to his Israeli series.[28] Homeland's success, including 10 Emmy nominations for its debut season, underscored the format's adaptability, leading to international remakes in countries like France and Russia.[10] Raff's Emmy involvement peaked at the 64th Primetime Emmy Awards on September 23, 2012, where Homeland secured eight wins, including Outstanding Drama Series, for which he received credit as an executive producer.[36] He also shared the Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series award with Gansa and Gordon for the pilot episode, "Pilot," recognizing the script's adaptation of Hatufim's foundational tension between heroism and hidden betrayal.[28][37] These accolades marked a rare instance of an Israeli creator earning U.S. television's top honors through an international adaptation, boosting global interest in Hatufim itself.[10]Other U.S. and global projects
Following the success of the Homeland adaptation, Raff co-created the FX political drama series Tyrant, which premiered on June 24, 2014, and explored the dynamics of power in a fictional Middle Eastern dictatorship through the lens of an American-raised son returning to his homeland.[38][7] The series, developed with Howard Gordon and Craig Wright, ran for three seasons until 2016, with Raff serving as executive producer and contributing to its narrative focus on family intrigue and authoritarian rule.[39] In 2015, Raff co-created the USA Network miniseries Dig, a 10-episode mystery thriller that debuted on March 5, centering on an FBI agent in Jerusalem investigating an archaeologist's murder amid revelations of a 2,000-year-old conspiracy tied to biblical artifacts.[40] Co-developed with Tim Kring, the project drew on Raff's Israeli background for its Jerusalem setting and concluded its single season on May 7, 2015, emphasizing archaeological and religious tensions.[41] Raff directed episodes of other U.S. series that year, including "Game Over" from NBC's Heroes Reborn miniseries, a revival of the superhero drama that aired from September to December 2015.[42] He also helmed the season 2 episode "Cleopatra" of ABC's Quantico on January 23, 2017, a procedural thriller involving FBI recruits and terrorism plots.[43] More recently, Raff executive produced and directed the first two episodes of the bilingual (English-Spanish) Apple TV+ thriller Now and Then, which premiered on May 20, 2022, and examined how a fatal incident from a college weekend in the 1990s resurfaces to disrupt the lives of five Miami-based friends two decades later.[44][45] The eight-episode series, set against themes of secrecy and adult consequences, featured an all-Hispanic cast and wrapped its single season in July 2022.[46]Fauda and ongoing television work
Development and co-creation with Lior Raz
Fauda originated from the real-life experiences of its co-creators, Lior Raz and Avi Issacharoff, who developed the series as a gritty portrayal of undercover Israeli operations against Palestinian militants. Raz, a veteran of the Israeli Defense Forces' elite Duvdevan undercover unit, provided authentic details on tactical raids and the psychological toll of such missions, while Issacharoff, a journalist who covered Arab affairs for outlets including Haaretz and the Times of Israel, incorporated nuanced understandings of regional conflicts and militant motivations drawn from his fieldwork.[47][48] The duo began scripting the pilot in the early 2010s, focusing on a narrative centered on a team leader's return from retirement to hunt a terrorist he believed he had killed, emphasizing moral ambiguities on both sides of the conflict without idealizing either.[49] The project's development gained traction through Yes Studios, the production arm of Israel's Yes satellite network, which greenlit the series for its potential to blend high-stakes action with human drama. Raz not only co-wrote the episodes but insisted on casting non-professional Arab actors for authenticity in depicting Palestinian characters, conducting extensive consultations with security experts to ensure operational realism while avoiding glorification of violence. Issacharoff's contributions shaped the portrayal of Hamas operatives and West Bank dynamics, reflecting his reporting on events like the Second Intifada and subsequent escalations. The first season's 12 episodes were filmed primarily in Hebrew and Arabic, with production wrapping in 2014 for a February 15, 2015, premiere on Yes, marking a deliberate shift from more sanitized Israeli TV formats toward raw, experience-based storytelling.[50][29] This co-creation process highlighted Raz's dual role as creator and lead actor—portraying Doron Kavretzky, a composite inspired by his own unit's operations—allowing for improvisational elements grounded in lived counterterrorism encounters. The series eschewed didacticism, instead using first-hand anecdotes to explore cycles of retaliation, such as botched arrests leading to civilian casualties, which Issacharoff attributed to systemic failures in intelligence and negotiation rather than inherent malice. Development emphasized linguistic fidelity, with Arabic dialogue vetted by native speakers to capture dialects from Nablus and Gaza, contributing to the show's immersive quality that later propelled its international appeal.[51][52]Seasons, expansions, and global distribution
Fauda premiered its first season on Israel's Yes network in December 2015, consisting of 12 episodes, before expanding internationally via Netflix starting December 2, 2016.[53] The second season, also 12 episodes, aired on Yes in December 2017 and became available on Netflix in May 2018. Season 3, released on Yes in December 2019, saw its premiere episode viewed over 1 million times by Israeli audiences within 48 hours, marking a domestic record for the series.[54] Season 4, comprising 12 episodes, debuted on Yes in June 2022 and launched globally on Netflix on January 20, 2023, achieving unprecedented viewership in the Middle East across 190 countries.[55] [56] Production for season 5 began in late April 2025, with an anticipated premiere on Yes in Israel during early 2026, followed by worldwide Netflix distribution.[57] [58] Each season maintains a format of 12 episodes, focusing on undercover operations by Israel's Duvdevan unit against Palestinian militants, with escalating personal and operational stakes. No official spin-offs or major narrative expansions beyond the core series have been announced as of October 2025.[59] Globally, Fauda has solidified its status through Netflix's platform, becoming the most-watched Israeli production on the service, surpassing titles like The Beauty Queen of Jerusalem. In the U.S., it consistently ranks in the top 8.6% of shows by audience demand, reflecting sustained international appeal amid geopolitical tensions. The series' availability in multiple languages and subtitles has facilitated its reach, though it has sparked debates on portrayals of conflict dynamics without altering its distribution strategy.[60] [61]Film projects
The Red Sea Diving Resort
The Red Sea Diving Resort is a 2019 American spy thriller film written and directed by Gideon Raff, depicting the real-life Mossad-led Operation Brothers in the early 1980s, during which Israeli agents established a front as a scuba diving resort in Sudan to facilitate the covert evacuation of thousands of Ethiopian Jews (Beta Israel) to Israel amid famine, civil war, and persecution.[62] The operation, which rescued approximately 8,000 individuals between 1979 and 1984, involved smuggling refugees across the Sudanese border before airlifting them via partnerships with international Jewish organizations.[63] Raff, drawing from historical accounts including Steven Pressman's 2000 book of the same name, emphasized the mission's ingenuity and moral imperative in interviews, noting his intent to highlight lesser-known aspects of Israeli intelligence history without overt political messaging.[64] Principal photography occurred primarily in South Africa and Namibia from October 2017 onward, substituting for Sudan's arid landscapes, with production handled by BRON Studios, EMJAG Productions, and others; the budget was not publicly disclosed but supported a cast including Chris Evans as Mossad agent Ari Levinson, Haley Bennett as a team operative, and Michael Kenneth Williams as an Ethiopian collaborator.[65] Netflix acquired worldwide distribution rights (excluding China) in February 2019 for an undisclosed sum, premiering the film globally on July 31, 2019.[62] Raff also served as a producer alongside Aaron L. Gilbert and Alexandra Milchan, marking his follow-up to television successes like The Spy and leveraging his experience with espionage narratives from Prisoners of War and Homeland.[66] Critical reception was mixed, with praise for the factual basis and performances—particularly Evans and Williams—but criticism for formulaic pacing, underdeveloped characters, and failure to delve deeply into ethical complexities or Sudanese perspectives, resulting in a 27% approval rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes based on 41 reviews.[67] Roger Ebert's review awarded it 1 out of 4 stars, faulting the film for prioritizing thriller tropes over substantive historical drama despite its "extraordinary true story."[68] User ratings averaged 6.6 out of 10 on IMDb from over 34,000 votes, reflecting appreciation for its inspirational elements amid entertainment value.[66] The film garnered no major awards nominations, though Raff promoted it at events like the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival in August 2019.[69]The Spy miniseries
The Spy is a six-episode espionage miniseries created, written, and directed by Gideon Raff, which premiered on Netflix on September 6, 2019.[70][71] The series dramatizes the real-life exploits of Eli Cohen, an Egyptian-born Israeli Mossad agent who in the early 1960s infiltrated high levels of Syrian society and military under the alias Kamel Amin Thaabet, providing intelligence that aided Israel's strategic preparations for the 1967 Six-Day War.[70] Cohen, recruited after demonstrating espionage aptitude in Egypt and Argentina, embedded himself in Damascus elite circles, including friendships with future Syrian leaders like Defense Minister Amin al-Hafiz, before his capture via Soviet detection equipment, public trial, and execution by hanging on May 18, 1965.[70][72] Raff drew from historical accounts, including the book L'espion qui venait d'Israël by Uri Dan and Yeshayahu Ben-Porat, a former Mossad operative involved in Cohen's operations, to structure the narrative around Cohen's transformation from a Tel Aviv family man and clerk to a deep-cover operative, emphasizing personal sacrifices and Mossad handler dynamics portrayed by Noah Emmerich as Dan Peleg.[73] Sacha Baron Cohen stars as Eli Cohen, delivering a dramatic turn distinct from his comedic roles, supported by Hadar Ratzon Rotem as his wife Nadia and a multinational cast including Aladeen of The Dictator fame in a serious supporting part.[71][74] Production involved international collaboration, with filming in Hungary and Morocco to depict period settings, and Raff co-wrote the latter episodes with Max Perry to heighten tension in Cohen's Syrian ascent and downfall.[71] Critically, the series received praise for Baron Cohen's restrained performance and Raff's taut direction, earning an 86% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes from 43 reviews, though some faulted its pacing as formulaic compared to Raff's prior works like Homeland.[75] Audience scores averaged 7.9/10 on IMDb from over 55,000 ratings, highlighting the espionage thriller's engagement despite predictable elements.[76] However, historical fidelity drew scrutiny: while core events like Cohen's recruitment in 1961, radio transmissions from Damascus rooftops exposing Syrian fortifications, and execution align with declassified Mossad records, the series embellishes unverified details such as specific elite meetings in Buenos Aires or romantic subplots, lacking independent corroboration beyond Israeli sources.[72][70] Critics from Arab perspectives, including Asharq Al-Awsat—a Saudi-owned outlet with a history of critiquing Israeli narratives—listed ten alleged errors, such as overstating Cohen's direct influence on Syrian military decisions and omitting Syrian counterintelligence efforts, potentially reflecting bias toward Damascus' official accounts over Mossad testimonies.[77] Newsweek noted inaccuracies like compressing timelines (e.g., portraying Cohen's rapid 1962-1965 rise without full context of his prior Egyptian activities) and dramatizing unproven interpersonal dynamics, underscoring that while Cohen's intel on Golan Heights positions proved pivotal—enabling Israeli artillery dominance in 1967—the series prioritizes narrative drive over granular precision.[72] Raff has defended the portrayal as rooted in survivor interviews and family consultations, aiming for emotional truth amid espionage's opacity, where full verification remains impossible due to ongoing Syrian-Israeli tensions and Cohen's unrepatriated remains.[78] No major awards followed, though it amplified global awareness of Cohen's story, with Raff citing the project as a personal exploration of Israeli resilience against adversarial regimes.[79]Awards and recognition
Israeli Television Academy Awards
Gideon Raff won the Israeli Television Academy Award for Best Directing in a Drama Series for his work on Prisoners of War (Hatufim) at the 2010 ceremony held on July 13. The series, which Raff created, wrote, and directed, was the ceremony's biggest winner, securing nine awards in total, including Best Drama Series. These accolades highlighted the series' impact on Israeli television, with additional wins for actors Ishai Golan (Best Actor in a Drama Series) and Yael Abecassis (Best Actress in a Drama Series).) No further personal wins or nominations for Raff are documented from subsequent Israeli Television Academy ceremonies, though Prisoners of War collectively earned up to six academy awards across its run according to some reports.[80]International accolades and nominations
Raff garnered significant international recognition for his contributions to the U.S. adaptation of his Israeli series Hatufim (2009–2012), reimagined as Homeland (2011–2020), where he served as a consulting producer and co-wrote the pilot episode. In 2012, he shared the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series with Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon for the Homeland pilot, praised for its tense portrayal of post-9/11 intelligence operations and psychological thriller elements rooted in the original Hatufim narrative.[6] [37] This marked one of the few instances of an Israeli creator receiving a major U.S. television honor for adapting domestic content to American audiences. Additional accolades tied to Homeland include a shared 2012 Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Television Episode Teleplay for the pilot, recognizing excellence in mystery writing, and contributions to the series' 2011 Peabody Award, which commended its innovative adaptation of real-world counterterrorism themes.[5] Raff was also nominated for a 2013 BAFTA Television Award in the International category, alongside Homeland executive producers, highlighting the series' global impact beyond U.S. borders.[6]| Award | Year | Category | Work | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primetime Emmy Award | 2012 | Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series | Homeland (Pilot) | Shared with Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon[6] |
| Edgar Allan Poe Award | 2012 | Best Television Episode Teleplay | Homeland (Pilot) | Shared recognition for mystery scripting[5] |
| BAFTA Television Award | 2013 | International | Homeland | Nomination shared with producers Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon[6] |
| Peabody Award | 2011 | N/A | Homeland | Series-level honor for adaptation and thematic depth[5] |