"Nuremberg" is a movie that certainly can be classified as an "Oscar-bait" movie. It is being released at the end of the year when the studios release their big gun films, it is about a serious and important subject, it has big stars in the lead roles and it gives each of them large swatches of dialog that they deliver in ways that only Big Stars can, and this is the important part, the movie delivers in every way.
On the day that the war in Europe ends, Allied soldiers stop a chauffeur driven car bearing a Nazi flag. Its passengers: Reichsmarschall Hermann Goering, the highest ranking Nazi official still alive and his family. Upon his surrender, Goering calmly asks his captors to please get his luggage for him. That is the first glimpse we get into the personality of Goering.
What follows is the story of a US Army psychiatrist, Douglas Kelley, played by Rami Malek, who is assigned to examine the captured Nazis as an international tribunal comprised of the Allied powers prepares to try them before the world during the War Crimes trials in Nuremberg, Germany. The movie focuses on the relationship and the cat-and-mouse game that develops between Kelley and Goering, played brilliantly by Russell Crowe.
The movie is filled with great performances by a number of other actors besides Crowe and Malek. Foremost among them is Michael Shannon, playing US Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson, who proposed that such war crimes trials be held, despite the fact that there was no legal precedent for them and huge questions about under whose jurisdiction the trails should take place. He was terrific in this role.
The role of the US Army officer who is in charge of the prison in which the defendants are held is played by John Slattery, best known, to me at least, as the guy who played Roger Sterling in "Mad Men", and who always delivered the best lines of dialog in that series. I couldn't help but see, and hear, "Roger Sterling" as he delivered his lines, particularly his farewell line to Kelley near the conclusion of the movie. I loved it.
While the subject matter of the film is a hard and a gruesome one, the movie essentially becomes a courtroom drama and a character study between its two main players, Crowe as Goering and Malek as Kelley. Be warned, though, that at one point during the trial, we are shown films taken by Allied troops as they liberated the Nazi concentration camps. These films are brutal, horrible, and difficult to watch, as they show man's inhumanity to man at its absolute worst. Which is exactly why the world needs to see them and constantly be reminded of what happened, and know that it must be prevented from ever happening again because there exists in mankind people who can cause it to happen again. This is the point that the prosecutors were making at the time of the trials, and largely speaking, that the filmmakers are making to the audiences of today.
I expect that there will be many Oscar nominations for this one. Picture, Director (James Vanderbilt), and a Best Actor nomination for Crowe for certain and possibly Malek. I would also be disappointed if Shannon did not receive a Supporting Actor nomination.
The Grandstander gives this movie the full Four Star rating.
An aside about my attendance yesterday, While visiting the rest room after the movie, a guy in there, who also was at the showing, asked what I thought. We both said that it was good movie with a powerful message, but then he said this: "Yeah, it was good, but you wonder how much of it was true and how much was made up." I wanted to scream.
Aside Number Two. The 1961 movie "Judgement at Nuremberg" dealt with these same topics and was probably a better movie this one. It was filled with great performances by stars like Spencer Tracey, Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Judy Garland, and Maximilian Schell, who won and Oscar for his performance. Seeing "Nuremberg" yesterday is prompting me to watch this one once again. If you have never seen it, I cannot recommend it highly enough.

























