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Judgment at Nuremberg (1961)

8 | Dec 18, 1961 (US) | Drama, History | 03:11
Budget: 3 000 000 | Revenue: 10 000 000

In 1947, four German judges who served on the bench during the Nazi regime face a military tribunal to answer charges of crimes against humanity. Chief Justice Haywood hears evidence and testimony not only from lead defendant Ernst Janning and his defense attorney Hans Rolfe, but also from the widow of a Nazi general, an idealistic U.S. Army captain and reluctant witness Irene Wallner.

Featured Crew

Producer, Director
Screenplay, Original Story
Original Music Composer
Costume Design
Title Designer
Set Decoration
Camera Operator
Production Manager
Script Supervisor

Cast

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Spencer Tracy
Dan Haywood
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Richard Widmark
Tad Lawson
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Maximilian Schell
Hans Rolfe
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Burt Lancaster
Ernst Janning
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Marlene Dietrich
Mrs. Bertholt
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Judy Garland
Irene Hoffman Wallner
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Montgomery Clift
Rudolph Petersen
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William Shatner
Harrison Byers
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Kenneth MacKenna
Kenneth Norris

Reviews

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CinemaSerf
8 | Apr 20, 2023
Spencer Tracy is the presiding judge at the fictitious trial of some of the most evil Nazis to have survived the end of WWII. Chief amongst them is the formidable former jurist "Dr. Ernst Janning" (Burt Lancaster). Richard Widmark is tasked with leading the prosecution; Maximilian Schell as their defender. Make no mistake, this is no standard courtroom melodrama. The performances from all - especially a sensitive and measured Tracy who tries, despite every sense of humanity within himself pulling him otherwise - to remain as impartial and fair in the face of the evidence of brutality presented to him and his fellow judges. There are a couple of wonderful cameo performances from victims of the alleged abuses - notably Judy Garland and Monty Clift with Marlene Dietrich as the widow of a former Nazi general who seems to be in some sort of a daze of denial (we are never quite certain what she did/didn't know). The story challenges the very basis of an independent judiciary and the principles of blind obedience motivated by pure evil, zeal or fear. The use, only once, of actual British footage from a liberated concentration camp is heart-rending and sickening in equal measure. A real must see.