Judgment at Nuremberg Movie Review
Judgment at Nuremberg Review
"Judgment at Nuremberg" Overview

Rating: NR
1961
Cast and Crew
Director : Stanley KramerProducer : Stanley Kramer
Screenwiter : Abby Mann
Starring : Spencer Tracy,Burt Lancaster,Richard Widmark,Marlene Dietrich,Maximilian Schell,Judy Garland,Montgomery Clift,Ed Binns
In the grand tradition of courtroom dramas, Judgment at Nuremberg has the
distinction of being probably the most "important" of them all -- even if it's
not the most blatantly entertaining.
The three-hour film concerns the trial of four Nazi-era German judges accused
of killing millions as part of the regime. The trial circumstances are tricky:
The four accused didn't pull any triggers, nor were they in the upper echelons
of power. They were middlemen, just signing off on the whims of Hitler. How
guilty are they of murder? And so it is that American Judge Dan Hawood is flown
in to lead a tribunal to determine their fate.
On the allied side, Richard Widmark makes searing arguments for their guilt.
For the accused, a young Maximilian Schell (who won a Best Actor Oscar for the
role) creates some really compelling arguments in their defense. Most notably,
his closing argument notes that if the judges are guilty, the entire world is
guilty -- even America, which delayed entry into World War II for years even
though it knew what was going on in Dachau and Auschwitz. Tracy, who had
previously been seen in the courtroom just a year earlier in Inherit the Wind,
plays the conflicted judge perfectly (he was also nominated for his
performance). Nuremberg is one of Tracy's last great performances.
Admittedly, three hours of this can be a bit much and, indeed, starts to feel a
little clinical at times, but movies about Nazi atrocities (a la Schindler's
List) can get pedantic at times (to the point where Judgment is required
viewing in every highschool history class). It's worth it in the end, though.
Stanley Kramer's heartfelt, earnest storytelling powers through all of it.
Finally available on DVD, Judgment includes a 20-minute interview with writer
Abby Mann and Schell (the only major cast member still alive), plus a handful
of other extras.
Reviewer: Christopher Null



