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Nuremberg

  • TV Mini Series
  • 2000
  • TV-14
  • 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
7.3/10
7.4K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
2,458
4
Alec Baldwin, Christopher Plummer, Brian Cox, and Jill Hennessy in Nuremberg (2000)
Home Video Trailer from Warner Home Video
Play trailer0:52
2 Videos
16 Photos
DocudramaLegal DramaDramaHistoryWar

The dramatized account of the war crime trials following the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.The dramatized account of the war crime trials following the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.The dramatized account of the war crime trials following the defeat of Nazi Germany in World War II.

  • Stars
    • Alec Baldwin
    • Brian Cox
    • Christopher Plummer
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.3/10
    7.4K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    2,458
    4
    • Stars
      • Alec Baldwin
      • Brian Cox
      • Christopher Plummer
    • 82User reviews
    • 8Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Won 2 Primetime Emmys
      • 10 wins & 33 nominations total

    Episodes2

    Browse episodes
    TopTop-rated1 season2000

    Videos2

    Nuremberg
    Trailer 0:52
    Nuremberg
    Nuremberg
    Trailer 0:53
    Nuremberg
    Nuremberg
    Trailer 0:53
    Nuremberg

    Photos16

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    Top cast78

    Edit
    Alec Baldwin
    Alec Baldwin
    • Justice Robert H. Jackson
    • 2000
    Brian Cox
    Brian Cox
    • Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring
    • 2000
    Christopher Plummer
    Christopher Plummer
    • Sir David Maxwell-Fyfe
    • 2000
    Jill Hennessy
    Jill Hennessy
    • Elsie Douglas
    • 2000
    Christopher Heyerdahl
    Christopher Heyerdahl
    • Ernst Kaltenbrunner
    • 2000
    Roger Dunn
    Roger Dunn
    • Col. Robert Storey
    • 2000
    David McIlwraith
    David McIlwraith
    • Col. John Harlan Amen
    • 2000
    Christopher Shyer
    Christopher Shyer
    • Gen. Telford Taylor
    • 2000
    Hrothgar Mathews
    Hrothgar Mathews
    • Thomas J. Dodd
    • 2000
    Herbert Knaup
    Herbert Knaup
    • Albert Speer
    • 2000
    Frank Moore
    Frank Moore
    • Hans Frank
    • 2000
    Frank Fontaine
    Frank Fontaine
    • Generalfeldmarschall Wilhelm Keitel
    • 2000
    Raymond Cloutier
    Raymond Cloutier
    • Großadmiral Karl Dönitz
    • 2000
    Bill Corday
    • Generaloberst Alfred Jodl
    • 2000
    Ken Kramer
    Ken Kramer
    • Fritz Sauckel
    • 2000
    Sam Stone
    • Julius Streicher
    • 2000
    Douglas O'Keeffe
    Douglas O'Keeffe
    • Reichsjugendführer Baldur von Schirach
    • 2000
    Benoît Girard
    Benoît Girard
    • Reichsaußenminister Joachim von Ribbentrop
    • 2000
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews82

    7.37.3K
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    Featured reviews

    5user-490-135372

    Not that good

    Quite a few reviewers seem to be taken by the historicity of this movie. It's true that many of the details are correct - but it is also true that many others are wildly incorrect. The most egregious one is the romantic liaison between Justice Jackson and his assistant. I guess that the producers introduced the romantic element for the sake of a wider appeal, but the fact is that, in light of the actual events, this looks ridiculous. Which is a shame, for the movie would have been far more valuable without that silliness. It's mostly because of this that I don't think that it deserves more than 5 points. The bright sides are Brian Cox's and Michael Ironside's performances, and also, but to a lesser extent, Christopher Plummer's and Matt Craven's. Alec Baldwin delivers the same kind of underwhelming performance that he usually does, and Jill Hennessy does whatever she can with her inane and fictitious part.

    In summary, it could have been a good movie, but it is just a decent one.
    8rps-2

    Compelling stuff

    This is a strange subject for a modern TV series designed to entice an audience to whom World War II is as distant as the Pelopenesian Wars. Yet this is a tough, well produced, historically accurate and thoroughly compelling film. Brian Cox steals the show with a masterful recreation of Hermann Goering as a beguiling rogue. And the production techniques excel, for example the sound track as silent film of the concentration camps is shown to the trial. It puts the horror in context without exploiting it or sensationalizing it. A brilliant piece of historical film making.
    delh1

    Electrifying depiction of the world-famous trials

    I was only a teenager when the Nuremberg trials began, and I (as most other people throughout the world) had very little true knowledge of the horror stories of the victims of Nazi atrocities. When the truth burst upon the world, many people could not believe what they saw. (Some neo-nazi fools still deny everything.)

    This is not an easy film to watch, especially with actual films of the frightful deathcamps, but one is drawn into the story because it was such a momentous event - that the major Allies of WWII united to have fair and open trials not just of single criminals, but of an evil governmental system.

    Alec Baldwin has done a magnificent job in his role as Robert Jackson, who was the Chief Prosecutor. I wish I could thank him, as co-producer of this fine mini-series, for such a vivid rendering of those years.

    Yes, there are still horrors being perpetrated on innocent victims in many parts of the world today, but the world IS watching, and in many cases, is resisting these evil governments.

    I suggest that it is of UTMOST IMPORTANCE that young people today watch this film. Too many young (and many older) people think of WWII as only a rather heroic glorious time; I want them to know what some human beings were doing to other innocent victims. Believe me it is NOT boring. Yes, there were many, many heroes. I know. I married a young man who had fought with the Greek resistance movement and suffered greatly, but his spirit, as that of many others, could not be conquered. We must not forget!
    8Clive-Silas

    It's compelling, but maybe not the way it was intended.

    Hidden inside this purported battle between surviving top Nazi Hermann Goering and American prosecutor Judge Robert Jackson is, I think, the adaptation the writer probably wanted to do - the story of psychologist G. M. Gilbert and his backstage verbal tusslings with men who either refused to acknowledge any guilt (Goering, Streicher) or conversely were overflowing with it (Frank, Speer).

    When you see Alec Baldwin appear a second time in the credits, as Executive Producer, you feel that Nuremberg was probably conceived as a vanity project for him. Fortunately it is quite easy to let the early scenes of the Court's setup just wash over you, and of course Jill Hennessey is always easy on the eyes. Much of the first half of the first episode is more or less soap opera. Jackson has to persuade Judge Biddle to go to Nuremberg, then to relinquish the Presidency of the court to the British. The bantering relationship with his secretary (Hennessey) serves as a prelude to their becoming lovers during their time in Germany.

    At this point Hermann Goering appears (the great Brian Cox on top form), totally dominating the trial, totally dominating this mini-series, and your attention is grasped and held. Cox almost wipes Baldwin off the screen. Unfortunately it's very hard not to gain a great deal of sympathy for Goering, particularly when he is with his family, or in the heart-to-heart chats with his G. I. prison guard, Tex. We see Goering as he undoubtedly saw himself, but in reality he wasn't like that at all. The Nuremberg trial and the general travails of imprisonment were an excellent opportunity for him to smarten himself up: prior to his arrest he had become a dissolute and overweight drug addict. Unfortunately no sign of this weakness of character was carried over into the script, leaving an impression of Goering as a noble, principled man - irrespective of whether you agreed with his principles.

    Also very watchable was Matt Craven in the role of Gilbert the aforementioned psychologist, and Christopher Plummer as British prosecutor David Maxwell-Fyfe (although the real Maxwell-Fyfe was the younger prosecutor, not an elder mentor as depicted here). Particularly gratifying is the scene in which Maxwell-Fyfe tells Jackson that "your documentary approach is legally impeccable - but as drama it's absolutely stultifying" - which might stand as an apt description of Baldwin's part in this series.

    A last little curiosity, and not to make any personal remarks about Herbert Knaup, but I did find it strange that they cast Knaup, a slightly odd-looking actor, to play Albert Speer, by fairly common consent the handsomest and most photogenic of all the Nazi leaders, particularly as Speer was portrayed here in a sympathetic light. Other than Knaup, many of the actors were very close in looks to their real-life counterparts, most notably Roc LaFortune as Rudolf Hess, almost a living double.
    8anana11

    Well done film of a difficult theme

    My first impression of this film was that it was excellently done. It provoked my curiosity and I am glad to say the film held up under my further investigation of the trials.

    The accurate representation of the grayness of a subject most would consider black and white was particularly courageous. It would be easy to paint the Nazis as monsters without souls, but so often terrible things are done by perfectly ordinary people. In fact that is what is so terrible about people's actions in WWII. Malevolence would certainly be easier to accept than what this film shows was at the source of the Nazi behavior -- indifference and lack of empathy. Who hasn't felt indifference toward someone they met in everyday life, the cashier who was too slow, the person in the car ahead, the telemarketer?

    The acting was excellent, particularly Brian Cox, who showed us how well charm can mask evil. I did not think Goering was white-washed. This was shown most clearly in his pathetic attempt to shrug off the concentration camp film. Even his manipulative skill couldn't ease that shock, and his American friend was silent. If Alex Baldwin pumped up his drama a little, well, take a look at transcripts of the trial, which are drier than the Sahara. The use of documents was extensive during the trial and how often does the layperson want to hear that? The use of the concentration camp film was a cold dash of water in the face of such dryness. Some other comments question the inclusion of the relationship between Jackson and his secretary. I didn't see it as a "love story", but more as an "adultery story" used to show on a more personal level that despite his side's claim to superior "morals" Jackson was also weak. I think the Soviet involvement and the Polish massacre was left out because it would have been too long to include in all its convolutions. It is an interesting part of the story, however, so I recommend researching it.

    I was glad to see on the comments that those who know more than I pointed out its accuracy. Too rarely does Hollywood actually attempt that.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Brian Cox claimed that the sequence in which the courtroom is shown a film of Nazi concentration camps required numerous takes. With the actual film being projected, genuine walkouts occurred on-set from crew members who couldn't take watching it anymore.
    • Goofs
      At the end of the trial, Field Marshall Wilhelm Keitel is referred to as "Admiral Keitel."
    • Quotes

      Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring: One German, a fine man. Two Germans, a bund. Three Germans, a war. One Englishman, an idiot. Two Englishmen, a club. Three Englishmen, an Empire.

    • Connections
      Featured in The 58th Annual Golden Globe Awards 2001 (2001)
    • Soundtracks
      Deep in the Heart of Texas
      Written by June Hershey and Don Swander

      Performed by cast

      Melody Lane Music c/o Peermusic International

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 10, 2001 (France)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United States
    • Official site
      • TNT
    • Languages
      • English
      • German
    • Also known as
      • Nürnbergprocessen
    • Filming locations
      • Montréal, Québec, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Alliance Atlantis Communications
      • British American Entertainment
      • CTV Television Network
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 30m(90 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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