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'This history mustn't be forgotten': The real story behind the Nuremberg trials
The Nazi high command was put on trial 80 years ago in 1945. In the new film Nuremberg, starring Russell Crowe as the charismatic and manipulative Hermann GĂśring, director James Vanderbilt draws on a little-known chapter of the trial's proceedings to ask enduring questions about the wellspring of fascism and the true nature of evil.
A criminal trial is inherently dramatic, often full of revelatory testimony, sparring lawyers, and stern pronouncements from the bench. Little wonder that so many powerful films and TV series are set in the courtroom: Inherit the Wind, To Kill a Mockingbird, A Few Good Men, and Presumed Innocent, to name just a handful. And every trial provides a denouement â the verdict â which determines guilt or innocence, and naturally engages the audience's own sense of right and wrong.
âNurembergâ to capture cat-and-mouse game between GĂśring, captors
On May 8, 1945, âÂÂder dicke Hermann,â or âÂÂFat Hermanâ to the German public, stepped out of his vehicle.
With the writing on the wall, Hermann GĂÂśring, the leader of the Luftwaffe, had surrendered to the Americans.
âÂÂTwelve years,â he purportedly muttered. âÂÂIâÂÂve had a good run for my money.âÂÂ
Now, based on Jack El-HaiâÂÂs book âÂÂThe Nazi and the Psychiatrist,â director James Vanderbilt is bringing GĂÂśringâÂÂs 18-month incarceration and trial to the big screen in âÂÂNuremberg.âÂÂ
Starring Rami Malek as Lt. Col. Douglas Kelley, the U.S. Army psychiatrist assigned to interview the Nazi leader, the film follows MalekâÂÂs character as he interrogates GĂÂśring, played by Russell Crowe.
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