This Flash movie requires a newer version of the Flash plug-in. Please upgrade your Flash plug-in by visiting www.macromedia.com
Movie Database
(Over 150,000 titles)
Site
Sign In register

Overview for Judgment at Nuremberg (1961)

Overview
Full Credits
Full Synopsis
Notes
Music
Screenplay Info
Original Print Info
Genre
Keywords
data from AFI catalog 
User Reviews
Other Reviews
Articles
Money
Awards
Quotes
Trivia
Home Video Reviews
Misc Notes
Alternate Versions
Theatrical Aspect Ratio
Fan Sites
Contribute an image Contribute a video Contribute information Write a review
Send Us Feedback
About TCM's database
This Flash movie requires a newer version of the Flash plug-in. Please upgrade your Flash plug-in by visiting www.macromedia.com
Overview
Brief Synopsis
An aging American judge presides over the trial of Nazi war criminals.
[+] Read full synopsis
[x] Close full synopsis
Synopsis

In 1948 Dan Haywood, an American judge recently defeated for reelection in Maine, arrives in Nuremberg to preside over the trial of several German judges accused of destroying law and justice to support Hitler's infamous mandates which took the lives of 6 million innocent people. From the moment the prosecuting attorney, Col. Tad Lawson, makes his emotion-packed opening statements, it is obvious that he is determined to obtain the maximum punishment for the judges. The defense lawyer, Hans Rolfe, counters by charging that if these men are guilty because they upheld the laws of their country, then all of Germany must be tried. To support his accusations of inhuman actions, Lawson offers the testimony of Rudolf Petersen, a victim of sterilization who, it develops, was castrated because of mental incompetence. During the long weeks of the trial, Haywood wanders about the city trying to "understand" the German people, trying to determine if they really understood what Hitler stood for. In particular, Haywood often chats with the aristocratic Madame Bertholt, the widow of a German general executed after the earlier war crimes trials. The proceedings reach a climax when a woman named Irene Hoffman is called to the stand. When she testifies that a former friend, an aged Jew, was falsely accused of being intimate with her (thereby "polluting the Aryan race") and then executed, Rolfe tries to break down her story by frantically accusing her of distorting the truth. As the distraught woman breaks into hysterical denials, one of the accused, Ernst Janning, interrupts the hearings and asks to make a statement. Throughout the trial he has remained silent, but he now voluntarily takes the stand and admits to being guilty of both ignoring and rationalizing the inhuman Nazi acts because he felt they were for the ultimate good of the country. As Haywood and his two associate judges ponder their decisions, the news that Russia has blockaded Berlin prompts military officials to hint that lenient judgments might be wise--and expedient. But Haywood, determined to stand for "justice, truth, and the value of a single human being," refuses to compromise, and he sentences the defendants to life imprisonment. The defiant Rolfe sneers that in 5 years the convicted men will be free.

Cast & Crew
Spencer Tracy
as Judge Dan Haywood
Burt Lancaster
as Ernst Janning
Richard Widmark
as Col. Tad Lawson
Marlene Dietrich
as Madame Bertholt
Maximilian Schell
as Hans Rolfe
Judy Garland
as Irene Hoffman
Montgomery Clift
as Rudolf Petersen
William Shatner
as Captain Byers
Edward Binns
as Senator Burkette
Kenneth MacKenna
as Judge Kenneth Norris
Joseph Bernard
as Maj. Abe Radnitz
See all cast & crew >>
Release Date
Jan 1961

Color/BW
Black and White

Sound
Mono

Production Dates
not available


Duration (in mins)
190

Premiere Information
New York opening: 19 Dec 1961
not available


Distribution Company
United Artists

Production Company
Roxlom Films


Country
United States
Apr 10, 08:00PM
Remind Me>>

  Suggest This Movie>>

Judgment At Nuremberg [DVD] (1961)
Available on DVD.
$14.99 Only $12.74
Max
Gripping epilogue with fabulous acting
Would be a great show for Veterans Day. The truths shown in this movie are why our soldiers serve.  More>>
paul maher
show judgement at nuremburg
in these times of a white house like we just got out of, the bush group, we should show this ...  More>>
More Reviews>>
Post a Review>>
You can also post on TCM's Message Boards >>