Director James Virerbilt dives into the real history of the post-World War II drama "Nuremberg" with Rami Malakhia as a Nazi.
What really happened at Nuremberg?Did an army psychiatrist really free a Nazi?
What is 'nuremberg'?Let's examine the post-wwii films.
- Rami Malek and Russell Crowe star in the new movie "Nuremberg", about the trial of the Nazi high command.
- "Nuremberg" is now in theaters.
- How accurate is the history of "Nuremberg"?We review original films.
SELORER AREBLEST!We are talking about the bright fiddler from the new movie "Nurevtberg".
James Vanderbilt's imagery is known as "messy".However, in post-WWII drama parlance, "Nurjirga," "Nurjirga,"
"I definitely seem to go back to the comedy and genre genre at the door of the evil that men do."
Vanderbilt originally based "Nuremberg" on Jack El-Hay's historical book "The Nazi and the Psychiatrist," about the relationship between military psychiatrist Douglas Kelly (played by Rami Malek) and imprisoned German leader Hermann Goering (Russell Crowe) before the Nuremberg trials.
But then he went to Supreme Court Justice Robert H.Jackson's (Michael Shannon) struggle to prosecute Nazi survivors for war crimes in 1945 and 1946;The military "wanted to shoot them all in the head and do it." They also learn the emotional history of Kelly's translator, Howie Triest (Leo Woodall).Vanderbilt added these story lines, giving the film "a scope that two people in a cell can't give you."
vinderbitha presents fact versus fiction in "Nuremberg":
Did Douglas Kelly really approach Herman Goering and his family?
In the film, Kelly works to look after the health of Gorig and others used in the Great Army.He spends most of his time trying to gain Goring's trust by investigating what makes a man work for the Nazis.
During their meeting, both Kelly and Goring hugged and kissed each other and touched each other's depths," says Vanderbilt. "They started to have fun and get something from each other in the way of advice and conversation about life."
As shown in the film, the real Kelley met Goring's family, and letters from German military men reached his wife.In a scene cut from the final film, Goring beforehand asked Kelley if he would take his daughter to America and raise her there, because Germany "was going to be a really bad place for her," Vanderbilt said."Of course, Kelley didn't do it, but it shows you how close they were, or so Goring thought."
Were Nazi concentration camp scenes played at the Nuremberg trials?
"Nuremberg" spends much of its narrative in the courtroom, as Jackson is the lead prosecutor in the case against the Nazis.At one point, he presents a film as evidence, showing brutal, gruesome footage of corpses and grieving survivors of death camps, giving the world its first real look at the Holocaust.
The film contains about six minutes of the 52-minute film, which includes John to Ford, shown in the actual trials.In addition, the subjects of this residence met on the screen, and the Vardans asked the members of the ask, who could not see the first members, so that they could experience something new," he said.
Woodal has agreed."It's raw and it was a very difficult day for everyone. But in some ways it is too helpful."
Did British Attorney General David Maxwell Fyfe really save the day?
Vanderbilt drew dialogue from his transcripts of courtroom scenes, including the confrontation between Jackson and Göring during cross-examination.Jackson falters a bit during the interrogation and Göring seems to have the upper hand when British prosecutor David Maxwell-Fyfe (Richard E. Grant) takes Göring over and hammers Göring as Hitler's no.2, he does not know how many Jews were killed in these "work camps".He turns the tide and falls on the witness stand of Göring's defeat.
"This really happened, the ugly kind," he stopped me saying."You tried to read things into your video, but you can do it. And I make the historians go, 'and I'm like,' and I'm also, we include this. ' We hope the historians are satisfied with Richard E. Give."
Did Douglas Kelly warn of the possibility of a new rise of Nazi-like fascism?
Near the end of "Nuremberg," Kelly visits a radio station to promote his book, "22 Cells at Nuremberg."He warns that what the Nazis achieved may one day happen again, but the radio hosts ignore his alarm and throw him out.
Vanderbilt said he got the blank lines in that scene from Kelley's comments in his book.
The director of The Jubilation of Allied Troops takes home and even a sense of joy in Nuremberg. "But the situation with the Germans is very different," he said.We have to do it.'"
