Film Show: Russell Crowe Is a Paunchy Hermann Göring in Nazi Drama 'Nuremberg'
7 Articles
7 Articles
Film show: Russell Crowe is a paunchy Hermann Göring in Nazi drama 'Nuremberg'
Emma Jones takes us through the nominations for France's upcoming "Césars" cinema awards, with American filmmaker Richard Linklater picking up 10 nods for "Nouvelle Vague". In this week's film releases, Emma tells us why the Russell Crowe-led Nazi courtroom drama "Nuremberg" is worth checking out. Emma also reviews Kelly Reichardt's offbeat drama "The Mastermind", in which Josh O'Connor shines as a clueless art thief in the 1970s.
Director James Vanderbilt academically reconstructs some moments of the famous trial, based on a book by American journalist Jack El-Hai.
▶️ In theaters on Wednesday, January 28, “Nuremberg” plunges us into the heart of the eponymous trial, organized after the fall of the Nazi regime. The American psychiatrist Douglas Kelley, played by Rami Malek, is at the center of the plot. Jack El-Hai, author of the book that inspired the film, returns for TF1info to Tf1info on the story of this little-known character. - “Nuremberg” in the cinema: the fascinating true story of the psychiatrist…
From Nuremberg to Nuremberg Nothing was easy in this undertaking. Addressing the still gigantic and traumatic subject of the Shoah, telling a trial for almost a year, trying to portray the human as monstrous character of Göring, adopting the point of view of the unknown character of the psychiatrist, opening the reflection on the effectiveness of the Justice posed [...]
In theaters starting on Wednesday, January 38, “Nuremberg”, a meticulous American production directed by James Vanderbilt, looks back at the historic trial of the high dignitaries of the Third Reich at the end of the Second World War...
The true story of an American psychologist confronted with Hermann Göring, number 2 in the Nazi regime, offers James Vanderbilt a fascinating story. “Nuremberg” is a powerful film that warns against all the resurgence of fascism. Anglo-Saxon criticism has widely treated it overboard, being more disdainful than with vulgar Hollywood entertainment, as if this type of cinema was no longer current. On the contrary, we saw an amazing movie, which man…
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