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Synopsis
Cast
- Russell Crowe
- Rami Malek
- Colin Hanks
- Michael Shannon
- Leo Woodall
- Richard E. Grant
- John Slattery
- Wrenn Schmidt
- Lotte Verbeek
- Mark O'Brien
Letterboxd User Reviews
- Nov 9, 2025
and, in an entirely seated role, Russell Crowe
David SimsSep 7, 2025This is a holocaust movie from the writer of Sony Marvels Amazing Spider-Man and Independence Day Resurgence, and it feels like it. The protagonist, a military psychologist, is introduced as a leather clad, smart mouth womanizer with a magic gimmick. This is a character…
KoreanwizardNov 10, 2025You are not Alexander the Great. You are a fat man in a cell. And you knew.
🎄 festive allain♡ 🎄 - Sep 29, 2025
Trump supporters will watch this and not understand the connection
Ian_4_shortNov 8, 2025Totally baffling movie where rami malek sincerely starts being friends with hermann göring and then gets his feelings hurt when he finds out about the holocaust… if this is actually what happened in real life then this guy was far too stupid to have a movie made about him
haleyNov 6, 2025This feels like a tv movie, and not in a good way (I’ve seen better stuff on the History Channel). Every piece of dialogue is far too winking, too quippy and overly writerly in a shiny dramatized way. It doesn’t help that Rami Malek’s role recalls the type of brilliant but…
Robert Daniels - Sep 8, 2025
NUREMBERG completely caught me off guard with just how gripping it is. James Vanderbilt’s tightly scripted and engrossing account of the Nuremberg trials examines the capacity for evil within us all, whether through active choice or passive complicity, and resonates with…
Matt NegliaSep 7, 2025Couldn’t be more timely if it tried.
Andrew JupinNov 22, 2025Adequately engrossing and classy. Destined to mostly maintain the attention of high school classrooms with hungover teachers. Somehow I managed to not hate Rami Malek in this.
matt lynch
Queue Community Reviews
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“You know why it happened here? Because we allowed it to happen.” Yet those same so called arbiters of justice and international law are allowing genocides to happen all over, namely Gaza and Sudan. The difference? They’re complicit this time, directly aiding the perpetrators.
Bad acting from good actors, cringe, predictable writing and just poor execution all the way around. Makes the Nazi’s seem like the victims at a certain point. Completely untrue execution of the real world events, hell it wasn’t even Americans conducting it, it was the Brits.
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so much of the cinema surrounding war is either focusing on the battlefront or what was happening back home. there’s never much of a focus on what happens afterwards. as a history undergraduate, this film does exactly what it needs to, absolutely loved it 9/10
guys this was actually soooo good. and i HATE ww1 and 2 movies. they’re usually soooo boring to me but this was sooooo good. i like didn’t grow up in an area where they taught ww2 in depth. like i didn’t know who hitler was until like 6 th grade. i’ve learned sooo much omg. i liked the message at…
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“Did you just blackmail the pope? I don’t want to talk about it.” Went to go see Zootopia and audibled last minute. Glad we did. Really interesting perspective on WW2. Remi Malek and Russell Crowe are amazing.
Amazing movie. So many lessons that can be learnt from this film. Every person has the capacity to become a Nazi and unfortunately today that is more true than ever. Russell Crowe was amazing.
Atom User Reviews
Everybody Needs To See This ….
A truly fantastic movie that makes you think about how the other side truly thinks and feels.
Metacritic
Russell Crowe is rather wittily cast as the portly, pompous Reichsmarschall Göring; it’s the best he’s been for a long time, a sly and cunning manipulator playing psychological cat-and-mouse with the Americans. But there is a deeply silly performance from Rami Malek as Kelley.
Not enough can be said for how strong [Crowe] is in this film, and how welcome it is every time he appears on screen. He seems able to read people. He also seems German, complete with German gestures.
Vanderbilt’s film slowly, confidently morphs into something beyond a cautionary tale and more like a klaxon blaring through the cinema.