Status
Released
original language
English
Budget
$ 3000000
Revenue
$ 10000000

Dan Haywood

Tad Lawson

Hans Rolfe

Ernst Janning

Mrs. Bertholt

Irene Hoffman Wallner

Rudolph Petersen

Harrison Byers

Emil Hahn

Kenneth Norris

Werner Lampe

Abe Radnitz

Matt Merrin

Senator Burkette

Mrs. Halbestadt

Pohl

Heinrich Geuter

Friedrich Hofstetter

Curtiss Ives

Karl Wieck

Halbestadt

Hugo Wallner

Elsa Lindnow

Schmidt

Max Perkins

Concert Attendee (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator at Verdict (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Waiter at Court Lounge (uncredited)

Waiter (uncredited)

Concert Attendee (uncredited)

Concert Attendee (uncredited)

Mrs. Ives (uncredited)

Courtroom Officer (uncredited)

Assistant Defense Attorney (uncredited)

Captain at Nightclub Announcing Call-up of Officers (uncredited)

German Prisoner in Cafeteria (uncredited)

Interpreter in Courtroom (uncredited)

German Prisoner in Cafeteria (uncredited)

German Counsel (uncredited)

Elsa Scheffler (uncredited)

Army Major at Trial (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Concert Attendee (uncredited)

Club Patron (uncredited)

Courtroom Spectator (uncredited)

Written by Geronimo1967 on 2023-04-20
Spencer Tracy is the presiding judge at the fictitious trial of some of the most evil Nazis to have survived the end of WWII. Chief amongst them is the formidable former jurist "Dr. Ernst Janning" (Burt Lancaster). Richard Widmark is tasked with leading the prosecution; Maximilian Schell as their defender. Make no mistake, this is no standard courtroom melodrama. The performances from all - especially a sensitive and measured Tracy who tries, despite every sense of humanity within himself pulling him otherwise - to remain as impartial and fair in the face of the evidence of brutality presented to him and his fellow judges. There are a couple of wonderful cameo performances from victims of the alleged abuses - notably Judy Garland and Monty Clift with Marlene Dietrich as the widow of a former Nazi general who seems to be in some sort of a daze of denial (we are never quite certain what she did/didn't know). The story challenges the very basis of an independent judiciary and the principles of blind obedience motivated by pure evil, zeal or fear. The use, only once, of actual British footage from a liberated concentration camp is heart-rending and sickening in equal measure. A real must see.