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'Nuremberg' Star Rami Malek, Director James Vanderbilt Interview On Post-WWII Pic
TV & Streaming

‘Nuremberg’ Star Rami Malek, Director James Vanderbilt Interview On Post-WWII Pic

by jummy84 November 15, 2025
written by jummy84

Rami Malek admits that while the subject matter of his latest film Nuremberg is sobering and grim, the story and characters were so compelling that he and his castmates couldn’t help but feel giddy when diving into the work.

“What’s odd is the juxtaposition of the word ‘fun’ in Nuremberg,” Malek mused during Deadline’s Contenders Film: Los Angeles panel Saturday alongside writer-director James Vanderbilt. The Bohemian Rhapsody Oscar winner described the whipsaw between the tension being generated on set and the actors’ joy of creating indelible characters and soaking in the lighter moments that added humanity to the story of prosecuting top Nazi officer Hermann Göring, played by Russell Crowe.

“There are moments where you’re laughing, and that’s what James has done so brilliantly in the script, that’s what drew me to it,” he said. “I love stories that take us back into history and allow us to retell the story that we think we know – and I promise you when you see this, if you haven’t, there’s so many surprises and twists and just a part of history that really will shock you.”

Malek said he and his fellow actors “were salivating as we were watching or taking part in it. And I know Michael [Shannon] and Russell just enjoyed every second of that to be able to go through these takes.”

The sense of place added to the gravitas of the story, Malek added. “We were shooting in Hungary, and at the end of each take there was a standing ovation,” he explained, noting that the locals “kept applauding because there’s so many links in that part of the world to what happened – very, very closely. And so you could feel that. You could feel the tension in that courtroom scene. It was palpable every day. You hold that with you and yeah, there’s something uniquely special about that.

“I just threw myself into the nature of what this guy was going through,” he added about his role as an Army psychiatrist tasked with evaluating Göring at a critical turning point in post-war world, matching wits with Nazis who had committed or ordered some of the most heinous atrocities in history.

RELATED: ‘Nuremberg’ Wows TIFF: Why It Took 13 Years To Stage The Post-WWII Trial And Tribulations Of Hitler Henchman Hermann Göring

“You have to come in there with a sense of charm and a sense of being as engaging and smart,” he said. “And I think being able to play that psychological chess match well enough to be in the room, pulling that off with all, not just [Göring], but 21 other Nazis as well. So there was a sense that I had to bring every level of humanity into that room — whether it was wit, charm, being able to be disarming, being able to be incredibly intelligent and being as powerful and having as much steeliness as I could at moments going toe-to-toe in that room.”

As he continues to add to his acting résumé, Malek also made it clear he wouldn’t be going backward in any sort of Mr. Robot reboot or spinoff with that 2015-19 series’ creator Sam Esmail. “No,” he affirmed definitively, though he said a collaboration on an unrelated project might arise. “Sam and I just talked about working together again, but that’s it.”

November 15, 2025 0 comments
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Movie Review Nuremberg | Courtroom Of Conscience More Than Justice | Glamsham.com
Lifestyle

Movie Review Nuremberg | Courtroom Of Conscience More Than Justice | Glamsham.com

by jummy84 October 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Nuremberg is one of the cities in the German state of Bavaria. Russell Crowe and Rami Malek Face Off in a Courtroom Drama of Conscience and Power. There’s something inherently cinematic about the Nuremberg Trials — the gravest men of the 20th century facing the moral weight of their crimes under the flicker of courtroom lights. James Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg revives that atmosphere with an unmistakable sense of seriousness, even though its emotional temperature often remains carefully contained.

At its heart, Nuremberg is not a war film but a moral confrontation — a drama about intellect, guilt, and control. Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek), an American psychiatrist is assigned to assess the mental state of Nazi war criminals awaiting trial. His interactions with Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe), form the psychological core of the story — an ongoing duel between analysis and arrogance, between human understanding and moral depravity.

Crowe’s performance is easily among his finest in years — a chilling portrayal of Göring as both monstrous and magnetic, fully aware of his charisma and how to weaponize it. His exchanges with Malek simmer with manipulation. In one of the film’s sharpest moments, Göring taunts Kelley by suggesting that he is the young psychiatrist’s “ticket to success.” The line lands like a slap — a reminder that even in defeat, power finds ways to dominate. It exposes Kelley’s own ambition, hinting that his fascination with his subject isn’t entirely noble. Vanderbilt captures this dynamic with a deft, unsettling precision – a man who committed unspeakable crimes still managing to control the moral narrative, if only for a moment.

Malek, in contrast, underplays beautifully. His restraint gives the film its quiet heartbeat. Kelley’s professionalism conceals an inner tremor — a man torn between scientific detachment and human empathy, struggling to remain composed as he stares into the abyss of human evil. His silences, far more than his dialogue, convey the real conflict.

Visually, Nuremberg impresses with its craftsmanship. Certain single long shots are awe-inspiring — not for their grandeur, but for their compositional intelligence. The early train sequence, between Douglas Kelley (Malek) and Lila (Lydia Peckham) built around a card trick, elegantly establishes tone and character without exposition.

The art direction, however, fluctuates in conviction. At times, the film recreates post-war Germany with haunting authenticity — the cold symmetry of the courtroom, the claustrophobic interrogation chambers — while in others, the environment feels curiously sterile, as if production design had briefly lost its emotional anchor. Yet Vanderbilt’s directorial control reasserts itself through several standout decisions. His use of real concentration camp footage within the courtroom scenes, is both bold and deeply affecting. It anchors the film’s intellectual dialogue in lived horror, redirecting the viewer’s empathy from the accused to their victims. It’s a creative stroke that gives the film its emotional backbone as also it takes the attention away from the proceeding depth that was expected.

Where Nuremberg falters slightly is in translating the psychological duel into the broader trial narrative. The courtroom scenes, while competently executed, seldom carry the same pulse as the one-on-one encounters between Kelley and Göring. The intellectual tension that crackles in private conversations dissipates in the public proceedings, which often feel more reenacted than reimagined. One wishes the film had allowed that cerebral chess match to bleed more visibly into the formal trial — to make justice and psychology collide in the same breath.

Still, Vanderbilt’s strength lies in restraint. The execution-by-hanging sequence near the end is a perfect example of understated direction — communicating the gravity of judgment without resorting to literal visuals. It’s a masterstroke of suggestion over spectacle, proof that sometimes representation carries the weight of truth better. In that moment, Nuremberg achieves what it often reaches for — an emotional resonance born from moral reflection, not dramatization.

In the final reckoning, Nuremberg stands as a dignified, intellectually charged historical drama — commanding in its performances, occasionally uneven in tone, yet unwavering in its intent. It’s not a film that overwhelms; it’s one that lingers, asking questions long after the lights fade. Less a courtroom of justice than a courtroom of conscience, it leaves you with a quiet ache — not from what it shows, but from what it implies.

A thoughtful, visually assured film that wins on intellect and restraint, even when it sidesteps the deeper emotional undercurrents it evokes.

Movie: Nuremberg
Directed by: James Vanderbilt
Based on: The Nazi and the Psychiatrist by Jack El-Hai
Starring: Russell Crowe, Rami Malek, Leo Woodall, John Slattery, Mark O’Brien, Colin Hanks, Wrenn Schmidt, Lydia Peckham, Richard E. Grant, Michael Shannon
Running time: ~2hrs 31mins
Theatrical Release Date: November 7, 2025

October 30, 2025 0 comments
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Official Trailer for 'Nuremberg' Movie w/ Crowe, Malek, Woodall, Slattery
Hollywood

Official Trailer for ‘Nuremberg’ Movie w/ Crowe, Malek, Woodall, Slattery

by jummy84 October 9, 2025
written by jummy84

Official Trailer for ‘Nuremberg’ Movie w/ Crowe, Malek, Woodall, Slattery

by Alex Billington
October 8, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I am a prisoner because you won and we lost, not because you’re morally superior.” “I know more about this man than anyone else on this planet. You’re walking into a trap.” Sony Pictures Classics has finally revealed the full official trailer for Nuremberg, written and directed by screenwriter James Vanderbilt, the second feature he has directed. Based on the book titled “The Nazi and the Psychiatrist” by Jack El-Hai, it’s set at the famous Nuremberg Trials from 1945-1946 in Germany after WWII ended. This recently premiered at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival and opens in theaters this November – we’ve already posted two other teasers before. A psychiatrist evaluates Nazi leaders before the trials begin, growing increasingly obsessed with understanding evil as he forms a disturbing bond with Hermann Göring. It’s a full recreation of the iconic Nuremberg trials, where they exposed the real evil within the Nazi mindset and what they did. With Russell Crowe as Hermann Göring, Rami Malek as Douglas Kelley, Michael Shannon as Robert H. Jackson, Leo Woodall, Richard E. Grant, John Slattery, Mark O’Brien, Colin Hanks, Lydia Peckham, and Wrenn Schmidt. Quite chilling. Acting as a reminder that anyone can perpetuate horrible evil against any others they hate, and they’ll get away with it until someone stops them. This looks riveting.

Here’s the main official trailer (+ poster) for James Vanderbilt’s film Nuremberg, direct from YouTube:

Nuremberg Trailer

Nuremberg Poster

You can rewatch the first teaser for Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg movie right here and the second teaser here.

The Allies, led by the unyielding chief prosecutor, Robert H. Jackson (Michael Shannon), have the task of ensuring the Nazi regime answers for the unveiled horrors of the Holocaust while a US Army psychiatrist (Rami Malek) is locked in a dramatic psychological duel with the former Reichsmarschall Herman Göring (Russell Crowe). Nuremberg is written & directed by the American writer / producer James Vanderbilt, making his second feature film after directing Truth previously. He also produced many films and wrote the screenplays for The Rundown, Zodiac, The Losers, The Amazing Spider-Man 1 & 2, White House Down, Truth, Murder Mystery 1 & 2, Fountain of Youth. Based on the book titled “The Nazi and the Psychiatrist” written by Jack El-Hai. It’s produced by Bradley J. Fischer, Cherilyn Hawrysh, István Major, Paul Neinstein, Richard Saperstein, William Sherak, Frank Smith, Benjamin Tappan, James Vanderbilt. This will premiere at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. Sony Pictures Classics will debut Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg film in select US theaters starting on November 7th, 2025 coming soon this fall. Who’s planning to watch this?

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October 9, 2025 0 comments
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Second Teaser for 'Nuremberg' Movie w/ Russell Crowe & Rami Malek
Hollywood

Second Teaser for ‘Nuremberg’ Movie w/ Russell Crowe & Rami Malek

by jummy84 August 27, 2025
written by jummy84

Second Teaser for ‘Nuremberg’ Movie w/ Russell Crowe & Rami Malek

by Alex Billington
August 27, 2025
Source: YouTube

“I’m not gonna make them martyrs… There will be no statues of them.” An important lesson from history. Sony Pictures Classics debuted another teaser trailer for Nuremberg, written and directed by screenwriter James Vanderbilt, the second feature he has directed (after producing and writing many other movies). Based on the book titled “The Nazi and the Psychiatrist” by Jack El-Hai, it’s set at the famous Nuremberg Trials from 1945-1946 in Germany after WWII ended. It’s set to premiere at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival next month before opening in theaters this November. A psychiatrist evaluates Nazi leaders before the trials begin, growing increasingly obsessed with understanding evil as he forms a disturbing bond with Hermann Göring. This is a full-on recreation of the iconic Nuremberg trials, where they exposed the real evil within the Nazi mindset and what they perpetrated. Starring Russell Crowe as Hermann Göring, Rami Malek as Douglas Kelley, Michael Shannon as Robert H. Jackson, Leo Woodall, Richard E. Grant, John Slattery, Mark O’Brien, Colin Hanks, Lydia Peckham, and Wrenn Schmidt. Much better footage in this than the first look teaser. I really hope this turns out good and won’t be something instantly forgettable.

Here’s the second teaser trailer for James Vanderbilt’s film Nuremberg, direct from SPC’s YouTube:

Nuremberg Teaser

Nuremberg Teaser

You can rewatch the first teaser trailer for Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg movie right here for more footage.

The Allies, led by the unyielding chief prosecutor, Robert H. Jackson (Michael Shannon), have the task of ensuring the Nazi regime answers for the unveiled horrors of the Holocaust while a US Army psychiatrist (Rami Malek) is locked in a dramatic psychological duel with the former Reichsmarschall Herman Göring (Russell Crowe). Nuremberg is written & directed by the American writer / producer James Vanderbilt, making his second feature film after directing Truth previously. He also produced many films and wrote the screenplays for The Rundown, Zodiac, The Losers, The Amazing Spider-Man 1 & 2, White House Down, Truth, Murder Mystery 1 & 2, Fountain of Youth. Based on the book titled “The Nazi and the Psychiatrist” written by Jack El-Hai. It’s produced by Bradley J. Fischer, Cherilyn Hawrysh, István Major, Paul Neinstein, Richard Saperstein, William Sherak, Frank Smith, Benjamin Tappan, James Vanderbilt. This will premiere at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. Sony Pictures Classics will debut Vanderbilt’s Nuremberg film in select US theaters starting November 7th, 2025 later this year. First impression? Who’s interested in it?

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Find more posts in: To Watch, Trailer

August 27, 2025 0 comments
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