Nuremberg (2 screening) Hall 2

Nuremberg (2 screening) Hall 2

From Sat 17 January Ore 17:00 until Ore 23:00

At Cinema Excelsior

Posted by Cinema Excelsior

Categories: Cinema

Tags: cinema ischia, cinema, cinema excelsior

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SHOWTIMES: 17:00 
Title: Nuremberg
Release: USA
Genre: Drama, Historical, Thriller
Directed by: James Vanderbilt
Runtime: 148 minutes
Rating: +13 (Teens)
Cast: Rami Malek, Russell Crowe, Richard E. Grant, Michael Shannon, Leo Woodall, Colin Hanks, John Slattery, Wrenn Schmidt, Lotte Verbeek, Mark O'Brien, Andreas Pietschmann, Steven Pacey, Lydia Peckham, Donald Sage Mackay, Wolfgang Cerny, Jeremy Wheeler
PLOT

Nuremberg, directed by James Vanderbilt, is a gripping historical drama set in Germany in 1945, immediately after the surrender of the Third Reich.
The film tells the story of the Nuremberg Trials, during which the Allied powers brought the top leaders of the Nazi regime to justice, holding them accountable for the atrocities committed during World War II, particularly the Holocaust. At the center of the story is the young U.S. Army psychiatrist Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek), tasked with assessing the mental state of the main defendants to determine whether they are fit to stand trial. His role forces him to confront some of the most ruthless figures of the century, most notably Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe), a key figure of the Hitlerian regime.
What begins as a clinical evaluation quickly turns into an intense and disturbing psychological confrontation between two men at opposite extremes. On one side, the rational and determined Kelley; on the other, the charismatic, calculating, and manipulative Göring. Their dialogue, marked by relentless interrogations and tension-filled silences, evolves into a true duel that challenges the boundaries of justice, madness, and moral responsibility.
Leading the prosecution is the uncompromising Chief Prosecutor Robert H. Jackson (Michael Shannon), determined to ensure that the crimes of Nazism are punished fairly and definitively, setting a legal precedent for the world.
The film portrays the struggle between duty and conscience, between the pursuit of justice and the need to understand how the unspeakable could have occurred.