SummaryThe 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 former Reichsmarschall Herman Göring (Russell Crowe).
Directed By:James Vanderbilt
Written By:James Vanderbilt, Jack El-Hai
Nuremberg
Metascore
Generally Favorable
61
User score
Generally Favorable
6.9
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Metascore
Generally Favorable
61
49% Positive
18 Reviews
18 Reviews
49% Mixed
18 Reviews
18 Reviews
3% Negative
1 Review
1 Review
Sep 9, 2025
91
Nuremberg benefits not only from a terrifying performance from Crowe in a larger-than-life role like those that defined the early part of his career, but also from the ensemble of actors.
Nov 6, 2025
75
This movie would have done better two-thirds as long but focused more tightly, or four times longer and airing on Netflix as a limited series. Still: The human and the historian in me feels compelled to recommend it. Because movies about atrocities are necessary.
User score
Generally Favorable
6.9
64% Positive
88 Ratings
88 Ratings
29% Mixed
40 Ratings
40 Ratings
7% Negative
10 Ratings
10 Ratings
Dec 17, 2025
10
Itʼs widely maintained that those who don’t learn from history are destined to repeat it (despite the fact, unfortunately, that we also all too often disregard such sage advice). But, if there’s any message to be taken away from this latest offering from writer-director James Vanderbilt, this would be it, especially given the prevailing sociopolitical climate. This engaging historical drama/psychological thriller serves up a potent cautionary tale about the need to recognize, embrace and take seriously the lessons to come out of the Nuremberg trials in which former **** were prosecuted for crimes against humanity in the wake of World War II, the first time proceedings of this kind were ever conducted (however, viewers should note that this is not a remake of the 1961 iconic movie classic “Judgment at Nuremberg”). Specifically, the film follows the efforts of US Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson (Michael Shannon) to convene an international tribunal for this purpose, one consisting of judicial representatives from the Allied Forces of the US, the UK, France and the USSR. In the first of what would become a series of 12 trials, the tribunal prosecutes 22 **** defendants, including Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe), second in command to deceased Führer Adolf ****. Göring’s capture at the end of the war represents a major coup for the Allies in their quest to secure justice, but, to assure his competency to stand trial, the US military assigns psychiatrist Dr. Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek) to evaluate his mental state, a process that accounts for much of the film’s narrative (based on author Jack El-Hai’s 2013 nonfiction title, The **** and the Psychiatrist). It’s a process that ultimately proves to be quite personal as well as professional, with some surprisingly fascinating revelations emerging from the duo’s intense and occasionally intimate dialogues. But, as becomes apparent, the picture also sheds a chilling light on the narcissistic and sociopathic traits characteristic of both Göring and his colleagues, attributes that Kelley finds troubling not only in the personas of the **** war criminals, but also quietly lurking in others, a wholly unexpected and disillusioning insight for the idealistic and fair-minded doctor. However, given the depth and relevance of the content here, I’m admittedly perplexed at the reaction this film has received. It has been shut out of nominations in all of the major awards competitions announced thus far, despite the undeniable strengths in its writing, editing, production design, and musical score, as well as its outstanding performances by the three principals and in the supporting portrayals of Richard E. Grant, John Slattery, Leo Woodall and Colin Hanks. But, more than that, I fail to see the questionable justification behind a number of the criticisms that have been leveled against this title. What many have called boring I’ve found mesmerizing; what some have likened to a dry cinematic term paper I’ve found to be consistently engaging and profoundly affecting; and what some have said is a slow-moving slog is, in my view, a consistently paced, attention-holding release, quite an accomplishment for a picture with a 200 runtime. From these dubious observations, I can only conclude that this is yet another example of the American public’s general lack of interest in anything of a historical nature, which, as a college history major, I find sad given its all-too-frequent tendency to repeat itself. Indeed, it’s a sentiment perhaps best summed up by a quote from British historian and philosopher R.G. Collingwood that appears before the start of the closing credits: “The only clue to what man can do is what man has done.” “Nuremberg” shows us that; let’s hope we’re paying attention.
Nov 6, 2025
70
Nuremberg doesn’t quite stand up with the best films centered on World War II, but it does a respectable job dramatizing the aftermath of the conflict. The film is anchored by a strong cast, led by another great turn by Russell Crowe, and a consistent thematic throughline, but the first act’s use of ill-timed humor doesn’t do the film any favors.
Sep 9, 2025
60
The film presents itself as lavishly somber and important and includes several not-so-veiled references to the rise of intolerance, and the need to maintain international standards of justice, in the world today. But Nuremberg, competent and watchable as it is, isn’t big on psychological tension or insight.
Sep 9, 2025
50
Nuremberg goes down easily enough for the first two acts, but you begin to question the purpose of the whole enterprise by the end, where it tries making a grander point about the pathology of evil that nothing in the rest of the film supported.
Oct 31, 2025
30
With Nuremberg, James Vanderbilt is less interested in showing Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe) as "normal," as he is in accentuating Hitler's right-hand man as a charming charlatan. But this intentionality is miscalculated, and the film, bloated as it is with jarring tonal changes and thickly laid-on sentimentality, tilts so far into humanizing Nazis that it seems, at times, to apologize for the behavior of the high command.
Nov 25, 2025
10
A really intriguing movie, with a great cast. This is probably one of Rami Maleks best performances.
May 11, 2026
6
The movie begins strongly. It captures the viewer's attention right from the start. The premise is compelling; the development of the characters is expertly done. The first two hours of the film build everything up perfectly for a tension‑filled courtroom climax. But the last half hour feels rushed. It leaves out details and reasons for the actions of main characters, which diminishes the emotional impact built by the impressive storytelling in the earlier part of the movie. Acting is the highlight of the movie... Crowe and Malek were exceptional in their roles. Production, set designs and cinematography are all first‑rate. The only downside is the last 40 minutes or so... but overall a nice watch.Final score: 6/10.
Apr 9, 2026
6
Russell Crowe commandeers this movie as the highest ranking **** leader put on trial for WWII atrocities, whereas Rami Malek is terribly miscast as the psychiatrist who both befriends and attempts to undo him.
Mar 22, 2026
6
A film that trades the power of the trial for an analysis that doesn’t hold up.Nuremberg had everything it needed to be a great courtroom drama… but instead turns into a psychological study that never goes as deep as it thinks it **** idea of a showdown between Rami Malek and Russell Crowe is good on paper, but in practice it devolves into an exchange of dialogue that doesn’t develop as much as it promises. And the more the film tries to “understand” evil, the closer it gets to a somewhat uncomfortable humanization that undermines the whole thing.Interestingly, once it gets to the courtroom, the film finally clicks… but by then it’s too **** the end, it works more because of the weight of the true story than because of what it builds. It was a great legal film waiting to happen, but it fell short.
Apr 30, 2026
3
The 2025 Nuremberg film is a masterclass in how to take one of the most profound moral reckonings in human history and turn it into a shallow, atrociously bad collection of filmmaking clichés. For a subject that demands the weight of a monumental historical drama, what we got instead was a hollow, briskly paced procedural that treats the Holocaust as a backdrop for a series of unearned cinematic moments. Here is the review of a film that despite its heavy subject matter, manages to be a complete historical and artistic failure. Rami Malek, as psychiatrist Douglas Kelley, is a total casting enigma. Instead of a man grappling with the psychological abyss of pure evil, Malek delivers a stiff, one-note performance that never does the gravity of the role justice. He spends the movie looking startled or pensive, but there is zero fruition to his character. Then there’s Russell Crowe. Playing Hermann Göring, Crowe is physically imposing but narratively stifled. The script gives him no room to show his true acting range, trapping him in a role that feels less like a complex war criminal and more like a cartoon villain. The intellectual mind games between Malek and Crowe,which should have been the heart of the film, have the emotional depth of a puddle. Their relationship is non-existent, leaving the audience to wonder why we’re even watching these two stare at each other for two hours. Perhaps the biggest head-scratcher is the character of the interpreter (Leo Woodall). He is everywhere, present in every private conversation and legal maneuver, yet the movie never bothers to explain why he is so vital to the narrative's soul. He’s just there, a constant fixture in a film where character relations are completely non-existent. Why is he in the audience of the trial for god's sake. The film moves at a steady, robotic pace, but it lacks real drama. It feels like a checklist of scenes rather than a story. One moment we’re in a cell, the next a courtroom, but there is no tension, no rising action, and certainly no emotional payoff. For a film titled Nuremberg, the actual trial is treated like an afterthought. The proceedings are condensed into a series of snappy oneliners as **** case for crimes against humanity could be won with a few "mic drop" moments. Short, simplified, and historically hollow. The Editing: Choppy and bad, jumping through time and locations without allowing the weight of the events to settle. The **** aren't presented as the terrifyingly banal bureaucrats of evil they were; they are caricatures. The most egregious error is the inclusion of gruesome footage from the death camps. While these images are a vital historical record, their use here feels exploitative and not very fitting for the tone of the rest of the movie. You cannot spend 90 minutes making a quippy Hollywood drama with "Allo 'Allo!" accents and then suddenly drop in the reality of the Holocaust to manufacture unearned gravity. It’s tonal whiplash of the worst kind. This movie is filled to the brim with every lazy cliché in the book. It treats a sacred, painful history as a "cool" backdrop for a so called psychological thriller that doesn't even have the brains to be psychological. A failure at historical drama in every sense, it didn't just miss the mark; it turned a tragedy into a mockery. And everyone involved should be ashamed of themselves.
Production Company:
- Walden Media
- Filmsquad
- Mythology Entertainment
- Széchenyi Funds
- Bluestone Entertainment
Release Date:Nov 7, 2025
Duration:2 h 28 m
Rating:PG-13
Tagline:An epic World War ll thriller based on true events
Awards
Golden Trailer Awards
• 1 Win & 7 Nominations
AARP Movies for Grownups Awards
• 4 Nominations
San Sebastián International Film Festival
• 1 Win & 2 Nominations




























