Nuremberg

Nuremberg

Posted on November 6, 2025 at 5:51 pm

A-
Lowest Recommended Age: High School
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13 for violent content related to the Holocaust, disturbing images, strong language, and themes including suicide, smoking, and brief drug use
Profanity: Some strong language
Alcohol/ Drugs: Alcohol, drugs, and smoking
Violence/ Scariness: Wartime and Holocaust references, archival scenes from concentration camps
Diversity Issues: A theme of the movie
Date Released to Theaters: November 7, 2025

Those who have studied 20th century history know that after WWII the Allies did something no governments had ever done after a surrender. They held a formal trial, not about Germany’s acts of war but about the “crimes against humanity” that tortured, imprisioned, stole from, and murdered its own people, and tried to eradicate citizens based on their religion, disability, and sexual orientation. They were known as the Nuremberg trials.

Copyright Sony Pictures Classics 2025

But even those who have studied that process may not know that the American military also assigned its own psychiatrists to interview the first 22 German officers and political leaders. It was not, as in an ordinary criminal trial, to determine their ability to understand the proceedings and in some cases their culpability for their decisions, but to try to understand what kinds of minds would create what we now call the Holocaust. Those questions have continued to confound us for 80 years, and continue to be explored by historians and filmmakers, including recent documentaries like “The Last Days,” “Shoah,” and “The Grey Zone” and narrative films like “The Zone of Interest” and “A Real Pain.”

“Nuremberg,” based in part on the book The Nazi and the Psychiatrist by Jack El-Hai, follows three intersecting stories, the efforts of Supreme Court Justice Robert Jackson (Michael Shannon) to get the Allied countries together to agree on the trial, the charges, and its proceedings, the interviews military psychiatrist Douglas Kelley (Rami Malek) conducted with top Nazi official Hermann Göring (Russell Crowe), and Howie Triest (Leo Woodall) a young military officer assigned to Kelley as a translator.

Jackson’s plan seems impossible, “a logistical nightmare.” “What you’re talking about is trying them in some sort of legal limbo that doesn’t exist using laws that haven’t been written yet,” he is told, and reminded that Germany never attacked the US. He would have to get the involvement of all of the Allies to participate, including the USSR. He insists, “The world needs to know what these men did.”

There is an optimism behind it, an idea that if the top Nazis were both convicted and diagnosed, it would help make sure that nothing like the Holocaust would ever happen again.

The essence of the film is in the interviews/conversations between Kelley and Göring, and the two Oscar-winners and writer/director James Vanderbilt’s script make them among the most riveting screen moments of the year.

Vanderbilt is superb in revealing the complexity of the moral and legal issues. Kelley is trained to give therapy, with patient confidentiality. Jackson wants him to use his sessions to find Göring’s vulnerabilities, to help with the prosecution. General Eisenhower insists that there be no executions without a trial, giving the men the opportunity to defend themselves. The risk of failing to find them guilty is the risk of making them martyrs, allowing atrocities to happen again. Jackson and the military are also very aware that the humiliation Germany suffered at the end of WWI played a big part in Hitler’s rise. Göring tells Kelley why he followed Hitler: “Along came a man who said we could reclaim our former glory. Would you not follow such a man?”

Jackson reminds us that the war “started with laws,” and should end with them. They have to create a sense of fairness and justice without repeating the mistakes of the post WWI Paris Peace Conference that divided up German’s territories.

The movie is well paced, as a thriller, a courtroom drama, and an exploration of history and the human capacity for evil and for good. It is never didactic or heavy-handed. There are moments of humor and excellent performances by all.

Vanderbilt has a gift for telling details like Göring ripping the lace-edged hem of his wife’s slip to make a white flag of surrender as his car reaches the Americans, and then casually telling them to get his luggage, as though the American soldiers are baggage handlers.

When the military thinks Kelley is too sympathetic, they bring in another psychiatrist (Colin Hanks), who is clear that he is there to write a book about it. Kelley is disturbed by this unabashed acknowledgement of self-interest. The film lets us know that Kelley did himself write a book, though, 22 Cells in Nuremberg: A Psychiatrist Examines the Nazi Criminals. It is hard to find but well worth reading, especially its conclusion, calling for the same commitments we are still trying to achieve today. It is impossible to watch this film without being chilled by what happened in Germany. It is impossible not to think about the lessons we have failed to learn.

Parents should know that this film includes references to wartime violence and the Holocaust, with real archival footage of concentration camps. There is some strong language and characters drink, smoke, and use drugs.

Family discussion: Compare the Nuremberg trials to a later version, South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission. Which is better? When the current global conflicts are resolved, how should we treat those involved?

If you like this, try: “Judgment at Nuremberg.” a 1961 film about the later trials, with waning interest in pursuing the Nazi judges, exploring the issues of responsibility for those in lower-level roles. and the American Experience documentary, “The Nuremberg Trials

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Satisfied

Satisfied

Posted on November 3, 2025 at 4:39 pm

B +
Lowest Recommended Age: High School
MPAA Rating: Rated PG-13
Profanity: Mild language
Alcohol/ Drugs: None
Violence/ Scariness: Discussion of miscarriages and fertility issues, scenes in hospital
Diversity Issues: A theme of the movie
Date Released to DVD: November 4, 2025

The “Hamilton” song “Satisfied” is sung by a character who is not at all satisfied. The sister she loves is marrying a man she loves, a man who himself, in the words of the song, is never satisfied. She sings,

A toast to the groom, to the bride
From your sister who is always by your side
To your union and the hope that you provide
May you always be satisfied
And I know she’ll be happy as his bride
And I know he will never be satisfied
I will never be satisfied
.

The character who sings that song is Anjelica Schuyler, originated in the workshop as the show was developed, its off-Broadway premiere, and then when it was transferred to Broadway, by Renée Elise Goldsberry. This documentary is her story, about the two transcendent goals of her life: to be a mother, and to have a career as a performer, and the way they collided.

Copyright 2025 Aura Entertainment

The history of documentaries, going back to the earliest days, is of a filmmaker on one side of the camera and the story on the other, whether it includes archival clips, fly-on-the-wall footage as the story develops, or talking head experts or witnesses. This film presents a different approach that reflects the evolution in storytelling as individuals bypass intermediaries and tell their own stories in the most unfiltered and direct way possible (and usually in vertical mode, filmed on a phone).

“Satisfied” is raw, intimate, and immediate because much of what we see is moments when Goldsberry filmed herself, not necessarily intended to show anyone else but just as a way to process what she is experiencing.

We see her heartbreaking difficulties in trying to have a child, including five miscarriages. We see the overwhelming joy of delivering a healthy baby boy, Benjamin, and then adopting a baby girl, Brielle. Their scenes together are everything we hope for a family. She and her husband adore each other and adore their children and the children love each other and their parents. One of the film’s sweetest moments is a brief home movie when Brielle, still a toddler, wants to go to school like her big brother, even though she is not quite sure what that means. So he puts a backpack on her and one on himself and tells her they are going to school even though it’s just the front door of their apartment. She is so proud and happy and he is so loving.

Goldsberry also provides narration for archival footage, telling us how she met her husband (in church) and did not tell him at first that she was a perfumer. She explains that a performer is two people; the aspiring one who is constantly anxious about getting cast and the successful one who is constantly pulled in a million directions, leaving her husband to hold her purse. That husband, Alexis Johnson, is completely on board with both elements. In another of the film’s highlights, he stands in their kitchen, tearing up as he tells us about how moved he is by her performances.

It was just after they brought Brielle home, when Goldsberry was planning to take some time off, that she was asked to audition for the workshop of “Hamilton.” Initially, she was going to say no, in part because workshop performers often help develop the material and then are passed over for bigger names when the production is launched. But she heard the songs and could not resist. We hear her worry about whether she will get cast when the show opens off-Broadway, and then we see what happens when it moves to Broadway and becomes a phenomenon. Every dream come true has some additional stress. She is nominated for a Tony award but that just means even more time away from her family as part of that process is bringing her story to the attention of the public.

The archival footage of her high school performances is endearing — and impressive. And there’s a lovely scene where she visits the high school drama teacher who cast her as Nellie in “South Pacific,” a play about a white woman dealing her her “carefully taught” prejudice.

She is a star. And yet, as she shows us, that doesn’t mean a cab driver won’t bypass her to pick up the white theater-goers who just gave her a standing ovation. And, as she also shows us, she has the same wrenching conflicts between work and family faced by every parent.

We hear from colleagues including Lin-Manuel Miranda and Oscar-winner Ariana DeBose and we see and hear some of Goldsberry’s thrilling performances. But what makes this film special is its private moments. This kind of honesty’s a gift, especially in a world of augmented reality. We should be grateful to Goldsberry for sharing her struggle as well as her talent and triumphs.

Parents should know that this movie deals with fertility challenges, including miscarriages, family stress, mental health, and racism.

Family discussion: How did Goldsberry decide what to prioritize? What was the most difficult decision? What made her decide to film herself and then to share those very personal moments?

If you like this, try: Goldsberry’s performances in “Hamilton,” “Girls 5Eva” and “The House with a Clock in Its Walls” — and watch the Tony Awards! It’s the best awards show on TV.

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Documentary movie review Movies -- format Movies -- Reviews VOD and Streaming
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