In the shadowed corridors of a war-torn Europe, where the echoes of victory mingled with the ghosts of atrocity, Nuremberg arrives like a thunderclap on November 7, 2025, positioning itself as the month’s premier Oscar hopeful and a unflinching mirror to our fractured present. Directed, written, and co-produced by James Vanderbilt—best known for his taut scripts on Zodiac and the Scream franchise—this historical drama, adapted from Jack El-Hai’s 2013 book The Nazi and the Psychiatrist, shifts the lens from the courtroom spectacle of Stanley Kramer’s 1961 Judgment at Nuremberg to the intimate psychological duels that preceded it. Starring Rami Malek as the brilliant but tormented U.S. Army psychiatrist Douglas Kelley and Russell Crowe as the charismatic yet monstrous Hermann Göring, the film delves into the fragile boundary between justice and vengeance, asking: Can evil be diagnosed, or does it seduce those who seek to understand it? With a PG-13 rating for its unflinching depictions of Holocaust horrors and a runtime of 128 minutes, Nuremberg isn’t just a period piece—it’s a scalpel to the soul of accountability, releasing via Sony Pictures Classics amid a November slate brimming with awards bait. Early buzz from its September 7 world premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival—capped by a four-minute standing ovation—has prognosticators like Variety’s Clayton Davis calling it “one of the season’s most awards-worthy films,” a sentiment echoed in Dewsbury, England, where local cinephiles like @sitaragabie on X dissect its resonances to modern tribunals over pints at the Shoulder of Mutton.
The plot unfurls in the autumn of 1945, as Allied forces corral the shattered remnants of the Nazi high command into a fortified prison in Nuremberg, Germany. Enter Major Douglas Kelley (Malek), a UC Berkeley psychologist turned military evaluator, tasked with the impossible: ascertaining whether these architects of genocide—Göring, Rudolf Hess, Karl Dönitz, and their ilk—are mentally competent to face trial for crimes against humanity. What begins as clinical detachment spirals into obsession when Kelley locks horns with Göring (Crowe), Hitler’s bombastic right-hand man and Luftwaffe chief, whose opulent tastes—silk pajamas, morphine vials, and a penchant for Wagnerian monologues—mask a razor-sharp intellect. Their sessions, conducted in a stark cell under the watchful eye of prison commandant Colonel Burton C. Andrus (Michael Shannon), evolve into a cat-and-mouse game of intellect and ideology. Göring, unrepentant and eloquent, probes Kelley’s American optimism, drawing parallels to U.S. internment camps and lynchings, while Kelley grapples with the banality of evil, scribbling notes that blur professional notes with personal hauntings. Flashbacks intercut the interrogations: Kelley’s idyllic family life in California fractures under the weight of classified horrors, including graphic reels of liberated camps that leave him retching in the rain. As the trials loom—November 20 marks their 80th anniversary—the film crescendos in a tense standoff where Göring’s cyanide capsule (a historical nod to his suicide on the eve of execution) dangles as both escape and indictment, forcing Kelley to confront if justice can ever outpace the human capacity for monstrosity.
Vanderbilt’s screenplay, honed over 13 years from initial drafts in 2012, masterfully sidesteps biopic tropes for a thriller’s pulse, emphasizing the “what if” of unchecked charisma. Production kicked off in Budapest in February 2024, wrapping by May, with cinematographer Jim Denault (Zodiac) bathing the sets in a desaturated palette of grays and umbers that evokes the moral fog of occupation. The ensemble elevates the material: Leo Woodall (One Day) as a greenhorn guard whose naivety crumbles into complicity; Richard E. Grant as the steely Justice Robert H. Jackson, architect of the tribunal; John Slattery (Mad Men) as a cynical prosecutor; and Mark O’Brien (The Dry) as Kelley’s conflicted colleague. Wrenn Schmidt (The Americans) brings quiet ferocity as Kelley’s wife, anchoring the domestic fallout, while Colin Hanks adds bureaucratic bite as a State Department liaison. Crowe’s transformation is tour de force—packing on 40 pounds and mastering a Teutonic growl laced with Oxford polish—channeling Göring’s theatricality into moments of chilling vulnerability, like a late-night confession where he weeps not for victims but lost grandeur. Malek, Oscar-winner for Bohemian Rhapsody, counters with coiled intensity, his wide eyes registering micro-expressions of doubt that culminate in a breakdown sequence blending Rorschach tests with hallucinatory visions of gas chambers.
Reception has been rapturously divided, with a 67% Rotten Tomatoes score from 33 reviews praising its “commanding performances” but critiquing the “measured pacing” that tempers emotional peaks. Deadline’s Pete Hammond deems it “fascinating and urgently important,” a story “incredibly relevant for now” amid global reckonings with authoritarianism—from Ukraine to Gaza—urging world leaders to screen it. The Hollywood Reporter notes its awards positioning: Crowe’s supporting turn a lock for nods, Malek a dark horse for lead, Vanderbilt for adapted screenplay, and Denault for cinematography. Yet, whispers of restraint linger; some TIFF attendees felt it intellectualized trauma, skirting the raw fury of Hannah Arendt’s “banality” thesis. Still, in a year where Anora and Emilia Pérez dominate indie chatter, Nuremberg’s prestige polish—bolstered by Walden Media’s family-friendly sheen—carves a lane for historical gravitas.
November’s Oscar contenders form a constellation of ambition, with Nuremberg leading the charge as the week’s anchor release. On the same November 7 date, Sentimental Value—a multilingual drama with Stellan Skarsgård and Elle Fanning—vies for international feature and supporting actress, its Norwegian-Swedish-English tapestry exploring immigrant grief in a post-Brexit world. By November 14, The Fire Inside, a boxing biopic starring Ryan Destiny as Claressa Shields, punches for best actress and original song, its MGM polish echoing Creed’s underdog arc. Hamnet, out November 27, reunites Jessie Buckley and Paul Mescal in a Shakespearean elegy for the Bard’s lost son, positioning Buckley for another lead nod after her Wicked turn and Mescal for supporting after Gladiator II’s summer swordplay. Animation bows with The Wild Robot on November 20, DreamWorks’ tale of a stranded AI bot mothering geese, a frontrunner for animated feature with Lupita Nyong’o’s voice work echoing Inside Out 2’s emotional heft.
Further afield, Queer (Luca Guadagnino’s steamy Burroughs adaptation with Daniel Craig) drops November 1, its Venice buzz fueling adapted screenplay hopes; The Piano Lesson (Netflix’s August Wilson adaptation with Samuel L. Jackson and John David Washington) streams November 22, eyeing ensemble acting noms; and Nickel Boys, RaMell Ross’s civil rights gut-punch based on Colson Whitehead, hits select theaters November 15, a best picture dark horse with cinematography whispers. Blockbusters like Wicked: For Good (November 21) and Zootopia 2 (November 26) blend spectacle with substance—Cynthia Erivo’s Elphaba a locks for song, while Judy Hopps’ sequel eyes animation and score—while indies like A Different Man (Adam Neumann’s face-swap satire) and His Three Daughters (Azazel Jacobs’ sibling rift with Carrie Coon) premiere at Gotham on November 3, priming for screenplay contention.
In Dewsbury’s damp November evenings, where coal fires flicker against the chill, Nuremberg resonates as more than cinema—it’s a dispatch from history’s front lines. @sitaragabie tweets: “Crowe’s Göring chills the bone; Malek’s Kelley haunts the heart. In 2025’s echo chamber of trials, it’s a must.” As awards season ignites, this drama doesn’t just contend—it convicts us all to remember. With $15 million budget and IMAX prints rolling out, expect packed houses debating evil’s etiology over post-screening pints. Justice, Vanderbilt reminds us, isn’t served cold—it’s dissected, drop by drop.
