IN MEMORIAM:  Bingham Ray (1954-2012). The loss of this friend, colleague, and champion of indie films is a source of great sadness...

IN MEMORIAM:  We are sad to announce the death of Lilo Balte Ashkins on December 9, 2011.

 

NUREMBERG STILL IN THEATERS AS 2012 BEGINS!

St. Louis, MO - Landmark Theatres - Jan 20 - 26, 2012

Nashville, TN - Belcourt Theatre - Jan 20 - 24, 2012

Greensboro, NC - Carousel Grande Cinemas - Jan 27 - Feb 2, 2012

NYC Special Screening - Jan 25, 2012

New York State Bar Association Annual Meeting. Attorneys Only (CLE Credit Available).

Contact: Andria L. Bentley - 518.487.5560 - abentley@nysba.org

NUREMBERG screened in Tehran on Nov 22, 2011 by NAM Center for Human Rights

To read account by Bill Schabas, click HERE.

Stay tuned for Sandra Schulberg's photos and report on reactions to Persian language version of the film.

Rave Review in the LA Times!

Nuremberg, meticulously brought back to life by Sandra Schulberg & Josh Waletzky, shines an important and fascinating light on the events at Nuremberg….it compels us as much because of its complicated and fascinating history as for what it has to show...” — Kenneth Turan, Los Angeles Times (To read the complete LA Times review, click HERE.)

NUREMBERG generated massive press coverage in Argentina, where trials for crimes against humanity are underway.

Para leer los articulos en español.

President Obama's Statement On Holocaust Remembrance Day

Read it HERE.

PHOTO GALLERY

Visit the updated PHOTO GALLERY to see new pictures.

 

TRAILER

 

POSTER

Nuremberg Restoration Poster

 

NUREMBERG: ITS LESSON FOR TODAY

[The Schulberg/Waletzky Restoration]

One of the greatest courtroom dramas in history, Nuremberg: Its Lesson For Today shows how the four allied prosecution teams — from the United States, Great Britain, France, and the Soviet Union — built their case against the top Nazi leaders. As documented in the film, the trial established the "Nuremberg principles," laying the groundwork for all subsequent prosecutions, anywhere in the world, for crimes against the peace, war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide.

The film premiered in The Hague as the centerpiece of the Erasmus Prize ceremonies. In 2009, the Prize was awarded to Ben Ferencz, one of the original Nuremberg prosecutors, who is now 90, and to Antonio Cassese, first President of the International Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and currently President of the Special Tribunal for Lebanon.

The original film was written and directed by Stuart Schulberg, and edited by Joseph Zigman, under the aegis of Pare Lorentz, chief of Film/Theatre/Music at the U.S. War Department, and completed by Schulberg in 1948, under the aegis of Eric Pommer, chief of the Motion Picture Branch of U.S. Military Government in Berlin.

The film makes extensive use of footage from The Nazi Plan and Nazi Concentration Camps, evidentiary films compiled under the supervision of Budd Schulberg, that were presented at the Nuremberg trial.

Schulberg Productions and Metropolis Productions now present the first complete 35mm picture and sound restoration of the U.S. Government's 1948 film about the first Nuremberg trial - the International Military Tribunal.