Pretend Nazis in the dock I was twelve when I first saw Judgment at Nuremberg. It ran on television some weekend evening in 1979, and I watched it because the synopsis in TV Guide mentioned that William Shatner was among the cast. (It was an early, small role for the future Captain Kirk.) The 1961 film is a fictionalized account of Nazi war crimes trials, and it features one of the great all-star casts. In brief appearances, two famously troubled stars – Judy Garland and Montgomery Clift – steal the proverbial show. Directed by Stanley Kramer,
Nuremberg Fantasies
Nuremberg Fantasies
Nuremberg Fantasies
Pretend Nazis in the dock I was twelve when I first saw Judgment at Nuremberg. It ran on television some weekend evening in 1979, and I watched it because the synopsis in TV Guide mentioned that William Shatner was among the cast. (It was an early, small role for the future Captain Kirk.) The 1961 film is a fictionalized account of Nazi war crimes trials, and it features one of the great all-star casts. In brief appearances, two famously troubled stars – Judy Garland and Montgomery Clift – steal the proverbial show. Directed by Stanley Kramer,