ist fiktiv und basiert auf den drei Staatsanwälten, welche die Anklage für den Prozess vorbereitet haben: Joachim Kügler, Georg Friedrich Vogel und Gerhard Wiese. Wieses Erinnerungen an den Prozess flossen ins Drehbuch ein. [5][6]
Ladd's character is fictional and is based on the preparations for the prosecution of three prosecutors: Joachim Kügler, Georg Bird and Gerhard Meadow. The process of recollection wieses the script. [ 5 ], [ 6 ]
Inspector General Fritz Bauer and journalist Thomas Gnielka are real people
"Do you know the consequences of this? Do
you want every young man in this country to torture himself
with his own father as a murderer?
Yes, That's what I'm going to do.
I hope that these lies, and this silence, will finally have an end."
"Auschwitz is a story that happened here, it's buried here, and
if you don't go to trial, it will continue. Buried here until sometime forgotten
what happened here, no punishment deserves
no punishment
but the victims and their stories"
The trial is seen as a turning point in the history of the Federal Republic of Germany, the Nazis The crimes of the period can no longer be vanished
. There are so many films about war reflection that it is not true. It is their own country that settles the accounts of those old things, and the "trial" of the "allied forces" is nothing in front of this.
This is a great thing, but the film itself is not very good-looking, and I don't know what to do with that female character.
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