Nuremberg Spertus Museum Illinois: Chicago - United States Movies Sun 8 May 2011
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Nuremberg

Spertus Museum

Illinois: Chicago - United States

Movies

Sun 8 May 2011
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Nuremberg

Nuremberg Sun 5/08 Chicago Spertus Muse

2011


May 2011


Sunday 8 May 2011

Nuremberg

Sun 8 May, 7 pm. 610 South Michigan Ave., Chicago, 60605. Ellie Sandler, 312.322.1700. Spertus Museum - [email][events]

The Schulberg/Waletzky Restoration Written & Directed by Stuart Schulberg Produced by Stuart Schulberg & Pare Lorentz Edited by Joseph Zigman Sunday, May 8 at 1:30 pm, 5 pm, and 7 pm at the Music Box Theatre 3733 N. Southport Chicago Co-sponsored by the Music Box Theatre and Spertus Institute. Join restoration producer Sandra Schulberg and scholar Dr. Richard S. Levy for what will surely be a fascinating discussion following the 7 pm screening.

One of the greatest courtroom dramas in history, Nuremberg shows how international prosecutors built their case against top Nazi war criminals using the Nazis’ own films and records. The trial established the “Nuremberg principles,” laying the foundation for all subsequent trials for crimes against the peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity.

This is the official U.S. government’s film about the trial, made for the War Department & U.S. Military Government by Stuart Schulberg, a veteran of John Ford’s OSS War Crimes film team. Though it was distributed in Germany in 1948 and 1949 as part of the U.S. de-Nazification campaign, its release to American theaters and other countries was canceled due to political concerns.

Over the years, the original picture negative and sound elements were lost or destroyed. Filmmakers Sandra Schulberg and Josh Waletzky created a new 35mm negative (made from the German Bundesarchiv’s best “lavender print”) and re-constructed the soundtrack using original sound from the trial. The Schulberg/Waletzky restoration allows audiences to hear Justice Robert H. Jackson's famous opening and closing statements to the Tribunal, and the testimony from the German defendants and their defense attorneys—all in their own voices—as well as bits of the English, Russian and French prosecutors. Now, more than 60 years later, the newly restored film can be seen around the world for the first time. The film ends with Justice Jackson’s stirring words: “Let Nuremberg stand as a warning to all who plan and wage aggressive war.”

Sunday tickets are $9.25 at the door.
(Tickets are not sold in advance.)
The Music Box accepts cash, Visa, and MasterCard.
Parking is available at Blaine Elementary, 1420 W. Grace Street, for $10.

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