One of the best ways to figure out what to watch next on a streaming service is to see which movies are leaving soon.Amazonhas a deep bench, but titles leave the service every month, making it difficult to keep track of which movies are available where.
If you’re looking for something to watch before the end of August, you should start withJudgment at Nuremberg.The movie, released 15 years after the end ofWorld War II, is about the trial at Nuremberg that determined whether those in the Nazi regime could be prosecuted for following orders. Here are three reasons you should check it out.

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It remains as timely as ever
The movie is careful to remind viewers of just how horrific World War II was, but what’s just as important here is how a person’s individual morality should weigh against the orders they’ve been asked to carry out. If you are told to do something you know is wrong, what is your recourse? And what does it mean for a country itself to have been complicit in horrific acts?
Perhaps the most remarkable thing aboutJudgment at Nurembergis the sheer tonnage of star power that’s on display in the film. In addition to Spencer Tracy, the film’s star, the cast also includes Maximillian Schell, Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Marlene Dietrich,Judy Garland, andWilliam Shatner. Some of the actors play smaller parts, but each one delivers some of the best work of their careers, especially Tracy and Lancaster. No actor feels out of place in the entire ensemble.

It features a slew of great performances
Perhaps the most remarkable thing aboutJudgment at Nurembergis the sheer tonnage of star power that’s on display in the film. In addition to Spencer Tracy, the film’s star, the cast also includes Maximillian Schell, Burt Lancaster, Montgomery Clift, Marlene Dietrich,Judy Garland, andWilliam Shatner.
Some of the actors have smaller roles, but each one of them delivers some of the best work of their careers, especially Tracy and Lancaster. No actor feels out of place in the entire ensemble.
It’s more riveting than you might expect
Judgment at Nurembergis a three-hour courtroom drama, it’s true, which means that most of its scenes take place in small rooms, and the topics they discuss in those rooms are often fairly legalistic.
Thanks to a slew of outstanding performances, though,Judgment at Nurembergis pretty gripping, in part because its central character, Judge Daniel Heywood, seems to be genuinely torn about whether these men should be blamed for the crimes they carried out while serving their country. It’s a fascinating question, and one thatJudgment at Nurembergworks hard to present every side of.