Labyrinth of Lies

Nearly 20 years after the Nuremberg trials, the Frankfurt Auschwitz trials (1963-1965) marked the first time Germans prosecuted fellow Germans for their involvement with the Nazi party during World War II. Labyrinth of Lies sheds light on this lesser known series of trials, but can’t help but fall into many of the same cliché traps that similar historical fictions often do.
Johann Radmann (Inglourious Basterds’ Alexander Fehling) is a public prosecutor, bored with the usual traffic cases he’s assigned. When journalist Thomas Gnielka (Andre Szymanski) brings to Radmann’s attention a former Nazi teaching at a nearby school, free and unpunished, Radmann takes it upon himself to find justice for those people whose lives this teacher potentially had a hand in destroying. The further Radmann explores the depths of horror that occurred decades before, the more he faces a Germany that will do anything to move beyond its awful past, in the process discovering just how closely the Nazi party touches his own life and those of his loved ones.
Radmann is an amalgam of three historical prosecutors, yet despite that, he’s little more than a bland receptacle for pertinent information. He’s told horrible truths—which are at this point mostly well-known crimes—that come off like repeated, expositional details, and the few elements we get of Radmann’s personal life feel completely irrelevant to the film’s overall story that is being told. His relationship with his girlfriend Marlene (Friederike Becht) goes absolutely nowhere, sufficing only to demonstrate that innocence and true love can still arise so recently after such atrocities.