First Quote Added
April 10, 2026
Latest Quote Added
"Rami Malek - Douglas Kelley"
"Sergeant Howie Triest: [to Douglas] Do you know why it happened here? Because people let it happen."
"[to Göring] You think you're a great man?"
"John Slattery - Burton C. Andrus"
"Wrenn Schmidt - Elsie Douglas"
"Russell Crowe - Hermann Göring"
"[to Göring] There's a difference between us bombing war factories and civilians dying as collateral damage! And you building 1200 human slaughter houses designed to exterminate an entire race! And you know it!!"
"I know more about this man than anyone else on the planet. You're walking into a trap!"
"Michael Shannon - Robert H. Jackson"
"Mark O'Brien - John Amen"
"Leo Woodall - Sergeant Howie Triest"
"Colin Hanks - Gustave Gilbert"
"Richard E. Grant - Sir David Maxwell Fyfe"
"Steven Pacey - George C. Marshall"
"No man has ever beaten me."
"Just because a man is your ally does not mean he is on your side."
"[On Göring] You know what sets him apart from us? Nothing."
"The first time I saw Hitler talk, it was uh... 1922, upstairs of a coffee shop, for maybe 30 people. This was peacetime, but it was a peace without food, jobs, shoes. And he stood up and he said "French bellies are being filled with German pain." And then, "If you make threats, you need bayonets. Rearm! Down this Versailles!" So that night, I became a National Socialist."
"Andreas Pietschmann - Rudolf Hess"
"Lotte Verbeek - Emmy Göring"
"Lydia Peckham - Lila"
"[After being defeated at the trial] Years from now, I wonder what you will say about us. Will you even acknowledge we were human?"
"An epic World War ll thriller based on true events"
"Salvatore Sansone - Orazio"
"Maria Sand - Michelle Hoffman"
"Jonathan Hyde - Leslie Woodrow"
"Stacy Martin - Maggie Van Buren"
"Emma Laird - Audrey Miller"
"Peter Polycarpou - Michael Hoffman"
"Guy Pearce - Harrison Lee Van Buren"
"My uncle is, above all, a principled artist. His lifelong ambition was not only to define an epoch but to transcend all time. In his memoirs, he described his designs as machines with no superfluous parts, that at their best, at his best, possessed an immoveable core; a "Hard Core of Beauty." A way of directing their inhabitant's perception to the world as it is. The inherent laws of concrete things such as mountains and rock define them. They indicate nothing. They tell nothing. They simply are. Born in 1911 in a small fishing village in Austria-Hungary, László Toth looked out upon the Adriatic Sea. He was a boy with eyes wide open, full of yearning. New borders would eventually rip this expanse of sea away from him but never did he cease to try and fill its void. Forty years later, he survived the camps at Buchenwald, as did his late wife, and myself, in Dachau. His first American masterpiece, the Van Buren institute outside of Philadelphia, remained unfinished until 1973. The building referenced his time at Buchenwald as well as the deeply felt absence of his wife, my Aunt Erzsébet. For this project, he re-imagined the camp's claustrophobic interior cells with precisely the same dimensions as his own place of imprisonment, save for one electrifying exception; when visitors looked 20 meters upwards, the dramatic heights of the glass above them invited free thought; freedom of identity. He further re-imagined Buchenwald and his wife's venue of imprisonment in Dachau on the same grounds, connected by a myriad of secret corridors re-writing their history and transcending space and time so that he and Erzsébet would never be apart again. Uncle, you and Aunt Erzsébet once spoke for me, I speak for you now, and I am honored. "Don't let anyone fool you, Zsófia" he would say to me as a struggling young mother raising my daughter during our first years in Jerusalem, "no matter what the others try and sell you, it is the destination, not the journey." Thank you."
"Joe Alwyn - Harry Lee Van Buren"
"I've found our conversation persuasive and intellectually stimulating."
"Losing a mother, it's an unfathomable loss. To lose one's birth mother is to lose the very foundation on which we stand. The mind may not know its loss, but the heart does."
"What have you done to yourself? It's a shame seeing how your people treat themselves. If you resent your persecution, why then do you make of yourself such an easy target? If you act as a loafer living off handouts, a societal leech, how can you rightfully expect a different result?"
"We tolerate you."
"Adrien Brody - László Tóth"
"Felicity Jones - Erzsébet Tóth"
"When dogs get sick, they often bite the hand of those who fed them, until someone mercifully puts them down."
"Alessandro Nivola - Attila Miller"
"Isaach de Bankolé - Gordon"
"Michael Epp - Jim Simpson"
"This place is rotten. The landscape, the food we eat. This whole country is rotten."
"I will follow you until I die."
"Last night I met God. He gave me permission to call Him by His name."
"This is why I never do business with Italians. The spics of Europe."
"Raffey Cassidy - Zsófia"
"Nestor Paiva — Henri le Royer, Catherine's husband"
"Irene Rich — Catherine le Royer, her friend"
"Richard Derr — Jean de Metz, a knight"
Young though he was, his radiant energy produced such an impression of absolute reliability that Hedgewar made him the first sarkaryavah, or general secretary, of the RSS.
- Gopal Mukund Huddar
Largely because of the influence of communists in London, Huddar's conversion into an enthusiastic supporter of the fight against fascism was quick and smooth. The ease with which he crossed from one worldview to another betrays the fact that he had not properly understood the world he had grown in.
Huddar would have been 101 now had he been alive. But then centenaries are not celebrated only to register how old so and so would have been and when. They are usually celebrated to explore how much poorer our lives are without them. Maharashtrian public life is poorer without him. It is poorer for not having made the effort to recall an extraordinary life.
I regret I was not there to listen to Balaji Huddar's speech [...] No matter how many times you listen to him, his speeches are so delightful that you feel like listening to them again and again.
By the time he came out of Franco's prison, Huddar had relinquished many of his old ideas. He displayed a worldview completely different from that of the RSS, even though he continued to remain deferential to Hedgewar and maintained a personal relationship with him.