'Much has been written about the representation of the Holocaust, but this is the first study to explore the prism of the courtroom in American film when dealing with the murder of European Jewry.''- Prof. Tony Kushner, Parkes Inst. for the Study of Jewish/Non-Jewish Relations, U. of Southampton
''James Jordan's wide-ranging and absorbing study reveals, by means of excellent close readings, the great significance of war-crimes trials in cinema history, as well as for Holocaust representation and memory.''- Prof. Sue Vice, English Literature, U. of Sheffield
""Jordan's exceptionally well-researched, well-written study maps a little-known subgenre of (primarily) American Holocaust cinema -- films about the trials of perpetrators....Jordan covers some of the production histories of these films, discusses their plots, and analyzes their key cinematic strategies. His principal concern, however, is to chart the shifting nature of the evidence presented in these fictional trials. Highly recommended.""- Choice, Vol. 54, No 2, October 2016