Labyrinth of Lies

In Frankfurt, 1958, ambitious young lawyer Johann Radmann learns that after the war, many former Nazis resumed their normal lives without facing punishment. He is determined to bring the war criminals to justice.
In 1958, Johann Radmann is a young and idealistic public prosecutor who takes an interest in the case of Charles Schulz, a former Auschwitz extermination camp commander who is now teaching at a school in Frankfurt am Main. Radmann is determined to bring Schulz to justice, but finds his efforts frustrated because of the many former Nazis who are serving in government and looking out for one another. Radmann’s boss, the prosecutor-general Fritz Bauer, puts him in charge of investigating former workers at the Auschwitz camp. Meanwhile, Radmann allows himself to be seduced by Marlene, a seamstress who, benefiting from Radmann’s connections, starts a business as a dress designer. Radmann reaches a crisis when he discovers his own father was in the Nazi party. When he tells Marlene that her father too was in the party, she ends their relationship. By the end of the film, however, there is a chance she will have him back. He resigns his official post and goes to work for an industrialist. There he is again confronted with the dilemma: do what is right; or do what the system requires you to do?