Mark Ryan credited as playing...
Maj. Airey Neave
- Maj. Airey Neave: [entering Göring's cell] Good morning. I am Major Neave. I'm the officer appointed by the International Military Tribunal to serve upon you a copy...
- Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring: Wait. You're British?
- Maj. Airey Neave: I am.
- Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring: Finally, a civilized man. Neave? Neave? What is your given name?
- Maj. Airey Neave: Airey.
- Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring: Airey? Major Airey Neave... I have heard this name before. Airey, like the wind. Why... Why would I have heard this name?
- Maj. Airey Neave: I was captured, tortured by the Gestapo, and escaped twice.
- Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring: Oh, I see. Well, then, you've earned your given name.
- Maj. Airey Neave: I am the officer appointed by the International Military Tribunal to serve upon you a copy of the indictment in which you are named as defendant.
- [hands indictment to Göring, along with a set of documents]
- Maj. Airey Neave: I'm also here to advise you as to your rights to council.
- [Göring takes the documents and drops them on the ground]
- Reichsmarschall Hermann Wilhelm Göring: I care nothing for lawyers. You can find one for me, Major Airey of the Wind. We're men of culture. We both know the truth: the victors will always be the judges, the vanquished always the accused, yes?
- Albert Speer: [receiving his indictment] Until I studied this, I cannot speak to the accuracy of the charges against me. But I acknowledge the necessity of this trial and accept my inclusion in it.
- Maj. Airey Neave: How can you say that before reading the charges?
- Albert Speer: There's a common responsibility for the crimes that were committed in the name of the Third Reich. No one is blameless, apart from the victims.