[2] Adapted to the screen by Edward Anhalt from the 1970 novel QB VII by Leon Uris, it was produced by Douglas S. Cramer and directed by Tom Gries.
They fail to prove their case and Kelno is vindicated, but afterwards he takes his wife to Kuwait to escape the notoriety.
His efforts to bring modern medicine and vaccinate the children of the region earns him recognition and a knighthood.
During World War II, Abraham Cady, an American writer serving in the Royal Air Force, was wounded.
Cady reconnects with his Jewish heritage while in Israel to see his ill father, who dies shortly after his arrival.
Kelno denies in court sterilizing healthy Jews at the behest of the SS, but Cady's barrister presents evidence that Kelno castrated hundreds of healthy Jews as punishments or as medical experiments, and that some of them died as a result.