Synopsis
Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire.
The true story of how businessman Oskar Schindler saved over a thousand Jewish lives from the Nazis while they worked as slaves in his factory during World War II.
The true story of how businessman Oskar Schindler saved over a thousand Jewish lives from the Nazis while they worked as slaves in his factory during World War II.
Liam Neeson Ben Kingsley Ralph Fiennes Caroline Goodall Jonathan Sagall Embeth Davidtz Malgorzata Gebel Shmuel Levy Mark Ivanir Béatrice Macola Andrzej Seweryn Friedrich von Thun Krzysztof Luft Harry Nehring Norbert Weisser Adi Nitzan Michael Schneider Miri Fabian Anna Mucha Albert Misak Michael Gordon Aldona Grochal Jacek Wójcicki Beata Paluch Piotr Polk Ezra Dagan Beata Deskur Rami Heuberger Leopold Kozłowski Show All…
Alicia Stevenson Louis L. Edemann Kevin Bartnof John Roesch Ellen Heuer Charles L. Campbell Steve Pederson Andy Nelson Scott Millan Paul Timothy Carden Jeff Clark Leonard T. Geschke Doug Jackson Nils C. Jensen Gary Krivacek Donald J. Malouf Gary Mundheim Chuck Neely Bernard Weiser Kerry Dean Williams Robert Jackson
قائمة شندلر, 舒特拉的名單, Lista Shindlera, シンドラーのリスト, シンドラーのリスト:1993, Schindlers List, Η Λίστα του Σίντλερ, Schindlers Liste, La Liste de Schindler, Список Шиндлера, Schindler listája, Schindler'in Listesi, La lista de Schindler, A Lista de Schindler, 辛德勒的名单, Lista Schindlera, Schindlerův seznam, רשימת שינדלר, Списъкът на Шиндлер, ชะตากรรมที่โลกไม่ลืม, Schindlerov zoznam, Lista lui Schindler, فهرست شیندلر, 쉰들러 리스트, 辛德勒的名單, La liste de Schindler, La llista de Schindler, Шиндлерова листа, Schindlerin lista, Schindlers liste, La Lista de Schindler, Šindlerio sąrašas, Schindlerova lista, Schindlerjev seznam, Šindlera saraksts, Danh Sách Schindler, შინდლერის სია, Schindleri nimekiri, La listo de Schindler
Humanity and the world around us War and historical adventure Moving relationship stories Intense violence and sexual transgression Epic history and literature Nazis and World War II Powerful stories of heartbreak and suffering Graphic violence and brutal revenge Creepy, chilling, and terrifying horror Terrifying, haunted, and supernatural horror Show All…
A red coat. That's all it is. It's used to keep warm, a shelter against the blistering cold. Gusts of wind tatter and billow, threatening the gentle glow that results from the little red coat. In all the horror, the absolute Hell, the devastation, the inhumanity; a simple color evokes so much more than the thought of gentle compliments and a tender smile.
Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List is simply one of the greatest films committed to celluloid. Bar none. No exaggeration. It is as essential, historical, vibrant, emotional, magnificent, harrowing, and impeccably orchestrated as anything that's ever been released in the cinematic medium.
And like the red coat of the little girl, the film will never fade, only growing in distinct majesty and singular clarity.
As iconic, almost mythic of a filmmaker Steven Spielberg is, this is the sort of film you would never imagine he has in him. Masterpiece in every sense of the word.
if you have any information regarding the whereabouts of ralph fiennes' missing oscar please contact me
"No dry eyes during the screening of Steven Spielberg's historical masterpiece! I know I had to wrangle a few rogue tears several times myself! Near the end when Schindler collapsed from grief and guilt and everyone gathered round him to console him I totally lost it! Because by then the full brunt of what I had just witnessed hit me like a ton of bricks!
A film where no one in the audience is allowed to remain a bystander! No one gets out unscathed! It was as close to being an interactive film what with the stomachs churning, eyes wincing or brimming with tears, chills running up and down spines and quivering lips!
Incredible filmmaking and storytelling! Liam Neeson gave…
This film bothers me and not because of its subject matter, but because of its treatment of it.
When making a film about the Holocaust, everything you do is fraught with danger. One could even argue that visualizing the Holocaust in a work of fiction is something that shouldn't be attempted as such inhuman suffering and mindless slaughter should be dealt with in reality, not in the realms of fiction.
If you approach Spielberg's film as such, there is a lot that feels wrong in this film. There is no hope in the Holocaust, yet Spielberg seems intent on showing us there is. From the shower scene that subversively plays with our expectations to the actual story of a small…
genuinely and completely perfect, I've only heard good things about this but I was never expecting to lose myself in it as much as I did. this film respectfully honors every person who died in the holocaust in the most beautiful and sympathetic way possible. nothing here is manipulating, everything is true.
can you believe some ppl are still sleeping on ralph fiennes? he didn’t become a nazi and voldemort for this
One of the most essential, powerfully moving & profoundly affecting films to ever grace the silver screen, Schindler's List is the crowning achievement in the remarkable film career of Steven Spielberg and finds the master storyteller at the pinnacle of his artistry. Crafted with painstaking care & dedication, it is rightfully acknowledged as one of the most honoured & significant films of all time.
Set during World War II, the story follows Oskar Schindler, a war profiteer & Nazi party member who arrives in Poland after its invasion by Germany in 1939 to make easy money but gradually undergoes a transformation after witnessing the barbaric acts committed by the Nazis against Jews and then begins to do all in his power to save as…
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Schindler's List is often hypocritical. It tugs at the heartstrings while stripping its formal mechanics of sentiment. It portrays the truth of history while often succumbing to cheap suspense tactics (the shower scene). It provides a snapshot of the industrialized functions of the holocaust while rarely moving beyond the story at hand, which would be fine if it didn't sway into broader digressions. Spielberg's pride in making it, and deciding *this* story is the one to tell has always ruffled feathers, but it is still an honorable act of remembrance. One that is so unbearably moving that its role as a reminder, an evocation, and a depiction seemingly blend together. To create an accessible hollywood depiction of the holocaust in all its inhumanity and yet not push for an overview of its history is powerful. The list is the life of these faces, these people, and of this masterpiece. Spielberg will forever be one of the greatest filmmakers.