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		No. 25 - 
				Schindler's List (1993) 
				
				Universal Pictures/Amblin 
				Entertainment, Universal Pictures 
				Whoever Saves One Life, 
		Saves The World Entire 
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				Schindler's List (1993), 
				DML Rating: 
				★★★★★★★★★★ 
				- perfect 
		Director: Steven 
		Spielberg; 
		Screenplay: Steven Zaillian; based on the novel Schindler's 
		Ark by Tom Keneally;
		
		Rated  R for 
		violence, language, torture, mass murder 
		Starring: Liam Neeson, 
		Ben Kingsley, Ralph Fiennes, Caroline Goodall, Jonathan Sagallie, Embeth 
		Davidtz 
		Movie Introduction: Businessman Oskar Schindler (Neeson) 
		arrives in Krakow in 1939, ready to make his fortune from World War II, 
		which has just started. After joining the Nazi party primarily for 
		political expediency, he staffs his factory with Jewish workers for 
		similarly pragmatic reasons. When the SS begins exterminating Jews in 
		the Krakow ghetto, Schindler arranges to have his workers protected to 
		keep his factory in operation. Even after the Jews are moved to the 
		concentration camp at Płaszów, under the brutal command of SS Lieutenant Amon Göth 
		(Fiennes), Schindler bargains to keep the Jewish workers for his 
		factory. He soon realizes that in so doing, he is also saving innocent 
		lives.    
		
		 Defining Moment: the girl in the red coat 
		Spielberg’s choice to tell this 
		story in black and white was smart. I honestly feel this helps make the 
		film more palatable. What happened in the German camps was so horrible, 
		seeing it in color would be almost unwatchable. With the colorless 
		backdrop, it enabled one of the film’s more powerful vignettes. As the 
		Jews are being rounded up in the ghetto, they are confused and scared. 
		It’s chaos. Using the color red, director Spielberg draws our attention, 
		and Oskar Schindler's, to a little girl in a long dress coat. She 
		walking among the confusion, calmly trying to be so brave in the melee. 
		We follower her as she walk past guards shooting people. She finally 
		ducks into a building, her home perhaps, then climbs upstairs and hides 
		under a bed.  We will see her again, much later, one final time.    
		
		Something subtle you might have missed:  enduring the 
		heaviness 
		Shooting a film on this subject 
		is incredibly heavy, and emotional. It took a toll on Spielberg and many 
		of the actors and actresses. Many would openly weep after taxing scenes. 
		Spielberg asked his friend Robin Williams to tell come jokes and do some 
		of his hilarious comedy routines, on speaker phone, for the cast and 
		crew. Some of that material would end up as dialogue for Disney's
		
		Aladdin (1992), where he portrayed the Genie.    
		 
		Memorable Quotes: 
		 
		
				"They came with nothing. 
				Nothing. And they flourished. For six centuries there has been a 
				Jewish Krakow. Think about that. By this evening those six 
				centuries are a rumor. They never happened. Today is history." –
				SS 2nd LT Amon Göth 
		
				"I am a member of the Nazi 
				Party. I'm a munitions manufacturer. I'm a profiteer of slave 
				labor. I am … a criminal. At midnight, you'll be free and I'll 
				be hunted. I shall remain with you until five minutes after 
				midnight, after which time – and I hope you'll forgive me – I 
				have to flee." - Oskar Schindler 
		
		 Dad's Review: 
		As an amateur 
		history buff, there are several moments (and I mean historical moments, 
		so, time-wise, they could encompass several years) that stand out 
		because of the sheer magnitude of their severity and impact on humanity. 
		The Fall of the Roman Empire, The Boxer Rebellion, The US Civil War - 
		all are historically massive.  
		 
		However, those pale in comparison to the Holocaust. Six million people 
		exterminated, systematically brutalized, experimented on, and 
		mercilessly murdered. Killed in the name of Nationalism, as German 
		proudly sat and watched. As the Nazi party seized power in Germany, 
		citizens gathered in huge rallies. They cheered as Adolph Hitler put 
		into action his “Final Solution” to wipe out the Jewish culture, and put 
		forth world domination for his “Master Race”.  
		 
		It’s almost too horrible to believe. How could this happen? But, it did. 
		The facts surrounding the Holocaust are undisputable. Undeniable. 
		However, there is a rising group of people in American and abroad, who 
		want to propagate the idea that it never happened. It was an elaborate 
		hoax.  
		 
		This is one reason Steven Spielberg’s felt a sense of urgency to make 
		this film. As a Jew, he always knew he’d make a movie on this topic – I 
		think he felt it his duty. The director often explored the topic of 
		World War II. Indiana Jones always seemed to run into those nasty Nazis. 
		This film was to be a masterpiece among his many masterpieces, however
		Schindler’s List feels very personal. This is a difficult topic 
		to convey on film. If the tone is wrong, it might appear preachy. 
		 
		This story elects to tell the story of the Jews who survived the ordeal 
		in large part due to the efforts of a businessman named Oskar Schindler 
		who used Jewish workers to manufacture munitions for the Nazi’s during 
		the war. At first he used the Jews for profits, but changed his efforts 
		in an attempt to get as many out of the death camps as possible. 
		I cannot say enough 
		about the performance of Ralph Fiennes as the SS Lieutenant in charge of 
		the camp. Good Lord, what a monstrous psychopath. Perhaps that was in 
		the job description for a high-ranking Nazi. Spielberg cast him because 
		he saw a "sexual evil". Fiennes gained 28 pounds for the role and spoke 
		with survivors who knew Göth. His appearance and mannerisms were so 
		convincing that when survivors saw him on set, they were terrified. It 
		is certainly understandable that he would go on to play the serpentine 
		"He Who Cannot Be Named" in the Harry Potter films.  
		Onto 
		No. 26... A Dozen Pissed-off Dudes 
		  
		  
		  
		  
		  
		  
		  
		  
		  
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