Mitsuki Horenake that final shot makes me bawl every time. It cuts me so deep I can’t explain it. Most of the actors were beside the real people they portrayed when they put the rocks on the grave and now watching Liam literally above the real Schindler he acted as, ah, it kills me.
@@Dontevenaskmebro honestly I never recognised that almost every real Schindler Jew is accompanied by the actor who portrayed them. It took me a very long time to notice Ben Kingsley
Apparently this was the first time Emilie Schindler visited her husband's grave after he left her in Argentina. She said "At last we meet again ... I have received no answer, my dear, I do not know why you abandoned me ... But what not even your death or my old age can change is that we are still married, this is how we are before God. I have forgiven you everything, everything ..."
@@akshaykumarjha9136 No, they never divorced, but she never saw him again in life, and when this film was made, that was when Emilie Schindler saw her husband where he was buried, and said those emotional words of love and forgiveness.
Ben who played Itzahk Stern escorted Itzahk Stern's wife. Embeth Davidtz who played Helen Hirsch escorted Helen and Caroline Goodall who played Mrs. Emilie Schindler escorted Emilie Schindler and Liam at the end stood with Schindler's Grave
janissary knight ottoman No it doesn't you fuck nugget. It comes from the Talmud, which predates Islam. Stop making shit up to make the False Prophet Muhammad look all righteous when he's utterly insignificant.
I saw this movie in the theater in high school, as did most of my friends. I was talking about it with one of my best friends after seeing it, and he told me something I didn't know about him: his grandmother was one of Schindler's Jews. Today he's married with two beautiful daughters, and it's amazing to think that he and his family are here because of what Schindler did.
Emille did say she loved her husband and forgave him everything after abandoning her. They never divorced, but they also never saw each other again. This time in the movie, is the first time Emille saw her husband's grave after 19 years since he passed away.
1:45 Leopold Pfefferberg The unsung hero behind the film. A man who spent 40 years of his life trying to get Oskar Schindler's memory preserved. He happened upon an author named Thomas Keneally who he convinced to write the 1983 novel Schindler's Ark (the basis for this film). Thank you Leopold. You did a great job and know that many more generations will know of Oskar Schindler and what he did for you all. Rest in peace. Leopold "Poldek" Pfefferberg 20th March 1913 - 9th March 2001
tdevil101 I like to think that he was rewarded eternity in the minds of good people and that he will always be a hero. Plus, any deity existing will have him rewarded in the world of the death
At least he got to live the rest of his days and will always be fondly remembered. Imagine if he never had a change of heart and remained taking advantage of the jews. He would've been hanging right next to Amon.
@@demo2382 Exactly, that scene where he says goodbye to his workers and explains to them that he will now have to be on the run for he is a war criminal is very touching. I was very lucky that when I first saw this movie at 13, my mom watched it with me and explained to me some of the background that was over my head. I remember asking why Schindler had to hide when he just saved all of his workers and my mom explained that because he was still affiliated with the Nazis and that the allied forces didn't know he about all he had done to save the Jewish people because he was doing it in secret so he would have been tried and executed and that's why the workers gave him that letter to keep on him in case he got arrested.
A fun fact from the set that I remember that I thought was really cool, was the air, Steven Mentioned in an interview that while most films have a usual production line, this carried an air of respect and somber remembrance among the crew. There was little to no side conversation, breaks were usually carried out in silence, and everyone did their part without any further vocal engagement. So hats off not only to Neeson, Spielberg and Kingsley, but also to the crew that did their absolute best to portray such a horrific time in our history with the utmost respect.
I like that last part, you see all Jewish survivors and their respectful actors who played as them side by side, but the last person who played Schindler, Liam Nelson, not showing his face, due to the fact that Schindler is laying in peace, obviously not showing his face, but is still by him *EDIT* - I worded that kind of badly, but I thought that was really nice and interesting
This final scene brings so much welling emotion to the heart as we see the Schindler Jews, most of them accompanied by the actors who portrayed them, laying stones on Schindler's grave in Mount Zion. It's touching to see at 0:48 Rebeka Bau place her fingers on the gravestone in gratitude. 1:51 is touching as we see Itzak Stern's widow accompanied by Sir Ben Kingsley (whose performance was equal to Liam Neeson's). 2:10 is the most heartfelt, both warming and breaking, as Mrs. Emilie Schindler arrives. She spoke of her husband's abandonment, and only until after his death and the filming here, was she with him again; she spoke only of forgiveness and that she would love him forever. 2:58 closes this emotional sequence with Liam Neeson placing the pair of roses atop the grave. His performance was perfect in portraying the man as he was: He was human like all of us. He made mistakes, had weaknesses, but in the end, because he saved all those innocent people, he was a good man. God bless you, Oskar Schindler.
This scene always makes me cry. God bless Oskar Schindler and the Schindler Jews and descendants. God bless Liam Neeson and Steven Spielberg. Christians and Jews should never be apart. We believe in one God.
AntiPCTruthseeker I agree with you 100%. Man had a choice and Man chose to do whatever they made and push God out of the way. Then when things go to hell, it's God's fault. Uh no... it's our fault
This scene still gets me every time, regardless of how many times I have seen it. It never fails to have me crying like a little girl. This could have been Steven Spielberg's only movie and he would still be considered a master movie maker.
First time I saw the ending I couldn’t stop sobbing. For many years I couldn’t bring myself to watch it to the end. A few years back I finally rewatched it with my sister (who had never seen it) and I started sobbing way before the survivors start gathering at the grave. Every time I hear that melody I cry.
my grandmother was in concentration camp westerbork in the war, she survived because she married a christian . two of her sisters and her parents and her brother were killed in auswitzch. two other sisters survived . they are all gone now , my mother died three years ago at 81. my father is now disabled and in his last days at 87. i take care of him every day. each time i see this scene tears well up .
I finally plucked up the courage to watch Schindlers list for the first time around 6 months ago. I lasted until this, the final scene of a 3 hour movie to finally crack. So Beautiful yet So Powerful.
I’ve never cried so much. Seriously, the fact that the actions were so monumental to the survival of all, let alone population makes the perspective so unique. I pray for those who lived and cried for those who died have an everlasting peace in what became. My heart poors out.
"[Oscar Schindler] was not a particularly competent or driven or talented man -- he had no other successes to his name. But goddamn did the guy step up when the human race needed him to."
I just discovered by reading the comments that the actors were the ones to accompany the real life survivors. I first thought it was their children or grandchildren and family as I have not seen the film. I am going to watch it now.
Pure emotion in song, ,movie, and final graveyard scene. Bravo Liam Neeson, and Sir Ben Kingsley. Brilliant. 5 times I watched this my daughter hushed her little friends and said, "Mom is crying."
+liljgoneman From user Martlet1 on Reddit: "Yet tsror in Hebrew means a pebble. In ancient times, shepherds needed a system to keep track of their flocks. On some days, they would go out to pasture with a flock of 30; on others, a flock of 10. Memory was an unreliable way of keeping tabs on the number of the flock. As a result, the shepherd would carry a sling over his shoulder, and in it he would keep the number of pebbles that corresponded to the number in his flock. That way he could at all times have an accurate daily count. When we place stones on the grave and inscribe the motto above on the stone, we are asking God to keep the departed’s soul in His sling. Among all the souls whom God has to watch over, we wish to add the name -the “pebble”- of the soul of our departed."
+Harrie de Haas - Ghandi was asked what he thought of Western civilisation, he replied that he thought it was a good idea. It still is. This travesty is being mirrored today - let's not make the same mistakes.
I can only offer my condolences and my sorrow for those who suffer during those dark times. I give the deepest respect to Schlinder who did everything he could save those people from death & I hope he found peace and to Liam Neeson for planting the two roses on his grave site. May we never experience horrors like this ever again.
when i got to this scene after the watching the whole movie, the emotional impact was heavy. Schindler list is a great example of how film can have a deep impact on people for the better.
That's exactly how I feel, I always had to cry when I heard the music, and when I saw those touching scènes! Thank you to all the people who made this film possible! 😢😢😢💜🇮🇱✡️🌟🙏🏻
If I had the chance to tell Oskar only one thing before he died, I’d tell him that now over 6,000 men, women, and children live because of him, and that number is still growing to this day. So yes Oskar, you have done so much and the world shall forever be grateful for what you did.
This ending was touching to the bottom of my heart. Especially when Rebecca Bau slightly touches the tombstone. First time ever I cried in the cinema. Never forget
Same here. Just seeing Liam Neeson put the roses on Schindler's grave and the subtitles that dedicates to the six million lives of the Jewish people taken is enough to make me cry.
Every time I see this movie I cry just as much as I did when I watched the first time. A dark part of history that I wish had never happened. So many innocent lives lost.
Im Jahre 1994 las ich zum erstenmal das Buch(Schindlers Liste), den Film bisher noch nicht zu Ende geschaut. Möge der Allmächtige, alle Juden schützen und sie segnen.
This movie hits me hard, my family is from Poland and Slovakia/Czech Republic and I recently found out I am part Ashkenazi Jewish. Never forget where you came from, be humble and respect everyone.
Liam Nesson who was in the movie Taken and Taken 2 did amazing job playing Oscar Schindler and at end with the red rose and him standing there very moving! I really hope he gets an Oscar one day! Liam Nesson is such a good actor. They all were.
I tried my best to hold back the tears this was one of two scenes in this movie that made me start bawling like crazy. I went through almost half a tissue box to get myself together.
seeing and then realizing that the desendants from his list came as well is beyond any emotion i could ever think of. how this could have happened to hard working, family people and truly gifted people who did nothing to anyone is so terrible. i will never understand and i am happy that this man did what he did and that i got to see such a movie. God Bless everyone.
Simple, yet so goddamn emotional, just people placing rocks on a grave. But knowing who they are the story of the man who saved them, and the final shot of Liam Neeson standing over the grave, makes this one of the best endings to a movie ever. Thank you Steven Spielberg
We watched this movie as part of a study in school. I came here to look back on it so I could write about it in my report, and it still makes me cry every time.
It is such a great film about something so harsh, and as much as I can watch the film, it is this scene at the end, with Liam standing over the grave, that cracks me every time and seeing it here, on its own, it still has the same effect. What an ending to a film! Bravo to all who made it. Bravo to all who survived. Lest we forget.
The placing of stones around the cross of the grave is the most touching moment. It is a sign that Christian and Jews should never be apart since we share the same origin: one true God, people freed from Egypt and values. I always bear in mind that Jesus was originally jewish
+Marcelo Benitez The thing is, the Jews need to recognize Jesus as their Messiah. They're still waiting for Him when He was already here 2000 years ago. But yes, salvation is of the Jews, as the Bible says.
"At last, we meet again... I have received no answer, my dear, for I may never know why you abandoned me. However, not even your death nor my old age can change the fact that we are still married. These were our vows before God. Now finally seeing what you did behind closed doors.... I have forgiven you... I have forgiven you for everything... everything." - Mrs. Emilie Schindler
All the people he helped and the actors who portrayed them are seen here. Everyone went to pay their respects to the man who saved their lives. Neeson at the end with the flowers was just a perfect way to end this great movie
Up to this day, Liam Neeson has never won an Oscar and his performance in Schindler's List is his only Oscar Nomination. The final scene where he gave flowers to Schindler was chilling.
As it is, the subject matter is already profoundly moving, but lets face it, with that masterful composition accompanying the scene you really don't stand a chance.
The best film I have ever seen...bar none. Unfortunately I watched it late at night - and when it finished at 2am, I found myself up and pacing the house full of rage, anger and resentment. Yet glad this film was made to give us a glimpse of the facts of this horrific part of world history.
Steven paid for all these people to meet at this location to film this. He also refused to be paid for the film. Class.
i didnt know that. its really true?
He also refused to sign dvd copies of the film
Steven Spielberg is great
@@marmer4541 Oh fuck off why do people like you have to be so cynical. He did a good deed
@@jacobwaters1147 I think that would be in extremely poor taste, to ask him to sign a copy of Schindler's List. I think he's doing the right thing.
There's something so haunting and yet calming about seeing Liam Neeson standing above the grave of the man he portrayed.
Mitsuki Horenake Liam was paying his respects.
Mitsuki Horenake that final shot makes me bawl every time. It cuts me so deep I can’t explain it. Most of the actors were beside the real people they portrayed when they put the rocks on the grave and now watching Liam literally above the real Schindler he acted as, ah, it kills me.
@@Dontevenaskmebro honestly I never recognised that almost every real Schindler Jew is accompanied by the actor who portrayed them. It took me a very long time to notice Ben Kingsley
I thought those were their descendants, like their children or grandchildren with them.
@@janinemcarrow3199 thought exactly the same
Apparently this was the first time Emilie Schindler visited her husband's grave after he left her in Argentina. She said "At last we meet again ... I have received no answer, my dear, I do not know why you abandoned me ... But what not even your death or my old age can change is that we are still married, this is how we are before God. I have forgiven you everything, everything ..."
Didn't Emilie Schindler divorce Oskar after he went bankrupt ?
@@akshaykumarjha9136 No, they never divorced, but she never saw him again in life, and when this film was made, that was when Emilie Schindler saw her husband where he was buried, and said those emotional words of love and forgiveness.
It must have been a really touching experience for the actors to be escorting their real life counter parts
Yes.
Ohhh I never noticed that’s why I was wondering why one of them looked really familiar
Ben who played Itzahk Stern escorted Itzahk Stern's wife. Embeth Davidtz who played Helen Hirsch escorted Helen and Caroline Goodall who played Mrs. Emilie Schindler escorted Emilie Schindler and Liam at the end stood with Schindler's Grave
One of the most poetic endings in film history.
@Silent Hill Warrior 5 just watched it... full of tears ;(
It's achingly emotional and beautiful, Spielberg gave us one of the greatest films ever..
"Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire".
That's one of the nicest quotes I have ever heard and so true.
masteroftheassassins
Comma unnecessary, but understood.
TRUE
janissary knight ottoman No it doesn't you fuck nugget. It comes from the Talmud, which predates Islam. Stop making shit up to make the False Prophet Muhammad look all righteous when he's utterly insignificant.
Alexito Rico Yep it does. A quote similar to that is indeed found within the Quran. There is no need to get so defensive about it.
I saw this movie in the theater in high school, as did most of my friends. I was talking about it with one of my best friends after seeing it, and he told me something I didn't know about him: his grandmother was one of Schindler's Jews. Today he's married with two beautiful daughters, and it's amazing to think that he and his family are here because of what Schindler did.
That's a great story, thank you for sharing.
Just like in the movie “ there will be generations because of what you did” chills every time I watch this scene.
When I saw his wife who couldn't put the stone by herself, all old and happy to see her dead husband reunited by all those he saved, I cried.
Emille did say she loved her husband and forgave him everything after abandoning her. They never divorced, but they also never saw each other again.
This time in the movie, is the first time Emille saw her husband's grave after 19 years since he passed away.
@The sandman Badman If God didn't, then none of us deserve to be in Heaven.
@@Antimanele104 wow 😯 that’s very saddening 🥺 but very interesting 🤔
The look of dignity in Sir Ben Kingsley's face as he escorts the wife of Izhak Stern is very moving.
Yes, I agree...
Yes, for those wondering who the guy at the end was, that is Liam Neeson placing the flowers.
who is liam?
+kagomefan101 Thanks, I couldn't determine if it was Liam or Steven Spielberg.
Liam neeson was the person who played schindler
Its spielberg actually
It's not, it's Liam Nesson.
Amazing how Spielberg gathered the actor's to walk aside the actual victims they portrayed, to honor Schindler. 😭
@Chance Wells me too
Steven Spielberg had a number of relatives who died during the Holocaust in Poland and the Ukraine.
@@phantomzone2725 I still cry at this scene
I cried so hard at that scene and the scene before it where all of them walked in a group and the music played. 😭😭😭😭
The last one that put roses on the grave was Liam Neeson.
There will be generations because of what you did.
I didn't do enough.
You did so much.
1:45 Leopold Pfefferberg
The unsung hero behind the film.
A man who spent 40 years of his life trying to get Oskar Schindler's memory preserved. He happened upon an author named Thomas Keneally who he convinced to write the 1983 novel Schindler's Ark (the basis for this film).
Thank you Leopold. You did a great job and know that many more generations will know of Oskar Schindler and what he did for you all. Rest in peace.
Leopold "Poldek" Pfefferberg
20th March 1913 - 9th March 2001
Hooah! And God Bless his immortal soul and those loved ones who he left behind.
It's so sad how Schindler suffered after the war. Both financially and personal.
tdevil101 I like to think that he was rewarded eternity in the minds of good people and that he will always be a hero. Plus, any deity existing will have him rewarded in the world of the death
That’s what you get for letting a lot of people go, no matter if it was good or bad.
At least he got to live the rest of his days and will always be fondly remembered. Imagine if he never had a change of heart and remained taking advantage of the jews. He would've been hanging right next to Amon.
@@demo2382 Exactly, that scene where he says goodbye to his workers and explains to them that he will now have to be on the run for he is a war criminal is very touching. I was very lucky that when I first saw this movie at 13, my mom watched it with me and explained to me some of the background that was over my head. I remember asking why Schindler had to hide when he just saved all of his workers and my mom explained that because he was still affiliated with the Nazis and that the allied forces didn't know he about all he had done to save the Jewish people because he was doing it in secret so he would have been tried and executed and that's why the workers gave him that letter to keep on him in case he got arrested.
His actions might have led to his personal downfall, but it is the same actions that make this man respected even after his death
A fun fact from the set that I remember that I thought was really cool, was the air, Steven Mentioned in an interview that while most films have a usual production line, this carried an air of respect and somber remembrance among the crew. There was little to no side conversation, breaks were usually carried out in silence, and everyone did their part without any further vocal engagement. So hats off not only to Neeson, Spielberg and Kingsley, but also to the crew that did their absolute best to portray such a horrific time in our history with the utmost respect.
"Power is when we have every justification to kill and we don't."
I like that last part, you see all Jewish survivors and their respectful actors who played as them side by side, but the last person who played Schindler, Liam Nelson, not showing his face, due to the fact that Schindler is laying in peace, obviously not showing his face, but is still by him
*EDIT* - I worded that kind of badly, but I thought that was really nice and interesting
I’ve always loved the part where Liam Neeson puts the roses on Schindler’s grave.
I read on Internet, in flowers' language, two roses mean " pardon "
I wish we saw his face too.
This final scene brings so much welling emotion to the heart as we see the Schindler Jews, most of them accompanied by the actors who portrayed them, laying stones on Schindler's grave in Mount Zion. It's touching to see at 0:48 Rebeka Bau place her fingers on the gravestone in gratitude. 1:51 is touching as we see Itzak Stern's widow accompanied by Sir Ben Kingsley (whose performance was equal to Liam Neeson's). 2:10 is the most heartfelt, both warming and breaking, as Mrs. Emilie Schindler arrives. She spoke of her husband's abandonment, and only until after his death and the filming here, was she with him again; she spoke only of forgiveness and that she would love him forever. 2:58 closes this emotional sequence with Liam Neeson placing the pair of roses atop the grave. His performance was perfect in portraying the man as he was: He was human like all of us. He made mistakes, had weaknesses, but in the end, because he saved all those innocent people, he was a good man. God bless you, Oskar Schindler.
This is a beautiful comment. You said it all abs more. Thank you.
HERO....that simple.
Panos Arvanitis ΟFFICIAL RUclips Channel better hero tha The Avengers
For steven it was never about the money, it was about the story.
Wow look at Helen Hirsh even when she's old you can just tell she's so beautiful..
have just retunred from a break in isreal we had to pay our respects to a very kind man who helped save so many. god bless him
vc10boy Were the stones still there?
Thank you Mr and Mrs. Schindler, I am alive today because of your beautiful sacrifice.
Even if the marriage didn't work, it was still sweet to see his wife there
This scene always makes me cry. God bless Oskar Schindler and the Schindler Jews and descendants. God bless Liam Neeson and Steven Spielberg. Christians and Jews should never be apart. We believe in one God.
+Marjorie Dieudonne Amen.
God does not exist. Peace. Be happy :)
+mymentor Bad things happen because man made the choice to basically forget God. Don't blame God, it's man.
AntiPCTruthseeker I agree with you 100%. Man had a choice and Man chose to do whatever they made and push God out of the way. Then when things go to hell, it's God's fault. Uh no... it's our fault
+AntiPCTruthseeker I don't blame God. I entirely blame man. Primarily because one demonstrably exists and the other almost certainly does not.
my god....are there still people like oscar? speechless....respect
+olga apergi Let's hope we won't need to test that theory.
***** true
I know right.. now we have Trump..
Bender Bending Rodriguez Unnecessary.
In almost every atrocitiy that's on the news there is some heroes. For example the French policeman recently.
Moving beyond words. The most powerful credits-ending-scene on film.
This scene still gets me every time, regardless of how many times I have seen it. It never fails to have me crying like a little girl. This could have been Steven Spielberg's only movie and he would still be considered a master movie maker.
That last shot of Liam Neeson standing in front of Oskar's grave. It's SO beautiful 😍
Liam standing in front of the grave of Oskar Schindler is such a form of art. Never have I ever seen something like that. Well done Spielberg...
First time I saw the ending I couldn’t stop sobbing. For many years I couldn’t bring myself to watch it to the end. A few years back I finally rewatched it with my sister (who had never seen it) and I started sobbing way before the survivors start gathering at the grave. Every time I hear that melody I cry.
my grandmother was in concentration camp westerbork in the war, she survived because she married a christian . two of her sisters and her parents and her brother were killed in auswitzch. two other sisters survived . they are all gone now , my mother died three years ago at 81. my father is now disabled and in his last days at 87. i take care of him every day. each time i see this scene tears well up .
I finally plucked up the courage to watch Schindlers list for the first time around 6 months ago.
I lasted until this, the final scene of a 3 hour movie to finally crack.
So Beautiful yet So Powerful.
For those wondering, yes it is Liam Neeson placing the flower at the end
I’ve never cried so much. Seriously, the fact that the actions were so monumental to the survival of all, let alone population makes the perspective so unique. I pray for those who lived and cried for those who died have an everlasting peace in what became. My heart poors out.
"[Oscar Schindler] was not a particularly competent or driven or talented man -- he had no other successes to his name. But goddamn did the guy step up when the human race needed him to."
Things like this bring out the humanity in people truly humane people..
I rather have humanity than any talent in these times
The way Rebeka Bau pat on Oskar's grave, and Mrs.Schindler kept looking at her husband's grave always makes me cry.
I just discovered by reading the comments that the actors were the ones to accompany the real life survivors. I first thought it was their children or grandchildren and family as I have not seen the film. I am going to watch it now.
Oskar passed away right on this day, may he rest in peace
Damn it. Who's cutting up onions?? ;_;
Whoever it is...my house was found aswell
I had the chance to visit his graveyard back in 2016. Absolutely silent and touching!
Pure emotion in song, ,movie, and final graveyard scene. Bravo Liam Neeson, and Sir Ben Kingsley. Brilliant. 5 times I watched this my daughter hushed her little friends and said, "Mom is crying."
Thanks for watching to see this 'tribute'.
+liljgoneman From user Martlet1 on Reddit: "Yet tsror in Hebrew means a pebble. In ancient times, shepherds needed a system to keep track of their flocks. On some days, they would go out to pasture with a flock of 30; on others, a flock of 10. Memory was an unreliable way of keeping tabs on the number of the flock. As a result, the shepherd would carry a sling over his shoulder, and in it he would keep the number of pebbles that corresponded to the number in his flock. That way he could at all times have an accurate daily count. When we place stones on the grave and inscribe the motto above on the stone, we are asking God to keep the departed’s soul in His sling. Among all the souls whom God has to watch over, we wish to add the name -the “pebble”- of the soul of our departed."
+Harrie de Haas - Ghandi was asked what he thought of Western civilisation, he replied that he thought it was a good idea. It still is. This travesty is being mirrored today - let's not make the same mistakes.
wonderful...
+Harrie de Haas Merci à vous d'avoir posté la vidéo
Harrie de Haas sir it is an honor too. I wished though more people were around like him. Maybe more could have been saved.
Love how at the end, you see Liam Neeson put the rose down, but they don't show him, however you know it is him when you see him from the distance -
Tears rolling down my face, there are no words to describe this... Thank you for uploading it.
When Mrs. Emilie Schindler looked at her husband's grave, my heart totally broke.
I can only offer my condolences and my sorrow for those who suffer during those dark times. I give the deepest respect to Schlinder who did everything he could save those people from death & I hope he found peace and to Liam Neeson for planting the two roses on his grave site. May we never experience horrors like this ever again.
when i got to this scene after the watching the whole movie, the emotional impact was heavy. Schindler list is a great example of how film can have a deep impact on people for the better.
God, I love this movie! This scene feels almost like a curtain call.
This emotionally destroys me. I cannot watch this without sobbing. The music, the real people, the whole tribute just kills me inside.
That's exactly how I feel, I always had to cry when I heard the music, and when I saw those touching scènes! Thank you to all the people who made this film possible! 😢😢😢💜🇮🇱✡️🌟🙏🏻
If I had the chance to tell Oskar only one thing before he died, I’d tell him that now over 6,000 men, women, and children live because of him, and that number is still growing to this day. So yes Oskar, you have done so much and the world shall forever be grateful for what you did.
This ending was touching to the bottom of my heart. Especially when Rebecca Bau slightly touches the tombstone. First time ever I cried in the cinema.
Never forget
We watched this movie in school... And every time I see this scene I can't hold my tears back. This just one of the greatest men during ww2.
Same here. Just seeing Liam Neeson put the roses on Schindler's grave and the subtitles that dedicates to the six million lives of the Jewish people taken is enough to make me cry.
How can people dislike this?! This is so beautiful!!
Cause they are assholes who don't believe this actually happened
Pairing the person with the actor who played them was incredibly meaningful.
When i realized that those are the real people portrayed in the movie i screamed no and cried my eyes out !
When I first saw this movie I cried and cried and cried... never have I ever felt such emotion watching a movie.
God, I sob like I just lost everything I loved. Beautifully filmed.
This Music is a cry from the Heart !
It is so beautiful, making feelings speak that no mouth can !
Thank you Harrie for sharing.
Cheers !
Sometimes, when I'm feeling masochistic, I watch this video and instantly begin to cry.
I was dying for that scene ,,,,Thank YOU XO
me toooo
Every time I see this movie I cry just as much as I did when I watched the first time. A dark part of history that I wish had never happened. So many innocent lives lost.
I just saw this movie for the first time. This scene had me sobbing and I still cry during this scene
Im Jahre 1994 las ich zum erstenmal das Buch(Schindlers Liste), den Film bisher noch nicht zu Ende geschaut. Möge der Allmächtige, alle Juden schützen und sie segnen.
Thank you and rest in peace
This movie hits me hard, my family is from Poland and Slovakia/Czech Republic and I recently found out I am part Ashkenazi Jewish.
Never forget where you came from, be humble and respect everyone.
Liam Nesson who was in the movie Taken and Taken 2 did amazing job playing Oscar Schindler and at end with the red rose and him standing there very moving! I really hope he gets an Oscar one day! Liam Nesson is such a good actor. They all were.
I just remember being in absolute awe watching this scene for the first time. And I’ve watched this scene a million times since then.
I tried my best to hold back the tears this was one of two scenes in this movie that made me start bawling like crazy. I went through almost half a tissue box to get myself together.
Amazing movie. Amazing Oskar
Spielberg didn't give Emilie Schindler enough credit. She was instrumental in saving those people.
I've heard her story could be a movie itself
Maybe she wanted it that way. She’s alive to make decisions on what she want credit for or not.
Absolutely one of the greatest endings I've seen and my favorite film from Steven Spielberg. Schindler's List is a masterpiece.
I cried watching this movie as a teenager. I still cry now. God bless this one who save the others. Sacrifice with love and compassion.
No words. Just the sounds of weeping as I watch this.
Man. That violin pierces my soul!
seeing and then realizing that the desendants from his list came as well is beyond any emotion i could ever think of. how this could have happened to hard working, family people and truly gifted people who did nothing to anyone is so terrible. i will never understand and i am happy that this man did what he did and that i got to see such a movie. God Bless everyone.
Simple, yet so goddamn emotional, just people placing rocks on a grave. But knowing who they are the story of the man who saved them, and the final shot of Liam Neeson standing over the grave, makes this one of the best endings to a movie ever. Thank you Steven Spielberg
We watched this movie as part of a study in school. I came here to look back on it so I could write about it in my report, and it still makes me cry every time.
faceless Lian Neeson at distance is the closest we get to witness Schindler's spirit standing right there... soul wrecking power of art...
A man’s worth in life is not measured by the thickness of his wallets, but by the impact he had on the hearts of the ones he changed
Middle of the biggest genocide in human history a hero appeared
It hit me so hard when Mrs. Schindler looked at Mr. Schindlers grave...
It is such a great film about something so harsh, and as much as I can watch the film, it is this scene at the end, with Liam standing over the grave, that cracks me every time and seeing it here, on its own, it still has the same effect. What an ending to a film! Bravo to all who made it. Bravo to all who survived. Lest we forget.
Whew… tear jerking… all these people that wouldn’t have been there without this man..
The rub of the grave by Rebeka Bau 🥺
The placing of stones around the cross of the grave is the most touching moment. It is a sign that Christian and Jews should never be apart since we share the same origin: one true God, people freed from Egypt and values. I always bear in mind that Jesus was originally jewish
+Marcelo Benitez The thing is, the Jews need to recognize Jesus as their Messiah. They're still waiting for Him when He was already here 2000 years ago. But yes, salvation is of the Jews, as the Bible says.
@@Darkpuerquito preach
Oh shit I need another box of tissues 😢😢😭😭
john roberts I was crying and suddenly burst into laughter after reading this😭😂😂
john roberts me😂😂
"At last, we meet again... I have received no answer, my dear, for I may never know why you abandoned me. However, not even your death nor my old age can change the fact that we are still married. These were our vows before God. Now finally seeing what you did behind closed doors.... I have forgiven you... I have forgiven you for everything... everything."
- Mrs. Emilie Schindler
Brings tears to my eyes when i see this. RIP
So many lives saved
The greatest & most powerful ending in the history of cinema. Hands down
It's really amazing what this film has done for Mr. Schindler. Because of this film, his story will echo throughout history even louder than before.
3:07 Is that Liam Neeson?
All the people he helped and the actors who portrayed them are seen here. Everyone went to pay their respects to the man who saved their lives. Neeson at the end with the flowers was just a perfect way to end this great movie
People thought at first it was Stephen Spielberg, but it is indeed Liam Neeson.
yes i think so
Yes, some people thought it was Spielberg but you can see that the man is too tall to be him
BODLive08 That is respect right there. True respect.
Up to this day, Liam Neeson has never won an Oscar and his performance in Schindler's List is his only Oscar Nomination. The final scene where he gave flowers to Schindler was chilling.
And yet tragedies like this happen all over the world today and since then. We have learnt nothing.
As it is, the subject matter is already profoundly moving, but lets face it, with that masterful composition accompanying the scene you really don't stand a chance.
God what gets me most out of all of this is look how young some of them are still. And they weren’t children and still so young today
After watching schindler's list I realized that war is more than only a few fighting soldiers. But also fear, sadness and destruction...
The best film I have ever seen...bar none. Unfortunately I watched it late at night - and when it finished at 2am, I found myself up and pacing the house full of rage, anger and resentment. Yet glad this film was made to give us a glimpse of the facts of this horrific part of world history.