Schindler's List REACTION with Lia and Viki

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  • Опубликовано: 29 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @optimusprowse6448
    @optimusprowse6448 2 года назад +1332

    A sad fact: Some survivors watched the movie and they've been asked what they thought of it afterwards: They said it wasn't brutal enough. Amon Goeth was more evil, the guards, the stuff they were doing to them... The things that are shown are toned down and still this movie is such a gut punch.

    • @lolitabubbles26
      @lolitabubbles26 2 года назад +179

      It is sad. Speilberg toned down Goeth because he thought audiences wouldn't believe it was real. That he just made it all up for drama. But it was real. He did teach his dogs to chase and kill them. I don't know what's sadder, the fact he omitted it, or the fact he's right--no one would have thought it was real.

    • @ViscusYouTube
      @ViscusYouTube 2 года назад +79

      @@lolitabubbles26 I think it’s difficult for people to comprehend true evil like that. Why do you think some major US commanders were skeptical right up until the point where they visited the main camps? Even with their own soldiers reporting atrocities, while they may have believed it to be true deep down, can you mentally accept that it happened? Horrible stuff. This allows for people to be educated without being traumatised.

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner 2 года назад +3

      @@lolitabubbles26 There's a TV interview with Rolf Mengele and he admits that his father had 20 truckloads of Jewish children burned alive. Yet still he didn't give Mengele up to justice.

    • @paulobrien1910
      @paulobrien1910 2 года назад +21

      Yes I done some research about this evil bastard and he was beyond cruel

    • @benjamindenton9453
      @benjamindenton9453 2 года назад +2

      @@lewisner well it was his father after all.

  • @simonk7937
    @simonk7937 2 года назад +409

    The biggest crime of this masterpiece is that Liam Neeson didn't win an Oscar for his performance .. 😞

    • @paulobrien9572
      @paulobrien9572 2 года назад +18

      Should have been Co-Oscars in 1994 Tom Hanks' portrayal in Philadelphia was just as gripping. Liam Neeson would have won easily in any other year

    • @GK-yi4xv
      @GK-yi4xv 2 года назад +19

      A strong performance by Neeson.
      But, imo, the only actor I just can't see being replaced by anyone else without a significant loss is Ben Kingsley as Stern.
      Masterful. And he didn't even get a nomination!

    • @tonyyul703
      @tonyyul703 2 года назад +3

      You guys should watch *The Last King of Scotland* with Forrest Whittaker as Edi Amine

    • @nickgurpleez2628
      @nickgurpleez2628 2 года назад +26

      Ralp Fiennes not getting the oscar was a crime against humanity

    • @lirmediatv753
      @lirmediatv753 2 года назад +4

      and Ralph Fiennes

  • @1938superman
    @1938superman 2 года назад +632

    57:32 1993 is when the movie was made. Almost 50 years later. They didn't catch him, but he lived the rest of his life either nearly destitute or attempting several failed business ventures. His marriage also fell apart. He stayed in contact with many of the Jewish prisoners that he had protected, including Stern. Schindler died in 1974 at only 66 years old and was buried on Mount Zion in Jerusalem in honor of his efforts during the war. He was the only member of the Nazi Party ever given this honor.

    • @cshubs
      @cshubs 2 года назад +6

      It came out in 93.

    • @1938superman
      @1938superman 2 года назад +4

      @@cshubs I stand corrected. Not sure how I messed that up. Thanks.

    • @StrayDogTheExposer
      @StrayDogTheExposer 2 года назад +12

      Wow. Thank you for that info. Going to Zion is a bucket list for me. I'll definitely visit his grave when I get there.

    • @dumontxt9813
      @dumontxt9813 2 года назад +20

      No offense but schindler was not buried on Mount Zion, that is a misconception by many people.
      Quote: One man, however, whose grave is always asked about, does not lie here: The Jew rescuer Oskar Schindler was buried in the neighboring Catholic cemetery.
      In a statement from the German Embassy in Tel Aviv to the Foreign Office of the Federal Republic of Germany dated February 14, 1989, the Anglican-German Zion Cemetery is accorded great importance.
      Source: Jerusalem. Community Newsletter - Foundation Journal Sept. - Nov. 2008

    • @kennandunn7533
      @kennandunn7533 2 года назад +16

      @@dumontxt9813 You mean the Mount Zion Franciscan Cemetery? he was still buried on the mountain known as Mount Zion, even if it's not the main cemetery.

  • @danielcowan8673
    @danielcowan8673 2 года назад +118

    The reality of what happened was far worse than the film was able to depict.

    • @SupremeCommanderBaiser
      @SupremeCommanderBaiser 2 года назад +1

      Have you.been there?

    • @ambermarshall2263
      @ambermarshall2263 2 года назад +28

      @@SupremeCommanderBaiser He didn't have to be to state the truth of it.

    • @Ateezwooyoung
      @Ateezwooyoung 2 года назад +15

      @@SupremeCommanderBaiser no but others were there and talked about it. Some of the survivors from the movie, watched it and they said, it was good, but not brutal enough…

    • @grime71
      @grime71 2 года назад +4

      i highly recommend the movie come and see

  • @kaceyteague5264
    @kaceyteague5264 2 года назад +24

    One of the best parts is at the end when the actors walk to actual survivors out to put the rocks on Oscars grave. The blonde was the actress that played Oscars wife who wheeled out out his actual wife to put the rock on his grave. Classic movie- one of the best.

  • @AdamF90
    @AdamF90 2 года назад +13

    No type of media depicting the Holocaust is as impactful as the actual footage and photos you can see in museums such as Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. But as far as feature films go, you have to give Spielberg tons of respect for choosing to make such a harrowing yet beautiful film that was personally important to him. The only real gripe people have is the fact that it’s in English rather than subtitled, but other than that it’s a masterpiece

    • @LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac
      @LlamaLlamaMamaJamaac 2 года назад +1

      here on RUclips is a 10-part docuseries from CourtTV on the Nuremberg trial. The series features part of the 2.5 hours of footage taken by Army photographers while liberating the camps.
      I think this movie does the best it realistically can…. I know in Band of Brothers they have cancer patients playing inmates, because they have a degree of that look. But to look like the people in the real footage, the actors would have to starve themselves nearly to the point of death.
      And I remember hearing that they had to tone down the Ammon Goeth character, bc that soulless entity resembling a man was SO evil, SO sociopathic, SO sadistic that most people would think “this CANNOT be true.., this MUST be an exaggeration

  • @Knight_of_NI
    @Knight_of_NI 2 года назад +46

    I lost family at Auschwitz and this movie crushes me every time. I’m so glad you took the time to watch this because our memories will help ensure this never happens again. Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it. Respect

    • @spqr7423
      @spqr7423 2 года назад +5

      I'm so sorry for your lose its beyond humane what happened
      Let's make sure this never happens again
      So sorry for you from the bottom of my heart,
      I hope they are at peace
      You stay safe and god be with you my friend

  • @pianoman1857
    @pianoman1857 2 года назад +165

    you should watch "the Pianist" (2002) too, it's also very powerful
    Edit: glad you did it :)

    • @DC2809
      @DC2809 2 года назад +15

      and maybe "The Boy in the Striped Pyjamas" (2008)

    • @FrancoisDressler
      @FrancoisDressler 2 года назад +3

      Masterpiece.

    • @blockraven22
      @blockraven22 2 года назад +2

      Are you in it? jk

    • @gigireads1716
      @gigireads1716 2 года назад +1

      My husband and I watched “The pianist” recently along with “boy in the striped pajamas” and “the zookeepers wife” and we were in tears by the end of the night.

    • @angelodante1655
      @angelodante1655 2 года назад +3

      Life is Beautiful too

  • @larrybell726
    @larrybell726 2 года назад +21

    Yes, this was a rough movie to watch. Feeling all the emotions is hard but I’m glad you were able to get through it. As the old saying goes “never forget”.

  • @garychambers6848
    @garychambers6848 2 года назад +3

    My father served in the US 3rd army (Cannoneer 687th FAB) from 43-45...Normandy,battle of the Bulge' When the Buchenwald concentration camp was liberated in the spring of 45 one of his last duties was helping "clean up" the place.....He brought back pictures he took there...The brutality of the German people was underplayed in this picture....And I restate German people because this did not happen in a vacuum...Those that said they "didn't know" lied.......

    • @siggilinde5623
      @siggilinde5623 2 года назад +1

      Facts. My grandfather was in the German army. He claimed he had no idea, he was just an ordinary unimportant soldier.
      My father, about 6 years old, played in the attic one day and found a dusty box full of medals. High decorated my grandfather was... so much for “didn't know anything“
      We never had a good relationship with him... for obvious reasons

    • @garychambers6848
      @garychambers6848 2 года назад

      @@siggilinde5623 And as a US citizen, It is sad to see the effort that is put in trying to divide us into "us and them" in order to do the same thing here.....And when it happens here the death toll will make WW2 look like child's play......Just saying...

  • @Blandina11
    @Blandina11 2 года назад +14

    Thank for your awesome live stream yesterday. Great fun 👍😊 now I'll watch your reaction vid.
    And this movie is VERY important, we must never forget the history. And Schindler was a true hero, nearly forgot before this movie
    Cheers

  • @patfleming6103
    @patfleming6103 Год назад +1

    An actress who was the “girl in the red coat” in “Schindler’s List” has turned real life heroine by coordinating help for fleeing Ukrainian refugees.
    Oliwia Dabrowska appeared in Steven Spielberg‘s 1993 classic aged just three - her red coat providing the only flash of color in the black-and-white Oscar winner.
    Her character, a little Jewish girl, was the catalyst that saved the lives of more than 1,200 Jews destined for Nazi concentration camps in 1943.
    And now Oliwia, 32, from Krakow, Poland, has taken inspiration from Oskar Schindler and is helping those fleeing war-torn Ukraine.

    • @thegameranch5935
      @thegameranch5935 4 месяца назад

      Somewhere at the end the candles flame had color though

  • @RafaelRabinovich
    @RafaelRabinovich 2 года назад +1

    That scene at the end was the survivors of Schindler's list on the early 1990s, when the film was shot, along with the actor or actress that represents them in the movie. This is to show you the story is real and based on their testimony.

  • @davida7153
    @davida7153 2 года назад +1

    When the ring falls from his hands, the way Oskar takes it back tells everything...
    He was a selfish prick, full of himself, a womanizer who cheated on his wife, a bit of alcoholic but with tremendous social skills and very smart of course and if not because of the war he probably would had never changed but at the end he showed as a human full of compassion above other things. And he really risked his life doing this because he was part of the SS. He used all his wealth, negotiation skills and persuasion to save them. What a man.

  • @STNeish
    @STNeish 2 года назад +2

    For me, the most powerful moment in this ASTONISHINGLY powerful film is when the real people he saved went to his grave.

  • @chainman100
    @chainman100 2 года назад +1

    This Movie helps remind people of why learning history and keeping an accurate account of what happened in our shared past is so Important, to those of us who study it and do our best to keep it alive and carry it on so it is not forgotten and so we try to keep these accounts of these sorts of atrocities alive so they will not be repeated, sadly it hasn't worked, genocides such as this movie portends has been continually repeated from this time to the current day.

  • @neverstopgrowing728
    @neverstopgrowing728 2 года назад +1

    One piece of trivia: when Steven Spielberg was finally getting his BA in film from Cal State University 34 years after dropping out, he submitted this film for his advanced filmmaking class. He passed.

  • @cmdrvarna
    @cmdrvarna 2 года назад +4

    When they started crying like 5 minutes in I was like well they're fu**ed

  • @foxman1546
    @foxman1546 9 месяцев назад

    Lest we forget. It's continued to happen since WW2. In Cambodia, Myanmar, China, North Korea, Armenia/Azerbaijan/Turkey, Congo, Kenya, Nigeria, Somalia, Ethiopia, former Yugoslavia, and in latin American countries. The horrors continue to this day, but we don't hear much about them.

  • @manon3765
    @manon3765 2 года назад +1

    The movie hits even harder after you have been to Krakow (where it has been shot) and Auschwitz-Birkenau in person. Seeing the huge area of the camp and actual survivors was tough to digest. But being German, I felt it is my obligation to go.

  • @davisgreen2099
    @davisgreen2099 2 года назад +1

    This film should been shown in ALL schools, colleges and Universities!!!

  • @movietella
    @movietella 2 года назад

    Harrison Ford was the first choice for the title role, but declined, saying that some people would not be able to look past his Indiana Jones persona to see the importance of the film. Kevin Costner expressed an interest in playing Oskar Schindler, and he even contacted Steven Spielberg personally and said he would play the part for free, but Spielberg preferred to cast the relatively unknown Liam Neeson, so the actor's star quality would not overpower the character.

  • @miriamhappe1066
    @miriamhappe1066 Год назад

    the people in the end of the movie, are the real people/decendents of the actual people oscar saved acompanied with the actors that portrait them in the movie.

  • @libertylover4016
    @libertylover4016 2 года назад +6

    Girls feel proud of yourselves. Watching this movie and crying means your human.

  • @5Mariner
    @5Mariner 2 года назад +1

    The actress who played the girl in red was only three when this was filmed.

  • @van8ryan
    @van8ryan 2 года назад

    It's honestly beautiful karma that, even though Schindler failed at all his businesses after the war and was often penniless, he was always taken in and sheltered by every Jewish person he saved until he passed away in the 70s (a true testament to the power of Kindness)

  • @lylejames965
    @lylejames965 2 года назад +1

    Where the actual people had passed away, the actors who portrayed them stood in for them at the gravesite

  • @johnorduno
    @johnorduno 2 года назад +3

    Sadly, history keep repeated itself, Bosnia War is an example.

  • @progame6238
    @progame6238 2 года назад +3

    We need more crying movie

  • @michaelangelocostello2599
    @michaelangelocostello2599 2 года назад

    They didn’t kill Schindler… he died naturally. The people ate the end were still alive when the movie was made and they were filmed visiting Schindler’s grave in Israel.

  • @edwardfrench475
    @edwardfrench475 2 года назад

    If I remember correctly, Ford Motor Company, paid for the entire movie to be commercial free. There was only 4 or 5 bathroom breaks, in the entire movie. It was truly, a rare occasion of a movie.

  • @user-gd7nk4re6u
    @user-gd7nk4re6u 2 года назад

    The one of the most powerful movies i have seen... The ending scene is just extremely impressive the speech of Schindler when he says he could have saved more..

  • @itsmefool8056
    @itsmefool8056 2 года назад +2

    I have seen this movie so many times and it breaks my heart every time so I'm not watching your reaction but I wanted to comment and drop a like because I love this channel and want it to do well because their aren't a lot of channels on you tube that are genuine like yours and you seem like family when you are all together ❤👍

  • @PandemoniumVice
    @PandemoniumVice 2 года назад +1

    Dear lord, you watched Schindler's List. This is one helluva movie, and for the very reasons that make it a masterpiece I'm not sticking around to watch. I've seen it twice, and I don't have enough emotional bandwidth remaining this year.
    Anyway, hat's off to ya. Just gonna leave a Like here and be on my way.

  • @tanvirahmed1515
    @tanvirahmed1515 2 года назад

    Last moment is so emotional
    😭.

  • @dickhickey909
    @dickhickey909 2 года назад +1

    Not too many movie directors can consistently get this kind of reaction from an audience . Spielberg is a freaking genius .

  • @wolfpredator1000
    @wolfpredator1000 2 года назад +467

    It always starts with smiles and "so excited" with the homies...
    then the movie happens

    • @richardscanlan3167
      @richardscanlan3167 2 года назад +11

      Yes,it's called a 'reality check".

    • @maulzor
      @maulzor 2 года назад +5

      @@richardscanlan3167 No it isn't

    • @richardscanlan3167
      @richardscanlan3167 2 года назад +5

      @@maulzor yes.... it is.

    • @bbwng54
      @bbwng54 2 года назад +7

      @@maulzor TROLL

    • @maulzor
      @maulzor 2 года назад +1

      @@richardscanlan3167 No.... It isn't

  • @NBLP7001
    @NBLP7001 2 года назад +579

    Oskar was not playing bad at the beginning. He was a greedy, womanizing, opportunist. Over the course of the war he became a changed man.

    • @GK-yi4xv
      @GK-yi4xv 2 года назад +28

      He was actually a little more deeply involved than the movie lets on.
      He was a spy and informant for the Nazis, using his front as a travelling 'businessman' as cover.
      In fact, he was a minor spymaster, with 25 or so working under him to gather information helpful to the Nazis.
      Still, it's not for me to judge.

    • @garyspillett7103
      @garyspillett7103 2 года назад +2

      Thank heavens he did!

    • @hilaryc3203
      @hilaryc3203 2 года назад +22

      @@GK-yi4xv Just why do you think he was shown such leniency? That he was able to stay under the radar? He played a game with the nazis; give, so he could get. Do you think they would have let him have all those Jews had he been a nobody to them? He was a master at playing the game with the nazis and only because of what he did for the jews did he wind up a pauper. Think it through.

    • @juliaj7939
      @juliaj7939 2 года назад +6

      Schincler was a bad guy in real life. This movie portrays him like a hero who made no mistakes.

    • @Nepthu
      @Nepthu 2 года назад +37

      @@juliaj7939 That's no true. He made several mistakes in the movie including using women. He later regretted it.

  • @OriginalPuro
    @OriginalPuro 2 года назад +984

    The people at the end were the real survivors, accompanied by the actors who played their young selves.
    They didn't catch him, he survived and lived an unsuccessful life, but his act of saving people are near unparalleled.
    An unremarkable man who did a remarkable deed.
    A great Man.

    • @Solidaritas1
      @Solidaritas1 2 года назад +58

      They did arrest him and charge him, but he was released after only a few years thanks to the intercession and testimonies of some of the people he saved.

    • @stefanf7847
      @stefanf7847 2 года назад +46

      And the man who puts the flower on the grave and stands before the grave is Liam Neeson

    • @Spikeelsucko
      @Spikeelsucko 2 года назад +24

      @robert punu I was NOT expecting a link about flat earth lmfao
      take a hike with this shit

    • @Spikeelsucko
      @Spikeelsucko 2 года назад +24

      @robert punu it's not true, so that question isn't much good. Ignoring all the ways you can prove the curvature of the earth, here's a few easy ones- why are the stars on the sky in Australia, or anywhere in the southern hemisphere, totally different than the ones in the northern hemisphere? How about lunar eclipses? If the earth was flat then the eclipse would have, at least sometimes, a wedge shape and not cover the moon. Why does the sun take many hours to pass over the earth? If it were flat, it would be day and night at a consistent rate instantly, or nearly instantly. Instead, there are time zones. Sure, you might not be able to feasibly fly over the poles looking for the wall, but just international travel or even just communicating with a person in an international location can confirm these.

    • @Spikeelsucko
      @Spikeelsucko 2 года назад +17

      @robert punu " the stars look different in the sky in Australia than in the US because, you're seeing them from a different angle or location on the flat earth." This is just silly and doesn't pass even a basic logic review, movement on a flat plane would not obscure or reveal ENTIRELY DIFFERENT CONSTELLATIONS.
      "the sun takes many hours to pass over the flat earth because it is vast. and it lights up only half of the flat earth while the other half is dark; day and night." A basic experiment with a light source and a flat plane would prove how stupid this is, the sun does not emit light in a tight cone.
      As for "seasons" on a ball, earth is tilted on its axis relative to the sun, this exposes different parts of the globe to more or less sunlight. Your "rotisserie model" actually follows this if you were to rotisserie a chicken in the same manner as the earth tilts on it's axis- which is a rather funny kind of irony, even your own experiment would show this.

  • @jamiesucie2685
    @jamiesucie2685 2 года назад +467

    You’d have to be a cold-hearted bastard to not be moved by Liam’s final scene at the car

    • @xenomorphlover
      @xenomorphlover 2 года назад +31

      Trust me...there are unfortunately enough people in the world who won't even shed a tear or be emotionally moved by any of this due to their upbringing, lack of soul or political reasons...welcome to humanity 😒

    • @MegaMkmiller
      @MegaMkmiller 2 года назад +31

      "I could have saved one more person and I didn't'' is one of the most moving, emotional lines in the history of film making in my book.

    • @citizenbobx
      @citizenbobx 2 года назад +3

      I heard not long after the movie was released that this particular scene didn't actually happen, but it is taken from remarks that Schindler was heard to have made later on.
      Still a good scene, though, that stands alongside Tom Hanks' "EARN this" line in Saving Private Ryan. Spielberg crystallizes in short, simple scenes what the audience is meant to take away from the experience of seeing these movies.

    • @jamiesucie2685
      @jamiesucie2685 2 года назад +2

      @@citizenbobx there were definitely some creative liberties taken. For example, the number at his camp was closer to 1700 as he had combined with other manufacturers to get the Jews out. The scene where he is asking the other manufacturer to join him but the other guy is reluctant is closer to truth except Schindler did get the help

    • @ahacks7692
      @ahacks7692 2 года назад +5

      @@xenomorphlover dude, I never cry in movies. I've never cried to any movie in my life including this one. That doesn't mean that I don't have feelings. I am conscious of what horror this part of history was

  • @TheseDarkWoods
    @TheseDarkWoods 2 года назад +1249

    This film should be screened in all schools, everywhere.

    • @bigounce7988
      @bigounce7988 2 года назад +52

      Grade 10 history was my first time seeing this and god damn ill never forget it. I agree with you cuz to be honest i probably wouldnt have watched it otherwise

    • @oobrocks
      @oobrocks 2 года назад +43

      Only HS or college: schools asked Spielberg for edited versions; he refused

    • @kenbean75
      @kenbean75 2 года назад +26

      No it shouldnt.Stop milking it.

    • @rainydaydreamawy
      @rainydaydreamawy 2 года назад +79

      @@kenbean75 You're right. Ignorance is obviously the prudent path.

    • @raidensergi2378
      @raidensergi2378 2 года назад +7

      The same as the killing fields with the comunist revolution.

  • @ftumschk
    @ftumschk 2 года назад +54

    57:05 Happily, the Nazis didn't kill Oskar Schindler; he died in 1974 aged 66, and was buried at Mount Zion in Jerusalem, in the grave we see at the end of the movie.

    • @montanus777
      @montanus777 Год назад +1

      why would the nazis kill schindler after the war anyways? he was mainly afraid of the czechoslovakians trying to kill him for being a traitor earlier, when he was still a spy for the nazis while at the same time being a czechoslovakian citizen.

  •  2 года назад +127

    57:00 “Are these people real?” Yes, these are the actual real life Schindler's survivors.

    • @a.g.demada5263
      @a.g.demada5263 2 года назад +9

      My favorite part in movies inspired by a real story, is the moment when we learn what happened to the real characters

  • @Quotenwagnerianer
    @Quotenwagnerianer 2 года назад +187

    "They are taking them to another place?"
    I sometimes forget that the iconic silhouette of the Auschwitz Gate house is not common knowledge. I would have recognized it even without a title card.

    • @kingwacky184
      @kingwacky184 2 года назад +16

      Same but not everyone have seen the gates of Auschwitz. They know the name and what happened there I am sure but not the look of the camp itself.

    • @Riddler0603
      @Riddler0603 2 года назад +12

      Same. But if I remember correctly, there is a big subtitle "Auschwitz" when the train arrives in the camp. So I was a bit confused why they're not know what place this is^^

    • @GK-yi4xv
      @GK-yi4xv 2 года назад +23

      @@Riddler0603 Yes, there seem to be some subtitles missing in this version.
      Including the ones at the end that make it clear who the people visiting his grave are.

    • @johntomlinson6849
      @johntomlinson6849 2 года назад +4

      I'm amazed and saddened it's not common knowledge.

    • @mosovanhe
      @mosovanhe 2 года назад +10

      I visited Auschwitz in September this year. I knew about the Gate, I'd seen it so many times in pictures and documentaries. To me it's always been one of the most recognizable symbols of the holocaust. But nothing prepared me for the heaviness that came over me once I was standing in front of the real thing.

  • @jcastromex
    @jcastromex 2 года назад +172

    There is a documentary on the making of the movie "Schindler's List" where certain scenes are discussed in details. There are other documentaries out there with very descriptive and extremely disturbing images on video of the mistreatment of the Jews throughout the Holocaust. This movie, as terrible as it seemed, is truly only a glimpse of the true tragedies befallen amongst the Jewish people. Thanks and blessings to Steven Spielberg for creating this masterpiece. I've enjoyed your reaction to this film. 💙

    • @quiett6191
      @quiett6191 2 года назад +3

      Theres an amazing documentary series called Shoah.

    • @98004justice
      @98004justice 2 года назад +3

      @@quiett6191 I just watched "Night and Fog" which has very disturbing footage in it but is an excellent documentary. I need to watch Shoah next.

    • @saralynn518
      @saralynn518 2 года назад +1

      Exactly. I have watched so many documentaries. I think if a movie was made that covered everything, it would be so long and beneficial, you'd have to schedule vacation time throughout the year just to be able to watch it all. So many countries impacted. A true perverse massacre.

    • @commanderkeen3787
      @commanderkeen3787 2 года назад +5

      Spielberg went on record saying there were many things he could simply never show on film, or it would have haunted him forever. For example, the Nazis would use babies for target practice. Yes, babies. They would take it from a mother's arms, throw it into the air, and shoot at it. He specifically said it was things like this he could never show, even if it was with a toy doll. This film captures some of the horror, but only the survivors will know the true horror of the Holocaust

  • @djokealtena2538
    @djokealtena2538 2 года назад +36

    He asked the two german officers at the trainstation their names and threatened them.
    "...thank you, I can guarantee you, you both will be in Southern Russia before the end of the month, good day."
    (Basically saying; I have more powerful Friends and I will make sure you both get send to the Eastern Front for not helping me).
    Immediately after they start shouting and looking with him, as the Eastern Front was Hell on Earth and basically a deathsentence.

  • @kriscynical
    @kriscynical 2 года назад +85

    I recently did a search for how many Schindler Jews there are now since this movie was made 30 years ago... the estimate is around 12,000. 12,000 people who exist because of one man. It's remarkable.
    I've come across a couple reactors here on RUclips who never learned about the Holocaust in school. They were in their 20s and we're asking if that really happened. That is _terrifying_ to me.

    • @bbwng54
      @bbwng54 2 года назад +12

      This is why teaching history is important; otherwise we repeat the same thing over and over agin.

    • @murtadhaalkenani3876
      @murtadhaalkenani3876 2 года назад

      You learn this at school ? Disgusting.

    • @kriscynical
      @kriscynical 2 года назад +12

      @@murtadhaalkenani3876 It's called history, you doorknob. Really important history, too.

    • @lukeduwa
      @lukeduwa Год назад +6

      idk about you. but i was taught about the holocaust when i was in 3rd or 4th grade. the fact that this wasnt taught to someone is very scary. i feel like most 23 year olds dont care about history like i do. makes me sad

    • @Stalicone
      @Stalicone Год назад +9

      @Murtadha Alkenani - Let me guess, you’re a Holocaust denier? You don’t think children should be taught about man’s capacity for brutality and apathy for suffering?
      Perhaps it disturbs you because in confronting the Holocaust, you may just have to confront the role Turkey played in the genocide of the Armenians, or… perhaps acknowledge the Serbian genocide of the Balkan Muslims, or even now - The Chinese genocide of the Uyhgurs. Humanity sucks, and people like you, don’t make us better.

  • @brucekazakos8647
    @brucekazakos8647 2 года назад +165

    The little girl with the Red Dress gets me every single time .

    • @stefanf7847
      @stefanf7847 2 года назад +18

      The Girl in Red based on a real Girl named Roma Ligocka born 13. November 1938 in Krakau. Nickname little strawberry. And she survived.

    • @davidhutchinson5233
      @davidhutchinson5233 2 года назад +11

      You're not alone. This 54 yo veteran cries every time.

    • @hilaryc3203
      @hilaryc3203 2 года назад +5

      @@stefanf7847 Are you sure her claims are true? I read that she was a little girl who, with her mother and maybe a sibling, were separated from her father. He was able to watch them be led away by the germans for a long distance because he had recently purchased the red coat for her and the red stood out. His story was authenticated and so to honour him and his family Spielberg put her in the movie. In the movie she is shown dead, because she and the rest of the family were exterminated. I highly doubt that Spielberg would break from the authenticity of this movie to kill her off, if she did indeed survive.

    • @colincharlton9339
      @colincharlton9339 2 года назад +1

      @@hilaryc3203 that's cleared that up for me..I also wondered what the girl in the red coat meant..

    • @Katrina-mi2gm
      @Katrina-mi2gm 2 года назад +1

      The song you can hear in that seen is called Oifen Pripetchik. It is an old Yiddish song written for children, encouraging them to learn alphabet. Some years before this movie came out, during a concert, I sang this song to a group of 6-7 year old children. My daughter was in that group. There are a lot of seens in this movie that I cry through, but that one, with that song in the background is most devastating.

  • @patrycjalachacz4620
    @patrycjalachacz4620 2 года назад +89

    I was born and raised in Poland and when I was 12 as a part of a 2 week camp we took a trip to Stutthof ( one of the death camps now a museum) I remember seeing what for a 12 year old me looked like a mountain of old shoes that our teacher told us belonged to the victims. In the next moment I noticed a little schoe that could only belong to a child not older than 2-3 years old. I remeber bursting in tears. After the trip we where so schoked that our group of 10 girls slept in the 2 bed bedroom huging eachother for the next 3 days ... Now Im 28 but this place is still vivid in my mind... I think everyone schould see this place or any other death camp at least once. Its a place that shifts your whole perception of a world. If more people would see what hate, prejudices and lust for power can destroy we would do anything and everything for that scenario not to repeat itself.

    • @a.g.demada5263
      @a.g.demada5263 2 года назад +2

      It's very touching. Me, I'm french and when I was 15 years old with my classmates and teacher, I met a survivor of the Holocaust who was deported to Bergen-Belsen

    • @rimrunz1795
      @rimrunz1795 2 года назад +2

      I disagree. I definitely feel an experience like that is NOT in everyone's best interest.... but certainly some meaningful exposure to it, at an educational level, is called for.
      For some it may be the right thing, while for others it cn b far more traumatic than instructive.

    • @rebeccawyse5562
      @rebeccawyse5562 Год назад

      🥺👣✌❤

  • @jahrolo
    @jahrolo 2 года назад +28

    At 27:27 you can see Stern walking over gravestones - the Nazis stole them from the local jewish graveyard to pave the ways....
    I´ve watched this movie a hundred times since it came out and it still makes my eyes watering like I´ve chopped a bag of onions.
    Greetings from Austria

    • @OriginalPuro
      @OriginalPuro 2 года назад +1

      I am sad to say I have walked on those gravestones and felt the marks left by people trying to claw their way out of the gas chamber.
      History must not be repeated, at any cost.

  • @danielhammond3
    @danielhammond3 2 года назад +68

    Schindler’s List is not an easy movie to watch, but it is a movie that has to be watched.

    • @tucci06
      @tucci06 2 года назад

      True.

    • @Justin-ShalaJC
      @Justin-ShalaJC 11 месяцев назад

      I would say the same thing about The book The Blood Meridian, people should know how worthless life is when people are ideologically possessed.

  • @dastemplar9681
    @dastemplar9681 2 года назад +278

    The scariest and most heartbreaking scene for me was when their clearing out the Ghetto, an SS officer plays the piano and two other soldiers briefly discuss whether he was playing Bach or Mozart.
    It just shows you these weren’t demons or monsters. They were men, educated men, men with families, men who knew what love is, men who knew what peace is, men who believed in God. And that is what makes them so terrifying, for they decided to inflict this horror upon the world. They chose to kill rather than spare. They chose evil and hatred, rather than stand for what is right.

    • @Aaron-io8vw
      @Aaron-io8vw 2 года назад +36

      Its been called the Banality of Evil, a phrase coined by Political Theorist Hannah Arendt during the Trial of Adolf Eichmann.
      It is idea that evil acts are not necessarily perpetrated by evil people. Instead, they can simply be the result of bureaucrats dutifully obeying orders.

    • @filyblunt2572
      @filyblunt2572 2 года назад +11

      It's down to indoctrination of an entire nation, Jews were demonized and dehumanised in Germany long before any killing started, unfortunately it still goes on today all over the world

    • @StinkyGreenBud
      @StinkyGreenBud 2 года назад +7

      Are you surprised though? This is hardly the first, or even worst, genocide that our species has committed in it's time on this planet.

    • @baronnuuke7821
      @baronnuuke7821 2 года назад +11

      @@StinkyGreenBud but it's the only industrial one with such a systematic dimension and done by one of the most advanced and civilized country in the world at that time

    • @dastemplar9681
      @dastemplar9681 2 года назад +2

      @@StinkyGreenBud Not surprising, just heartbreaking. No one is born to go about committing genocide.

  • @paulg123
    @paulg123 2 года назад +76

    I was seeing your happy and smiling faces at the beginning, and I knew you'd both be mentally exhausted by the end. I'm so glad you watched this film. It's actually just a small sample of the actual horror that took place. Now I'm exhausted watching you two ladies reacting to this film. It's impossible not to shed tears. Vicky and Leah, your thoughts and reactions are shared by millions.

    • @scottdecker9115
      @scottdecker9115 2 года назад

      I agree, because this is NOT an easy film to watch by any standards, but they gutted it out and stuck with it to the end. I admire Viki and Leah for their courage and tenacity.

  • @scottwilkinson3575
    @scottwilkinson3575 2 года назад +3

    There are some things that should never be forgotten or ever be forgiven. Slavery is one and the Holocaust is another. Pure evil.

    • @rescyou
      @rescyou 2 года назад

      C'mon dude you can't say bad things about slavery any more, you certainly cannot teach children that it is bad in more and more U.S. states...

  • @mitchell4745
    @mitchell4745 Год назад +5

    “It’s based on a book” a little more than that hun

  • @Phil-p7p
    @Phil-p7p 2 года назад +20

    Well done Lia and Viki. Your humanity shines throughout this reaction. ❤

  • @soonerdrummer12
    @soonerdrummer12 2 года назад +39

    We watched this my senior year of high school in Oklahoma, USA. I still get choked up throughout the movie. My grandfather and his brother served in WWII for the Allies liberating camps.

    • @joem5332
      @joem5332 2 года назад

      @L M ok America is fascist?

    • @chasepop4578
      @chasepop4578 2 года назад

      @L M yep, the new fascism is the left. They are doing similar things that the Nazis did

    • @chasepop4578
      @chasepop4578 2 года назад

      @@joem5332 no, it isn’t. Don’t let leftist brainwashing and propaganda fool you

    • @Onecooltop75
      @Onecooltop75 Год назад

      Mine liberated Buchenwald. My grandfather jumped into France and was wounded. He fought at the Battle of the Bulge and was wounded a second time. But those wounds were nothing compared to what he experienced at Buchenwald. Seeing the absolute worst things men can inflict on other men tore his soul out. My grandpa may have had air in his lungs and blood flow through his veins, but that war killed his soul

  • @timlamb6196
    @timlamb6196 2 года назад +97

    I have seen actual footage of when American soldiers liberated these concentration camps and some of the most hardended soldiers who were used to seeing death had either shocked looks on their faces or were crying when they saw first hand of what happened to these people. Many American soldiers were so enraged they beat and shot the German guards on site and in some cases allowed the prisoners who was still strong enough to attack and beat the German guards. Very brutal and sad situation. Let's try to make sure nothing like this happens again.

    • @douglascampbell9809
      @douglascampbell9809 2 года назад +16

      Yup. The minute a politician or even a normal person starts using phrases to dehumanize a class of people it's a warning sign.

    • @o.b.7217
      @o.b.7217 2 года назад +5

      @Tim Lamb: "Let's try to make sure nothing like this happens again."
      ---
      A little late for that, don't you think? Remember _(or maybe I should ask: have you ever heard about what happened in)_ Yugoslavia in the 90s?

    • @MySerpentine
      @MySerpentine 2 года назад +1

      @@o.b.7217 Hell, we had the start of them in America on the southern border. We probably have them still, they just haven't been in the news lately.

    • @Ateezwooyoung
      @Ateezwooyoung 2 года назад +3

      It’s already happening again, pay attention….

    • @Ateezwooyoung
      @Ateezwooyoung 2 года назад +2

      @@douglascampbell9809 you mean like they do with the unvaccinated ppl?
      Australia already putting ppl in camps, everywhere people without certificate are discriminated, attacked and arrested for not wearing a mask, even though they have an exception.

  • @robertkaplan3324
    @robertkaplan3324 Год назад +5

    6 million murdered Never forget

  • @alanicolas2510
    @alanicolas2510 2 года назад +45

    In the final scene of the cemetery, the people who left a stone were the ones who really saved Schindler accompanied by the actors by whom they were played in the movie ... I recommend that you see another one set at the same time, it's called "La vita e Bella "directed, interpreted and I think also written by Roberto Benigni ... also another very nice one for them to react to is" I am Sam ", interpreted by Sean Penn and Michelle Pfeiffer.

    • @JuliaV-z6c
      @JuliaV-z6c 5 месяцев назад

      Hi! So I don’t know if you need to hear this but if you are struggling right now just know that there is always someone looking out for you. His name is Jesus Christ who died on the cross for your sins! No matter how hard you have been broken, hurt, or cheated he will never leave you or forsake you. I know times can be tough, so how about we make a deal? Put your trust on Him for one week, and pray. See what happens! You would be pleasantly surprised. He helped me in hard times and he will help you too:)

    • @AndreaCosta-n2n
      @AndreaCosta-n2n 3 месяца назад

      Also the pianist is a masterpiece

  • @cesarantoniotaboadaolvera741
    @cesarantoniotaboadaolvera741 2 года назад +13

    The real survivors appear with the actors who played them. Sometimes just the actor or actress .Issac Stern was played by Ben Kingsley and shows up with his widow. And Liam Neeson honors Schindler at the end.

    • @a.g.demada5263
      @a.g.demada5263 2 года назад +2

      Oh, it's him with the two roses at the end ? I didn't recognize him.

    • @Taboada30
      @Taboada30 2 года назад +4

      @@a.g.demada5263 Oskar was the only catholic, that´s why he was the only one who placed a flower. I mean the fictional character to the real person.

    • @a.g.demada5263
      @a.g.demada5263 2 года назад +1

      @@Taboada30 yes, I understood what you mean.
      I haven't a religion but if you say that, I believe you

  • @noharakun
    @noharakun 2 года назад +5

    romans 1:28-32

  • @panowa8319
    @panowa8319 2 года назад +29

    The Schindler Jews who were setting stones on his grave were accompanied by the actors who portrayed them. For a long time, I've always thought it was Steven Spielberg who directed the movie that placed the rose, but it was Liam Neeson who played Oskar Schindler.

  • @abjectt5440
    @abjectt5440 2 года назад +7

    We think we are civilized. When a country like Germany with an educated population with a cultured history can let itself be led by lunacy to become an instrument of unimaginable cruelty and butchery only shows it can happen anywhere. We are not far from the jungle as a race.

    • @marshad82
      @marshad82 2 года назад

      To take it literally: as far as we know, we've started cultivating crops and domesticating animals about 10 000 years ago (simplifying). If you assume a new generation coming every 25 years, then it's just about 400 generations. Mere 20 generations since end of the Middle Ages. This number shrinks even more when you realize that quite a few people will live to meet 6 generations of their own lineage.

  • @ThunderbackOG
    @ThunderbackOG 2 года назад +15

    I live in Berlin and just a few weeks ago I found out, that I live 5 minutes away from one of Schindlers former Factories. I rode my bike past it for almost a decade without noticing. It failed after the war, and was laid still for years. It was reopened and still runs under his name to this day. But they are not producing the same things they did back then.

    • @lauriesandt5371
      @lauriesandt5371 2 года назад +2

      Very interesting. Thanks for sharing.

    • @paulanthonyhoeflich8988
      @paulanthonyhoeflich8988 2 года назад +1

      Isnt it a museum now?

    • @attilacs.3446
      @attilacs.3446 2 года назад +2

      @@paulanthonyhoeflich8988 the one in Krakow,which can be also seen in the movie is indeed a museum

  • @amauryegazarain3890
    @amauryegazarain3890 2 года назад +16

    Young people need to see this movie!

    • @arnaudbouret5562
      @arnaudbouret5562 2 года назад

      @Ashid Mikeks Go and visit Auschwitz. Birkenau's Death Gate, shown in this movie still stands, and so does the camp itself. Parts of the land around the camp and inside it are still marked by human ash three quarters of a century later - over a million people were cremated there, and most of their ashes that went up the chimneys of the Kremas fell back close to them. The ruins of the four large Kremas have been left as they were. The two "bunkers", which served as prototype gas chambers and stayed in use throughout Birkenau's tenure as a death camp. And pile after pile of personal belongings that were sorted but never shipped away for lack of capacity, and kept in the "Kanada" warehouses.
      The Shoah was real. It was the worst example of organized mass murder in history. Its stigmata are still visible, mostly in Poland, where most of the death camps were built by the Nazis. And the worst part is, the five and a half million Jews murdered throughout the war by the Nazis are barely a quarter of the number of the civilians the Nazis killed in six years' worth of various extermination campaigns. Europe's Jews, however, hold the unfortunate distinction of being the population whose extermination the Nazis prioritized the most and organized "the best".

    • @kyrtsi2930
      @kyrtsi2930 2 года назад

      Traitor

    • @Zachrinox
      @Zachrinox 2 года назад

      The film is full of nudity and gore.

    • @lmd499
      @lmd499 2 года назад +3

      @@Zachrinox which is what happened in real life so it’s necessary

  • @elainemarie8725
    @elainemarie8725 2 года назад +12

    Oscar was known for having lots of children and women when he was questioned why th he told them in order to make bullets bc they have small hands. Also they made many of the weapons not work so whenever a someone was being shot they would have a chance of geting away. God bless all the people affected in the holocausts. NEVER FORGET!

  • @StefanZacharias1
    @StefanZacharias1 2 года назад +75

    It is really hard to watch this movie the whole 3 hours and to know that this movie based on a true story in one of the worst time in history make it even harder. This movie is a masterpiece, everyone should see this, especially people who think they can put down other people because of their beliefs

    • @trumphatesyou
      @trumphatesyou 2 года назад +1

      Xi should be stuffed with this movie

    • @lorichet
      @lorichet 2 года назад

      It was based on "Schindler's Ark" -- the fictional novel that won the Booker Award for "Best Fiction."
      Spielberg neglected to mention that.

    • @StefanZacharias1
      @StefanZacharias1 2 года назад +3

      @@lorichet WW2 was not a fiction and that Oskar Schindler saved life from over 1000 Jewish people is true. Not every spoken word in that movie is exactly the historical copy, that explains itselfs and is not necessary. But the context is right and makes these to a true story based movie either

    • @lorichet
      @lorichet 2 года назад

      @@StefanZacharias1
      I see my reply vanished. Let's see if this is deleted.
      Nobody denies Schindler was a real person. Nobody denies Amon Goth existed. The story is pure fiction.
      Detailed examples will only get my post deleted again. "Truth fears no investigation" -- says it all.

    • @StefanZacharias1
      @StefanZacharias1 2 года назад +1

      @@lorichet Well, i readed your opinion, but what is your point?

  • @matthewmurphy8362
    @matthewmurphy8362 Год назад +4

    I find it hard to believe that your generation know so little about what happened in this recent part of our history.

  • @julianaFinn
    @julianaFinn 2 года назад +11

    This was a story of hope, and an important story to be told. There is a massive amount of horrific stories, books that will turn your hair white off true atrocities committed. "The musicians of Auschwitz ", "Elle" and many more written by survivors. It's more prevalent than ever before today.

    • @actualstormtrooper6155
      @actualstormtrooper6155 2 года назад +1

      if you ever wonder why there's so many holocaust movies, books, television shows and never ending references to it in your everyday life you might understand what's really happening.

  • @Tristan_Anderwelt
    @Tristan_Anderwelt 2 года назад +23

    When I saw Lia and Viki watching "Schindler's List", it was my first thought. It's too hard.
    I like that they are as emotional as I am but I can't the them cry ....
    There's no shame in crying at the movie. I cry tons of tears every time
    All parents should watch this film with their children when they are old enough to understand and answer all their questions.
    Something like that must never happen again!

    • @centuryrox
      @centuryrox 2 года назад +4

      Shame? No. One should be proud of themselves at crying at this movie. It shows they are human. It shows they have a soul. Seeing others cry during this movie restores my faith in humanity.

    • @danielaponte8594
      @danielaponte8594 2 года назад

      My father used to watch this kind of movies. I remember when I was a child and he cover my eyes during some painful scenes. Now, after this film, I can show my respect for Jewish people. Maybe Spielberg wanted to give us his vision of the Second World War with this movie, the next one (Saving Private Ryan) and his two TV series (Band of Brothers and The Pacific). I hope you can react to them.

    • @Tristan_Anderwelt
      @Tristan_Anderwelt 2 года назад

      @@centuryrox that's what I said

    • @centuryrox
      @centuryrox 2 года назад +1

      @@Tristan_Anderwelt Yeah you're right. I read your first paragraph then just skimmed over the rest! Bad habit of mine!

    • @Tristan_Anderwelt
      @Tristan_Anderwelt 2 года назад +1

      @@centuryroxNo problem

  • @capnhands
    @capnhands 2 года назад +6

    24:09 Hitler banned guns before he sent them to the death camps

    • @BroadHobbyProjects
      @BroadHobbyProjects 2 года назад

      Like all fascist governments do when they want you weak and defenceless.

    • @capnhands
      @capnhands 2 года назад +1

      @@BroadHobbyProjects "To conquer a nation first disarm it's citizens." - Hitler

  • @texasrattlesnake31637
    @texasrattlesnake31637 2 года назад +12

    Incredible Movie! Great and heartfelt reaction you two! The line "The List Is Life." - chills everytime, . . .

  • @lethaldose2000
    @lethaldose2000 2 года назад +7

    The wives of many of the officers collected skulls of dead Jews. Often having them embronzed and passed around as Christmas and party exchange gifts. This is the level of depravity we are dealing with.

    • @GK-yi4xv
      @GK-yi4xv 2 года назад +4

      Roosevelt was given a letter-opener made from the skeleton of a Japanese soldier (though he returned it). And Life Magazine at the time published a photo of a young American woman showing off the skull of a Japanese soldier sent by her boyfriend as a 'trophy'.
      Once we decide that 'the Other' is our worst enemy, there's no limit to how far down we seem to be able to go.

    • @lethaldose2000
      @lethaldose2000 2 года назад +4

      @@GK-yi4xv So true. Hate begets hate.

    • @lethaldose2000
      @lethaldose2000 2 года назад +1

      @@GK-yi4xv The Japanese committed incredibly heinous acts in Manchuria. Opening the skulls of captivates while still alive and pouring quicksilver into them. To watch their expressions as they died.

    • @tucci06
      @tucci06 2 года назад +1

      Reminds me of Jeffrey Dahmer and other brutal serial killers. We look at them like deranged maniacs, meanwhile proper little housewives were going full on Predator.

    • @Spikeelsucko
      @Spikeelsucko 2 года назад +1

      @@GK-yi4xv i mean, for a short time the Japanese WERE our (the US, China, Russia, India/Hindustan and Australia particularly) worst enemy, and the Imperial Japanese military committed some of the most unimaginable atrocities possible including ignoring laws of war even the Nazis and Russia (sometimes) respected and establishing Unit 731- they dehumanized themselves. Reacting to an opponent like that with 'humanity' is, ultimately, a weakness that the IJA and IJN openly exploited to the detriment of their own people- they made it impossible to react to them with compassion. This is NOT to justify objectively wrong actions like internment, but rather a realistic perspective- trying to 'play nice' just got more people killed. Thankfully, the war ended and humanity was able to return to the table.

  • @ortizjorge8285
    @ortizjorge8285 2 года назад +11

    Big hug for you guys. Thanks for your tears.

  • @filyblunt2572
    @filyblunt2572 2 года назад +5

    A couple of interesting facts of ww2 - all the SS uniforms were designed by Hugo boss, Hitler is credited with designing the VW beetle, because he stole it from a jew and had him killed.

  • @TheRussian13
    @TheRussian13 2 года назад +8

    Movies like this I like to describe as "beautifully ugly." The film is masterfully crafted with a beautiful story of the protagonists forming incredible bonds. However the films story is drowning in the ugliness of the subject matter. It's a great cinematic example of "a diamond in the ruff."

  • @seqouiaflame
    @seqouiaflame Год назад +5

    I first saw this film in an AG history class in high school. At the end of the film the teacher turned on the lights and ask the class, "what do you think?" I started crying uncontrollably and said, "I kept hearing my name!" My last name is Horowitz. I fucking love this film.

  • @Bluemgwes
    @Bluemgwes 2 года назад +8

    This movie is not only incredibly hard to watch, but it was even harder to make for Steven Spielberg, being his most personal film. The production days were so hard for him to get through that he'd call Robin Williams to tell jokes just to bring his mood up.

    • @GK-yi4xv
      @GK-yi4xv 2 года назад

      The author of the source novel just happened to be passing through L.A. airport with time to kill, so he just happened to go into a luggage shop, which just happened to be run by one of the Schindler Jews, who just happened to tell him the story.
      Otherwise, the movie might never have happened.

  • @krisfrederick5001
    @krisfrederick5001 2 года назад +29

    Spielberg pulls no punches in this...gloves are off. The balance of humanity and brutality is remarkable.

    • @GK-yi4xv
      @GK-yi4xv 2 года назад +2

      The most masterfully put together movie I've seen.
      The very fact that we don't even meet the main villain until 45 minutes in is just one testament to the confidence with which Spielberg took his time to tell the story his way (and had the status by then to get things his way).
      So, by the time bad things start happening, they're so much more impactful because we've kind of been lulled into letting our guard down by the slow buildup, and also because we 'know' the people it's happening to.
      A lesser movie would have felt the need to bash the audience over the head with shocking scenes of violence, right up front, to much less effect.
      And the way that he weaves in and out of the opposite extremes without ever losing the shock value of the worst parts is incredibly difficult to do in this age of jaded, over-saturated, over-sophisticated viewers.

    • @Traya6P6
      @Traya6P6 2 года назад +2

      In reality was it harder and more terrible. The part about Amon Göth was lighter, because nobody would have believe the things that he actually did. So he caught a woman, she has eaten a potato and she was thrown in boiling water.

  • @aronsnz9248
    @aronsnz9248 2 года назад +6

    You should watch "The boy with the striped pajamas" is also a hearthbreaking movie!

  • @JimbalayaJones
    @JimbalayaJones 2 года назад +19

    In Germany this film is shown in almost every class. Mostly in the ninth grade. For us, such a film is part of our history class. No cold numbers or hollow facts, but the feelings. Feelings like yours.
    To understand the past, see the horror and feel the responsibility that we have. So this inhumanity would never be repeated.
    Greetings from 🇩🇪

    • @Ateezwooyoung
      @Ateezwooyoung 2 года назад

      Ironically it already started again, you just don’t Seen to notice it. You Are probably even part of it.

    • @MegaSnehvide
      @MegaSnehvide Год назад

      I think it’s a great idea to show that film continually for youngsters ( not only for them, everyone should see it 🤔) it’s a big reminder for the human beings of today….. May such a terrible things never ever happened again 🙏🏻😔

    • @shaunwild8797
      @shaunwild8797 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@MegaSnehvide It happened again in Rwanda.

  • @bonsai67
    @bonsai67 2 года назад +9

    Your emotional reaction has brought me to tears. 54 years old and crying like a little kid.

  • @blueroninstudios
    @blueroninstudios 2 года назад +7

    Ralph Fiennes plays Amon Goethe in this film. He would of course, go on to play Voldemort in the Harry Potter films. Voldemort's pretty scary as a fictional character.
    But Amon Goethe was a real person....and one of the worst human rights violators in history, extremely loyal to Hitlers ideals, and one of the worst human beings to ever exist.

    • @SupremeCommanderBaiser
      @SupremeCommanderBaiser 2 года назад

      Göth. Not Goethe...

    • @a.g.demada5263
      @a.g.demada5263 2 года назад

      I read somewhere he has a grandaughter who's interacial (she said he will killed her if he knew her)

    • @mathiaswetekam1253
      @mathiaswetekam1253 2 года назад +1

      ​@@a.g.demada5263 Correct, Jennifer Teege. Her mother is Göth's illegitimate daughter and her father was from Nigeria. She grew up in a children's home for seven years before being adopted. She later studied in Israel. She unexpectadly learned of her ancestry when she read the biography of Monika Göth and realized she is her mother. To fight the following depression she wrote the book "My Grandfather would have shot me" about her story. She also made contact to her mother who btw after watching Schindler's List contacted some survicors and befriended them.

    • @a.g.demada5263
      @a.g.demada5263 2 года назад

      @@mathiaswetekam1253 yes, I have forgotten her name.
      I think she had been shocked to learn she's the grandaughter of a monster like him

    • @417Owsy
      @417Owsy 2 года назад

      @@SupremeCommanderBaiser Goeth/Goethe is just the english spelling since our alphabet doesn't have ö so to the equivalent is oe

  • @joquitasullivan6353
    @joquitasullivan6353 2 года назад +7

    How many of us ,that have actually watched this historical portrayal of Schindlers List ; know that these two young women will never be the same after witnessing these horrifying events. Its sad, but so very needed in order for this to NEVER happen again.

    • @a.g.demada5263
      @a.g.demada5263 2 года назад

      I met a french survivor of the Holocaust with my classmates when I was 15 years old.
      The french singer Jean-Jacques Goldman speaks about the camps in his song " Comme toi " (Like you in english)

  • @davidsweeney4021
    @davidsweeney4021 Год назад +2

    I know you two young ladies are young but I was born 13 years after the end of WWII and read about and the the Russian front, no good guys there by the way. This is what the nazis did. No excuses, criminals of the worst kind..

  • @markbiggs6302
    @markbiggs6302 2 года назад +8

    This movie breaks my heart. Watching you react to it broke my heart again.
    This story is so important, not just for remembering the past but to prevent this from ever happening again in the future.

  • @davidwatson3456
    @davidwatson3456 2 года назад +3

    You couldn't keep kids off their phones long enough to watch it and teachers don't enforce it

  • @gorlab9549
    @gorlab9549 2 года назад +2

    Why is your version of the film missing all the ending text that explains what happened to the jews and schindler? Is this pirated?

  • @Jon-yn4pq
    @Jon-yn4pq 2 года назад +5

    53:30 that part fuckin kills me.
    The whole "I could have got more, and I didn't " how sacred a single human life really is. Though he saved the lives of so many he still feels immense guilt that he didn't get one more person.
    Destroys me every time lol

    • @xhagast
      @xhagast 2 года назад +1

      In the Torah was his absolution. "He who saves one life saves the whole world". He did enough. If he had been different, he would have failed. 1100 people was plenty. The Torah absolved him of failing to do more.

  • @spqr7423
    @spqr7423 2 года назад +3

    Great reaction video you ladies
    are not afraid to show your felling ,
    This is a hard film to watch but you ladies did a great reaction to it ,

  • @faz0482
    @faz0482 2 года назад +18

    “Don’t tell me that they are gonna Kill them”. Did you study history, right?

  • @justsmashing4628
    @justsmashing4628 2 года назад +3

    Band of Brothers awaits…😊

  • @danielaponte8594
    @danielaponte8594 2 года назад +5

    I love this film. I would like to watch it on the movies, maybe because of its next 30th anniversary (th premiere of Schindler's List was in 1993, so its 30th anniversary will be in 2023). I'd like to feel the collective emotion after watching this wonderful movie.

  • @michaelrichter8040
    @michaelrichter8040 2 года назад +2

    The most horrifying part of that movie is how easily people forget it. Looking at the way so much of the word view the Jewish people in today's world it's looking ever more likely that we will repeat a past we didn't learn from.

  • @jamesgowen9546
    @jamesgowen9546 2 года назад +6

    Poor Viki. She would cry at a purple lampshade. She's adorable.

  • @goochdawg
    @goochdawg 2 года назад +7

    Such a great movie one of greats of the 1990's.

  • @dunki-dunki-dawg
    @dunki-dunki-dawg Месяц назад +1

    There is another masterpiece move call 'Come And See'. Its about what the Nazis did in Belarus. The people who made the film were actually there but miraculously survived. They depicted the movie as it actually was. It's shocking.

  • @karlmoles6530
    @karlmoles6530 2 года назад +3

    And the SS Soldiers, I don't understand, I was raised that you help people, protect people. I would rather die ten thousand times than treat people the way they did.

    • @GK-yi4xv
      @GK-yi4xv 2 года назад

      In their own twisted way, it's simply true that many of them believed they were in fact 'helping people', ie protecting 'their own people' against what they thought was their worst enemy.
      In that sense, it's actually not particular to them, or that time and place. It's a much more general human failing.

    • @stephanlunden4318
      @stephanlunden4318 2 года назад +1

      Imagine you hear every day that the jews are bad people and you grew up with it. Nearly everybody would believe that and follow the Nazis. It started in 1933 and when you are 10 and you got to go in the Hitle Jugend. They gave you a life, they give you a glimmer of hope and in Germany it was getting better for the followers. Sad that the few people who realised what was going on would be arrested. Basicly as a child in Nazi Germany it was very difficult not to follow them. I recommend watching the German Movies "Die Brücke" and "Napola" where you can see that the Nazis infected the brains of young men and women.

    • @karlmoles6530
      @karlmoles6530 2 года назад

      @@stephanlunden4318 It started a lot sooner than that in most of Europe. Persecution of the Jews went back for centuries.

  • @6120mcghee
    @6120mcghee 2 года назад +2

    Fact: The extras in the Nazi costumes felt so dirty that they took multiple showers and told their agents that they will NEVER put on another Nazi uniform costume.