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imagine the feeling when you pick up the script to play Lord Voldemort and you're like "well at least this villain is less evil than the last one they had me do."
@@reconsoldier135 na verdade o Valdemorte é baseado nos nazistas. A ideologia dos sangues puros, os anti sangues sujos...os comerciais da morte representando a SS. A muitos preconceitos em Harry porter.
Thank you for watching this. My grandfather was one of the _Schindlerjuden_ aka a “Schindler Jew.” If it wasn’t of Schindler, I wouldn’t be here today enjoying your content. ❤️
no baby, you didn't have liam neeson's character messed up. at the start he really was a cold person who only cared about making money. over the course of time, he did change. he grew a heart. and i will never forget the first time i saw this. it was in the theater, and my car was in the shop so my mother dropped me off at the movies. when she picked me up, i was numb and silent, and she asked me tentatively how the movie had been, and i just burst into tears. couldn't form words until we got home. i don't recall what i said, but she understood how i felt anyway. the tears had said plenty.
@jenniferri7735 oh baby. I feel like this is the kind of experience that definitely needs a guide. Someone who knows the history to fill that in and also to hold the viewers hand. I saw it in the theater too but went with a group so we'll versed on the history. My grandfather was a doctor in a DP liberation camp after the camps were liberated who help nurse people back and find new lives. I'd grown up with people he helped coming to our home to show him their families and have a moment with someone who understood their experiences. These connections are getting further and further away. That had to have been so hard on your own to process this.
I was too young when it first came out, but in the late '90s I remember one of the major networks got special FCC clearance to air the entire thing completely uncensored with extremely limited commercials. I was in middle school, and we had just covered the Holocaust at school. I asked my parents if I could watch it during that special broadcast, and they said yes and watched it with me. I was a mess just like most people who watch it. It really is one of the most important movies ever made, and one that you really need to watch at least once in your life. I used to wonder how things got to that point back in the '40s. Given the last few years, I don't anymore. 😕
I'm thinking about it after watching it again, if he was so cold and only cared about money at the beginning, why did he pick the guy with one arm who was old? He should have said no because it would lose him profit.
My grandfather escaped from a prison camp and was caught by the Russian army. After he told them of his escape they were so impressed that they let him go with a letter to let him pass if he ran into more Russians. Luckily he eventually made it to America where he met my grandmother and lived to 93.
Wow that's both incredible, and horrifying. I can't imagine being in his shoes, escaping in a war torn country, with the possibility of being killed even by "allied" nation's armies being very high. And then being lucky enough to meet some people who helped him out, only to start the new journey by yourself to the literal other side of the earth with basically nothing. Absolutely insane.
There’s a book written by Amon Goeth’s granddaughter called “My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me”. Her name is Jennifer Teege, and she lays out how she dealt with the shock of learning her family’s history.
@@willgold9989 relatable. Unfortunately my family were nazis back then and it was hard to learn about it. But history must be learned no matter how horrible, so it can't be repeated
I was crying along with you, this is a movie everyone should watch. It's important we learn history to not let it repeat itself. I just wanted to give you a big hug, it's a tough watch but a necessary one.
He broke character and comforted a few people because he was so close to the real douchecanoe that he sent them into panic attacks. 😭 I just love Ralph and Liam, they are both amazing men.
Ralph Fiennes said that to get himself ready to play Göth, he read Mein Kampf and pretended he believed every word of it. He then began to think of himself as the pinnacle of man. This let him gain weight (because Göth was overweight), because he knew that Göth would have been indulgent in all aspects of his life, since he was a perfect Aryan specimen. That's why, in almost every scene, he's eating or drinking something (or both).
RUclips disappeared my comment 3 times. Short version is, my grandparents were both in camps during all of this. My grandpa only talked about his experience once when he was alive. My grandmother to this day will not speak about it. We are only a few steps away from potentially having something like this happen again, with the way things are going these days. I hope we can avoid that, for everyone's sake...
That’s what’s also so bad. It’s too traumatic to talk about. But sometimes word of mouth passes down is the only way to learn when certain people do everything they can to hide it. There are literally people who grew up in Tulsa OK who had no idea about the race massacre in 1921 because it was too traumatic for survivors to talk about and it made it easier for the government to hide it.
@ugiby8377 You think YOU are in danger of experiencing this again? Israel is actively doing this to the Palestinians right now. We can go almost scene-by-scene in this movie and I can show you how Israel is doing the exact same thing in the scene to the Palestinians. If your grandmother supports Israel, she is effectively sh*tting and p*ssing on the graves of all her family that died in the Holocaust. PLEASE tell her that I said that. If she supports Israel, it's her utter moral weakness that perpetuates gen*cide across the world. Nothing is more utterly pathetic than enduring a gen*cide and then supporting a gen*cide against others.
I feel you. Sometimes a good cry is healthy. For me one of the most beautiful sad films is The Fountain. I usually watch it when I need a good cry. It's unlike any other movie I've seen. It's unique and may not be everyone's cup of tea, but I love it.
The opening song is a prayer we say at the beginning of Shabbat (the Sabbath). Thank you for bearing witness, Jay. It’s so important these times in history should never be forgotten, otherwise we’re bound to repeat it. ❤
This is a movie that is truly hard not to get emotional to. The "I could have done more" scene is just one of many that can make one shed tears, and I surey do. The horror of this history is just so brutal, but necessary to know.
What else needs to be said about this masterwork of cinema that hasn't already been said? Spielberg making this AND Jurassic Park in the same year is another astounding aspect of this whole thing.
@@EOMReacts365 days is a lot of days for most people, but if you're a director making a big-budget, effects-driven dinosaur movie and a large scale Holocaust drama, I couldn't imagine the sheer level of time management involved in the process haha
Spielberg has long tended to make movies in pairs fairly close together. But same-year release for these two is simply outstanding, and on top of that is the sheer quality and reception of each movie.
He also got his best friend George Lucas to fill in the last few weeks of post production of Jurassic Park so he could leave to start Schindlers List 🙂
I try to watch this whenever the algorithm send it to me. Your tears are moving and your dogs being so in tune with your emotions is incredible. Thank you
I'm half Jewish and never watched this movie because I know some of my ancestors died in the Holocaust and it would be too tough. Now that a reactor like J is covering it I might watch but I don't know. Here's a comment to support the video regardless.
@@jrm48220Exactly. That's what critical race theory and this Marxist DEI nonsense does. It gets people to turn against each other instead of coming together. Distract the people with one hand while the other one does something else.
@@raramonty5217 And in fact one of the first things hate groups do is to try to dehumanize their targets. Calling them animals, vermin, scum, etc. The dehumanization is among the first few steps in the famous “ten stages of genocide”. 😢
This will be a hard one. You have so much empathy for others not to be effected deeply by this story. The fact its a true story makes it all the more horrific
I've never seen a reaction to Richard Attenborough's Gandhi. The guy who plays Isaac Stern, Ben Kingsley, stars in Gandhi and the movie is one of the most impressive life stories ever made. It had to be independently funded and holds the record to this day of the most extras ever shot on film, which will never be broken because of technology.
It’s fascinating that Ben Kingsley is so ethically ambiguous that he’s cast as an Italian, Persian, Jewish, Indian, etc. I believe his background is half British, half Indian so today I would think it would be controversial to cast him as historical figures Gandhi and Stern. Sexy Beast is another excellent movie he stars in.
Germans acted like they didn't know about those camps, even when they lived 3 km away. "Wir Haben Es Nicht Gewusst". The (sometimes fannaticly) cooperation from big companies, who weirdly enough never really had to answer for it. Above that the campguards and others got to live a long, free life, with pension. Again, Pension. The government knew where they lived, they send them money. They started arresting them when they were 85, secretaries included. But indeed they showed the whole movie.
@@jrm48220 same as us Canadians. We didn’t learn about the atrocities in the residential school system until my last couple years of highschool. I graduated in 2021. Yeah it’s fucked up.
Here a funny fact : Armon Goeth granddaughter is a black woman!! He is her maternal grandfather…she boar the last name Goeth until she was adopted. She found out by chance!! She picked up a book…her mama was in it !! She has a book called “My grandfather would have shot me”. You can’t tell me that God doesn’t have a sense of humor.
OMG I saw a documentary on that! HE was the grandfather?? Oh sweet baby Jesus and the grown one too! You know what F him in the deepest pits of h3ll there are. That scum who is lower than the most worthless cockroach has a BLACK QUEEN for a granddaughter!! I do love that little piece of justice!
A great movie of great importance. To think there are still people around denying the Holocaust. Neeson was brilliant here. Had movies before (Darkman would be a great one), but this one here put him really on the map. And Ralph Fiennes was scary good. They even toned down the character of Amon Goeth for the movie, the real one was even worse. A movie that everyone should see once.
Hotel Rwanda is another good true story, and Knights Of The south Bronx is another good true story but it's about school kids being failed by the school state until a relief teacher teaches them by also teaching them to play chess
Thank you for this. It's not an easy watch, but it's important. It's a reminder that sometimes all it takes is for one soul to stand up and make a difference. One of the best films ever made in my own humble view. Not meant to entertain, but to make you reflect, ponder and think. In the eyes of God, no one is without significance. The ending scenes did feature the real people, along with the actors that played them. "There will be generations because of what you did " is no exaggeration.
It was atrocious and today there is still great atrocities happening and being swept under the rug, but true history is far more complex than most have been led to believe.
Normally I watch to see you cry and show emotion, but this time I feel like all I’m watching is someone being taught history the hard way, and those tears hurt my soul. You’re a beautiful soul, so this is tough for me to react to as a historian.🙁🫣
@EOM Thank you Thank you Thank you, we must never forget and we must never become apathetic. Hate is on the rise and unless people stand up for each other it is going to get far far worse. JL your heart is amazing, never loose it
This and Saving Private Ryan are companion films to me, depicting both halves of that terrible war, from the perspective of the victims and the brave men who fought to liberate them. To show how much Spielberg is the GOAT, he made this masterpiece and Jurassic Park simultaneously! He was in Poland making Schindler's List while overseeing the making of JP via video calls to the crew. Needless to say after it was all over he was physically and emotionally drained and took a long break from filmmaking. He also took no pay for making it, it was a very personal film for him.
Amazing and beautiful to me that your copilots anticipate and sense when you are overcome with emotion. But this was the first time I noticed that you were furious or confused and your copilots came to comfort you which allowed you to feel the sadness instead. Love yall.
In 1997 Schindlers list was shown uncensored on NBC with no commercials and an intermission. I remember being a teen and watching it for the second time. It had the same feeling, I had the first time watching it. I understood the cruelty and savageness of it all but I could never understand the indifference and nonchalant behavior. I know humans can be cruel and like a wild animal. It’s all over our human existence. The Indifference, I had never seen.
The entire movie was disturbing, but that last scene with the survivors, alongside the actors who portrayed them, makes me bawl every time. Just curious if you've seen the original mini-series ROOTS before. It aired on TV in '76. Another superb film for you to eventually watch is The Pianist. Thanks for sharing your reactions with us.
Good honest reaction, man. Stressed and angry is exactly how I felt everytime I watch this movie and I think you should watch it every now and then to remind yourself to never let something like this to ever happen again, especially in the US in these times. In some European school districts, this movie is required watching.Your dogs are sweet and are so sensitive to your moods.
This is THE most difficult movie to watch, but needs to be seen. So well done. When it came out my brother, father, and I went to see it. The two rows in front of us were filled with biker guys straight out of Sons of Anarchy. We all were sniffling together. Thank you for taking this one on. ❤
Man my history teacher took our whole class to the movies to see this in '93 when it came out. At the end most of the class was crying. It took everything in me to keep from shedding.
I watched this in history class in the US (West Virginia) when I was in high school. This was two years after the movie was released and many parents were against it being shown, but we watched it anyway. We all cried, we all had so many questions about HOW this was allowed to happen. It was a topic of discussion for weeks. Explaining injustice like this, crimes against humanity like this is so important so the next generation does better.
16:35 - nearly everybody seems to miss this. Oskar _is,_ in fact, beginning to care about more than just the money; but he is not yet ready to admit it, not even to himself, and certainly not to anyone else- least of all someone whose life he just saved.
My family on my Dad's side is very German. When this started happening in Germany my great Grandfather moved to America and went to fight his own people in the war because of how wrong it was.
No matter how many times I watch someone react to this I cry! It’s a hard watch once so rewatching it edited down with a reactor helps me remember how important it is that stories like this get out so I rewatch painfully every time I see someone react to it.
Oh this is one of the greatest pictures ever. I don't know how we can even call it a movie I mean Roger Ebert said it better than me it's necessary viewing.
I am FULLY Native American by Birth & Jewish by Adoption, so I feel the emotion and pain and lessons conveyed in this film extremely hard, It IS A reminder to always be kind and respect others, there NEEDS to be MORE People with the courage and mind to stand up AGAINST Injustice, Racism and what IS WRONG. And Much Like EOM, There needs to be people in the world with Kind hearts, or we Unfortunately CAN repeat history like this.
If I take 1 hour to cook a batch of cookies and the cookie monster has 15 ovens working 24 hours a day every day for 5 years, how long does it take the cookie monster to make 6,000,000 batches of cookies?
Hence why the new secretary of education in the US has said they will not be teaching the truth about slavery or the native american genocides Florida has already changed the curriculum to teach slavery was actually a skill opportunity for blacks Cause they don't want to make white kids feel bad.
You my man… have a heart of gold!!! The amount of empathy you have for all these people truly makes me believe if we all had that thought process, the world would be a better place
.........it's difficult to fathom that this kind of brutality and massacre of innocent human beings could ever happen - but it did! Sydney J. Harris once said "History repeats itself, but in such cunning disguise that we never detect the resemblance until the damage is done" -------------- God, I hope this NEVER happens again!
This is one of the hardest movies to watch for me. I wasn’t gonna watch it again, but I’ll be there for you. You are always honest and genuine in all of your reactions. I appreciate it,
That's not entirely accurate. Be careful who you get your history from there are plenty of people out there in positions of power who will work twist and bend events in history to suit their purposes and agendas Spielberg is evil. Causing the death of the young girl that played Carol Anne in the poltergeist movies. It says she died of sepsis but or an anal blockage in her bowel something like that but she was you know to death. It was Spielberg and his friends that did that to her. Remember the devil is beautiful and apparently great films. This movie was used for shock value and to tell a narrative. Yes a lot of this stuff did happen but it's not for the reasons that most people think. And the Jews are not some shrinking violet some little old lady that got hurt by some mean old man. They give just as good as they get, sometimes more so due to all their influence in the top positions of power finance film industry music industry etc, it's almost like they control the world....... 6:14
I would never watch this movie over and over. Honestly, the only reason I'm watching it is because I enjoy watching movies with you. Thank you for being brave enough to share your reaction with us
This has to be Spielberg's finest work. It's astonishingly good and horrifying in equal measure and what it makes it even more disturbing is that it's truthful, although it only scratches the surfaces of the atrocities committed. Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes and Ben Kingsley are superb. I watched this at the cinema when it first came out in the early 90s. No one wanted to go and see it with me, so I went alone. I cried like you did and there wasn't a dry eye in the house, you could hear people sobbing in the cinema. This is an absolute masterpiece of cinema. Thank you for sharing your reaction.
J ... I wish more ppl had a beautiful heart like you do!! I agree human nature shouldn't be this evil. The world is hard enough without all if us fighting each other. Whoever is reading this I love you, you are loved have a beautiful day or night!! 🙏🏽🤍
Thank you for reacting to this movie. It was difficult to watch you suffer but just know that you are not alone. Anyone with a heart that watches this suffers. It is an ongoing struggle to prevent this from continuing to happen around the world.
Thank you as always for such a slulful reaction.Watching you get upset is very touching, god bless you. Hope you feel better later.Love to you abd yiur little buds.🤍💌
I read somewhere that the movie good morning Vietnam was being filmed at the same time of this movie. Apparently Robin Williams would visit the set for this movie and tell jokes to cheer up the cast and crew because of how dark and heavy this movie is.
Close... :) Good Morning, Vietnam was from 1987, 6 years before the release of Schindler's List. Spielberg would call Robin Williams to try and cheer him up.
Actually Schindler could only provide a couple names, the list was made by a bigger group of ppl including Mieczysław Pemper, Itzhak Stern, Marcel Goldberg and some more. So the "List Creation" scene never happend as it was shown in the movie, same with the scene where he watches the red coat girl, himself sitting on a horse, or the "i could got more out" scene, actually he was proud about the numbers of ppl "he got out" on that evening. The inaccuracy might be because the movie is based on a novel from an Australian writer, he wrote it after he went to the shop of one of the Schindler Jews Leopold Pfefferberg in the USA, when "Poldek" heard that the man standing in his shop is a writer he convinced him to write a book about the story, he also acted as a advisor for Thomas Keneally, went with him to places in Europe like Krakow, Auschwitz or Brünnlitz, Keneally was a lucky catch for him, as he already unsuccessfully tried to convince screenwriters and filmmakers for years, with the book Pfefferberg then finally was also involved to convince Spielberg to make a movie out of Keneally's book.
I have always said I would never watch this film again after the first viewing. It’s just too much to comprehend. But I have now seen it at least a dozen. Mainly to show friends that are not aware of the atrocities that were committed, and be close for support. It keeps me humble, and always aware if things in society start drifting to this kind of behaviour. Don’t let hate get you! Always be loving.
My grandfather was part of the Third Army under General Patton when Buchenwald concentration camp was liberated. He never talked about what he saw there to anyone in the family except to say,”I didn’t know people could do that to other people.”
This is one of cinema's most important films. Thanks for braving through this. If you don't feel outraged and heartbroken watching this, you're not human. I had some big man tears with you and I've seen this multiple times. And Blank, I see what you're doing with the movie choices the last few weeks and I have to say, I applaud your efforts. I know what you guys are about and I'm with you. I appreciate you guys like brothers. I only wish I could hang out with you guys in person. Nothing but good will, good talks, and lots of laughs. Thank you guys for making a space like you have on here. You guys would be welcome at my house as family. Take care guys.
the lady architect he shot...she couldnt win - shot if she told them they were wrong and shot if it collapsed....at least she tried to save lives in preventing a collapse :(
When John Williams saw the finished film before he made the music he told Spielberg, “you need a better composer than me for this film” and Spielberg said “I know but they’re all dead”. Funny but Also a compliment. Meaning John Williams was the greatest a living composer to him.
A few things I want to say to you J. One, thank you for watching such a tremendously great movie. Two, getting angry at the inhumanity that is shown shows that you have a heart. And seeing how you react, it's a good heart that truly cares. Three, your statement "I will never watch this again" yeah that's a normal thought for anyone that's seen this.... Your reaction was the most i have seen of this film since I first watched this years ago. Four (and last) yes. Go watch some cartoons or a comedy. For a mental cleanse. You're a good man, J. Love your videos
I thought I'd never watch this movie again but I showed it to students in my Holocaust Literature class. Rather than watch the screen, I watched their faces. As I listened to your reaction, I played solitaire on another screen until the final scene in at Schindler's grave. That didn't stop the tears or the gut clinching as if I was seeing it again. I think we need to feel these emotions for the people who had to endure the reality. We need to bear witness. You are a good human being and a strong man for witnessing.
It’s a little more nuanced than that-it wasn’t Thomas Keneally, the author of “Schindler’s Ark,” who was trying to persuade Spielberg, but Poldek Pfefferberg, a Jewish immigrant who worked in Beverly Hills, California, who persuaded Keneally to write the book in the first place because Pfefferberg was so persistent in getting Schindler’s story told. In fact, in the credits for the movie Schindler’s List, he is credited as a consultant (under the name he took when immigrating to America, Leopold Page), as he also helped Spielberg when he agreed to make the movie. Another fact about Poldek Pfefferberg was that he was also one of the Jews that Schindler saved. He even shows up as a character in the movie, and even gets a scene where he is called the “little Polish clicking soldier”.
@@Gradyolson No, it was Mila Pfefferberg. Her husband (Poldek) was the one who had pushed for the story to be written as a book, and then adapted as a movie. He was a consultant on the movie set. Poldek is the one cleaning the road of the suitcases during the ghetto extermination. Her wife Mila was the one who refused to go to the sewers with him.
Omg I have watched quite a few reactions to this film Schindler‘s list but your reaction really tore at my heartstrings. I sobbed when you sobbed and especially then when your dogs knew how much your heart was aching tore at my heartstrings even more - thank you so much for sharing and people like you restores my faith back in humanity. ❤️❤️
Thank you, fam. Means more than the actual money when people show this type of love. This is why J says we have the best family on YT on literally every video. Can't say thanks enough.
Empire of The Sun is another amazing Spielberg WW II movie that needs more love. It's like Pinocchio in World War II Japan with a displaced Brit kid Christian Bale & 2 American con artists (Malkovich & Joey Pantiliano) trying to find Bale's character's parents. It's more adventurous like Indy so lighter then Schindler/SPR but more reverent then Indy. Amazing movie IMO
Something to know about this horrific period, that will make you cry and warm your heart at the same time; There were so many people, across so many countries, doing what they could to save people. From smugglers, army officers, foreign diplomats... The list goes on. They saw wrong and they did what they could to make it right. And I know when I watch this movie, I remind myself that he was one of many trying to do right in the face of insurmountable odds, and all of them saved who they could for as long as they could.
17:02 Yes. They were literally removing their teeth in order to take the gold fillings out of them. That’s how little they view them as humans. They would just take parts from them.
I don't know which I should be more surprised/angry at, the people who are surprised by the events in this movie (whether learning about it for the first time or knowing about it but never seeing it depicted), or that there are people who deny it ever happened (I know Jay is not doing that, but I have seen comments in other reactions with people saying it never happened).
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Please do a reaction to The Wild Robot.
Morgan and Morgan?! Movin On Up, J!!
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React to Starman, Beastmaster, & enemy minds. Want a comedy, try inner space.
@@EOMReacts the crazy thing is from reading the book, and they toned down Goethes evil for the movie.
imagine the feeling when you pick up the script to play Lord Voldemort and you're like "well at least this villain is less evil than the last one they had me do."
Voldemort is a weak clown of a villain. In the pantheon of fictional villains Voldemort is at the bottom kissing the feet of real villains.
@@reconsoldier135 na verdade o Valdemorte é baseado nos nazistas. A ideologia dos sangues puros, os anti sangues sujos...os comerciais da morte representando a SS. A muitos preconceitos em Harry porter.
You're forgetting Francis Dollarhyde from Red Dragon.... He was pretty damn evil in that too
Imagine finding out the worst villain of your career was "watered down". I'll just say I'm glad we didn't see much of his dogs and leave it at that.
@reconsoldier135 he couldn't even take over a highschool😂
Thank you for watching this. My grandfather was one of the _Schindlerjuden_ aka a “Schindler Jew.” If it wasn’t of Schindler, I wouldn’t be here today enjoying your content. ❤️
God bless you. Am Israel Chai!
💜💜💜💜💜
We are ALL blessed because you are here today with us! Much Love and Gods Blessings Always!!
Glad you're here as a testament to your grandfather.
Wow, that’s amazing! ❤
It’s so sweet that Romulus can sense when you are upset even if he can’t see you or your voice hasn’t changed much yet.
I was thinking the same thing! How sweet! ♥️
Romulus is da bomb 😁
I was bout to say something similar. Its so cute.
Yes, he came right in to check on you.
no baby, you didn't have liam neeson's character messed up. at the start he really was a cold person who only cared about making money. over the course of time, he did change. he grew a heart.
and i will never forget the first time i saw this. it was in the theater, and my car was in the shop so my mother dropped me off at the movies. when she picked me up, i was numb and silent, and she asked me tentatively how the movie had been, and i just burst into tears. couldn't form words until we got home. i don't recall what i said, but she understood how i felt anyway. the tears had said plenty.
@jenniferri7735 oh baby.
I feel like this is the kind of experience that definitely needs a guide.
Someone who knows the history to fill that in and also to hold the viewers hand.
I saw it in the theater too but went with a group so we'll versed on the history. My grandfather was a doctor in a DP liberation camp after the camps were liberated who help nurse people back and find new lives. I'd grown up with people he helped coming to our home to show him their families and have a moment with someone who understood their experiences.
These connections are getting further and further away.
That had to have been so hard on your own to process this.
When I saw this in the theater, after the 😢movie ended we all just sat there silently till the credits ended then filed out of the theater in silence.
My dad took me to see this in 6th Grade. My parents DGAF about what I watched. Now I’m a history teacher. This movie did something to me as a person
I was too young when it first came out, but in the late '90s I remember one of the major networks got special FCC clearance to air the entire thing completely uncensored with extremely limited commercials. I was in middle school, and we had just covered the Holocaust at school. I asked my parents if I could watch it during that special broadcast, and they said yes and watched it with me. I was a mess just like most people who watch it. It really is one of the most important movies ever made, and one that you really need to watch at least once in your life.
I used to wonder how things got to that point back in the '40s. Given the last few years, I don't anymore. 😕
I'm thinking about it after watching it again, if he was so cold and only cared about money at the beginning, why did he pick the guy with one arm who was old? He should have said no because it would lose him profit.
I haven't wanted to give a dude a hug so bad in a long time. Thank you for doing this film. It's important.
He's a big-hearted soul.
You're as sweet as his dog. :-)
Its pure fiction. Just like the book its based on.
@@JCLoud-ix9jjyou’re pure fiction.
@@JCLoud-ix9jjit is NOT!!! Stop being terrible! How dare you say this is fiction! EOM, block this hateful person!
My grandfather escaped from a prison camp and was caught by the Russian army. After he told them of his escape they were so impressed that they let him go with a letter to let him pass if he ran into more Russians. Luckily he eventually made it to America where he met my grandmother and lived to 93.
Wow that's both incredible, and horrifying. I can't imagine being in his shoes, escaping in a war torn country, with the possibility of being killed even by "allied" nation's armies being very high. And then being lucky enough to meet some people who helped him out, only to start the new journey by yourself to the literal other side of the earth with basically nothing. Absolutely insane.
“When your history don’t matter, it’s not essential” wow that hit hard
There’s a book written by Amon Goeth’s granddaughter called “My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me”. Her name is Jennifer Teege, and she lays out how she dealt with the shock of learning her family’s history.
@@willgold9989 relatable. Unfortunately my family were nazis back then and it was hard to learn about it. But history must be learned no matter how horrible, so it can't be repeated
@@willgold9989 I have this book.
I was crying along with you, this is a movie everyone should watch. It's important we learn history to not let it repeat itself. I just wanted to give you a big hug, it's a tough watch but a necessary one.
Yes but we seem to still repeat history. 🤦♂️
I wish things would be different in the Gaza Ghetto…
History is being repeated right now in Gaza.
@@JM-er2ylI've been looking through the comments to see if anyone would mention this.
People still deny this ever occurred…….
21:18 - Rom raising up, realizing that you're getting upset, and then coming closer. 😭 that sweet boy. ❤🩹
Ralph Finnes played a real-life brutal monster, Amon Goth, that was rightfully executed after the war.
and he was MORE of a monster in real life than in the movie....
@@Philmaster07 this is true. Once you know, you cannot un-know. I mean his moniker is “the butcher of Plaszow”
Amon was so bad that the WW2 bad guys themselves wanted to execute him. Along with several other guards/staff from this camp.
He broke character and comforted a few people because he was so close to the real douchecanoe that he sent them into panic attacks. 😭 I just love Ralph and Liam, they are both amazing men.
Ralph Fiennes said that to get himself ready to play Göth, he read Mein Kampf and pretended he believed every word of it. He then began to think of himself as the pinnacle of man. This let him gain weight (because Göth was overweight), because he knew that Göth would have been indulgent in all aspects of his life, since he was a perfect Aryan specimen. That's why, in almost every scene, he's eating or drinking something (or both).
I just love how your babies kept checking on you like "Dad, are you okay?" So sweet.
"I hope he get the Bubonic plague".... classic bro 😂😂
RUclips disappeared my comment 3 times. Short version is, my grandparents were both in camps during all of this. My grandpa only talked about his experience once when he was alive. My grandmother to this day will not speak about it.
We are only a few steps away from potentially having something like this happen again, with the way things are going these days. I hope we can avoid that, for everyone's sake...
That’s what’s also so bad. It’s too traumatic to talk about. But sometimes word of mouth passes down is the only way to learn when certain people do everything they can to hide it. There are literally people who grew up in Tulsa OK who had no idea about the race massacre in 1921 because it was too traumatic for survivors to talk about and it made it easier for the government to hide it.
@ugiby8377 You think YOU are in danger of experiencing this again? Israel is actively doing this to the Palestinians right now. We can go almost scene-by-scene in this movie and I can show you how Israel is doing the exact same thing in the scene to the Palestinians. If your grandmother supports Israel, she is effectively sh*tting and p*ssing on the graves of all her family that died in the Holocaust. PLEASE tell her that I said that. If she supports Israel, it's her utter moral weakness that perpetuates gen*cide across the world. Nothing is more utterly pathetic than enduring a gen*cide and then supporting a gen*cide against others.
I need to cry today, so this is just what the doctor ordered.
Oh, you DEF won't be disappointed. LoL
I feel you. Sometimes a good cry is healthy. For me one of the most beautiful sad films is The Fountain. I usually watch it when I need a good cry. It's unlike any other movie I've seen. It's unique and may not be everyone's cup of tea, but I love it.
another good one for waterworks is marley & me
The opening song is a prayer we say at the beginning of Shabbat (the Sabbath).
Thank you for bearing witness, Jay. It’s so important these times in history should never be forgotten, otherwise we’re bound to repeat it. ❤
Except we do repeat it
Burma, Cambodia, Bosnia, Rwanda, Myanmar, Darfur, etc.
@46:20 I went from ugly crying to instant laughs and awe. All thanks to your sweet dog in the background.
And then when he said "yank on him a couple of times." I laughed real good at that.
@TinyToadSage me too 🤣
You have big heart and empathy. Respect to you, man. Thank you for reacting to this movie. Your co-pilot checking on you was so cute!
The biggest toughest man needs to be the little spoon sometimes...we all need it sometimes
This is a movie that is truly hard not to get emotional to. The "I could have done more" scene is just one of many that can make one shed tears, and I surey do. The horror of this history is just so brutal, but necessary to know.
We love you brother❤ Thank you for taking the time to learn about this story🙏 Hope everyone has a wonderful rest of their day❤
What else needs to be said about this masterwork of cinema that hasn't already been said?
Spielberg making this AND Jurassic Park in the same year is another astounding aspect of this whole thing.
It will never not be insane to me that he pulled off those two movies in a calendar year.
@@EOMReacts365 days is a lot of days for most people, but if you're a director making a big-budget, effects-driven dinosaur movie and a large scale Holocaust drama, I couldn't imagine the sheer level of time management involved in the process haha
Spielberg has long tended to make movies in pairs fairly close together. But same-year release for these two is simply outstanding, and on top of that is the sheer quality and reception of each movie.
He also got his best friend George Lucas to fill in the last few weeks of post production of Jurassic Park so he could leave to start Schindlers List 🙂
Not just the same year. At the same time.
I try to watch this whenever the algorithm send it to me. Your tears are moving and your dogs being so in tune with your emotions is incredible. Thank you
Glad you enjoyed!
Sir, your reaction was perhaps the most honest and heart felt I have ever seen. Thank you, and God Bless for watching.
I'm half Jewish and never watched this movie because I know some of my ancestors died in the Holocaust and it would be too tough. Now that a reactor like J is covering it I might watch but I don't know. Here's a comment to support the video regardless.
You need to watch the movie, the list is something you should know about.
@@ryanbuckley5529I might but if I don't I'm going to read about it.
First time I have seen a whole reaction to it. Only watched once by myself before.
It's hard. It's worth it. I was 13 when my parents took me. It has been one of the best films I've come across. It should be mandatory in schools.
My condolences.
Treating people as less than to the point that you no longer see them as human...😢
Everything old is new again.
@@jrm48220Exactly. That's what critical race theory and this Marxist DEI nonsense does. It gets people to turn against each other instead of coming together. Distract the people with one hand while the other one does something else.
@@raramonty5217 And in fact one of the first things hate groups do is to try to dehumanize their targets. Calling them animals, vermin, scum, etc. The dehumanization is among the first few steps in the famous “ten stages of genocide”. 😢
This will be a hard one. You have so much empathy for others not to be effected deeply by this story. The fact its a true story makes it all the more horrific
I’m so glad you didn’t wait to reach 100k subscribers. I hope this shows others how much you care and see a jump in your numbers. X
I've never seen a reaction to Richard Attenborough's Gandhi. The guy who plays Isaac Stern, Ben Kingsley, stars in Gandhi and the movie is one of the most impressive life stories ever made. It had to be independently funded and holds the record to this day of the most extras ever shot on film, which will never be broken because of technology.
It’s fascinating that Ben Kingsley is so ethically ambiguous that he’s cast as an Italian, Persian, Jewish, Indian, etc. I believe his background is half British, half Indian so today I would think it would be controversial to cast him as historical figures Gandhi and Stern.
Sexy Beast is another excellent movie he stars in.
@@jeanallan8106he was also in enders game where I believe he was cast as Maori (I might be wrong though)
This movie is shown uninterrupted in Germany. Say what you want about the Germans, but at least they acknowledge their past, the Japanese hide theirs.
We hide ours too. How many history books still teach about Manzanar or the Trail or Tears?
Germans acted like they didn't know about those camps, even when they lived 3 km away. "Wir Haben Es Nicht Gewusst".
The (sometimes fannaticly) cooperation from big companies, who weirdly enough never really had to answer for it.
Above that the campguards and others got to live a long, free life, with pension. Again, Pension.
The government knew where they lived, they send them money. They started arresting them when they were 85, secretaries included. But indeed they showed the whole movie.
@@jrm48220 same as us Canadians. We didn’t learn about the atrocities in the residential school system until my last couple years of highschool. I graduated in 2021. Yeah it’s fucked up.
or like subhuman america does.
@@jeff8366 They did not acknowledge anything. My many examples keep getting taken of, but whatever.
Winner of 7 Oscars including Best Picture
One of the most important and most powerful movies ever made.
Here a funny fact : Armon Goeth granddaughter is a black woman!!
He is her maternal grandfather…she boar the last name Goeth until she was adopted. She found out by chance!! She picked up a book…her mama was in it !!
She has a book called “My grandfather would have shot me”.
You can’t tell me that God doesn’t have a sense of humor.
OMG I saw a documentary on that! HE was the grandfather?? Oh sweet baby Jesus and the grown one too! You know what F him in the deepest pits of h3ll there are. That scum who is lower than the most worthless cockroach has a BLACK QUEEN for a granddaughter!! I do love that little piece of justice!
A great movie of great importance. To think there are still people around denying the Holocaust. Neeson was brilliant here. Had movies before (Darkman would be a great one), but this one here put him really on the map. And Ralph Fiennes was scary good. They even toned down the character of Amon Goeth for the movie, the real one was even worse. A movie that everyone should see once.
Hotel Rwanda is another good true story, and Knights Of The south Bronx is another good true story but it's about school kids being failed by the school state until a relief teacher teaches them by also teaching them to play chess
Thank you for this. It's not an easy watch, but it's important. It's a reminder that sometimes all it takes is for one soul to stand up and make a difference. One of the best films ever made in my own humble view. Not meant to entertain, but to make you reflect, ponder and think. In the eyes of God, no one is without significance.
The ending scenes did feature the real people, along with the actors that played them. "There will be generations because of what you did " is no exaggeration.
It was atrocious and today there is still great atrocities happening and being swept under the rug, but true history is far more complex than most have been led to believe.
Normally I watch to see you cry and show emotion, but this time I feel like all I’m watching is someone being taught history the hard way, and those tears hurt my soul. You’re a beautiful soul, so this is tough for me to react to as a historian.🙁🫣
He really is
@EOM Thank you Thank you Thank you, we must never forget and we must never become apathetic. Hate is on the rise and unless people stand up for each other it is going to get far far worse. JL your heart is amazing, never loose it
This and Saving Private Ryan are companion films to me, depicting both halves of that terrible war, from the perspective of the victims and the brave men who fought to liberate them.
To show how much Spielberg is the GOAT, he made this masterpiece and Jurassic Park simultaneously! He was in Poland making Schindler's List while overseeing the making of JP via video calls to the crew. Needless to say after it was all over he was physically and emotionally drained and took a long break from filmmaking.
He also took no pay for making it, it was a very personal film for him.
Amazing and beautiful to me that your copilots anticipate and sense when you are overcome with emotion. But this was the first time I noticed that you were furious or confused and your copilots came to comfort you which allowed you to feel the sadness instead. Love yall.
"Are you the LITTLE spoon?!?!"😳🥴🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
In 1997 Schindlers list was shown uncensored on NBC with no commercials and an intermission. I remember being a teen and watching it for the second time. It had the same feeling, I had the first time watching it. I understood the cruelty and savageness of it all but I could never understand the indifference and nonchalant behavior. I know humans can be cruel and like a wild animal. It’s all over our human existence. The Indifference, I had never seen.
The entire movie was disturbing, but that last scene with the survivors, alongside the actors who portrayed them, makes me bawl every time.
Just curious if you've seen the original mini-series ROOTS before. It aired on TV in '76.
Another superb film for you to eventually watch is The Pianist.
Thanks for sharing your reactions with us.
Good honest reaction, man. Stressed and angry is exactly how I felt everytime I watch this movie and I think you should watch it every now and then to remind yourself to never let something like this to ever happen again, especially in the US in these times. In some European school districts, this movie is required watching.Your dogs are sweet and are so sensitive to your moods.
This is THE most difficult movie to watch, but needs to be seen. So well done. When it came out my brother, father, and I went to see it. The two rows in front of us were filled with biker guys straight out of Sons of Anarchy. We all were sniffling together.
Thank you for taking this one on. ❤
OMGOODNESS. One of my FAVORITE movies. I'm sitting at the doctor's office with a headset on cuz I can't miss this.
Man my history teacher took our whole class to the movies to see this in '93 when it came out. At the end most of the class was crying. It took everything in me to keep from shedding.
My man had Romulus STRESSING with this movie. What a good doggy! ❤
Such a heartfelt reaction 😢 Here in the Netherlands this movie is shown in history class at high schools..I think it should be in every country 💫
I watched this in history class in the US (West Virginia) when I was in high school. This was two years after the movie was released and many parents were against it being shown, but we watched it anyway. We all cried, we all had so many questions about HOW this was allowed to happen. It was a topic of discussion for weeks. Explaining injustice like this, crimes against humanity like this is so important so the next generation does better.
well america loves to put all the horrible subhuman shit they did in history under the rug so nobody finds out. Typical subhumans.
16:35 - nearly everybody seems to miss this. Oskar _is,_ in fact, beginning to care about more than just the money; but he is not yet ready to admit it, not even to himself, and certainly not to anyone else- least of all someone whose life he just saved.
My family on my Dad's side is very German. When this started happening in Germany my great Grandfather moved to America and went to fight his own people in the war because of how wrong it was.
No matter how many times I watch someone react to this I cry! It’s a hard watch once so rewatching it edited down with a reactor helps me remember how important it is that stories like this get out so I rewatch painfully every time I see someone react to it.
Oh this is one of the greatest pictures ever. I don't know how we can even call it a movie I mean Roger Ebert said it better than me it's necessary viewing.
I just started watching the video. And I already know my man's gonna need a truck load of tissues, some ice cream and a hug from the puppies.
I am FULLY Native American by Birth & Jewish by Adoption, so I feel the emotion and pain and lessons conveyed in this film extremely hard, It IS A reminder to always be kind and respect others, there NEEDS to be MORE People with the courage and mind to stand up AGAINST Injustice, Racism and what IS WRONG. And Much Like EOM, There needs to be people in the world with Kind hearts, or we Unfortunately CAN repeat history like this.
If I take 1 hour to cook a batch of cookies and the cookie monster has 15 ovens working 24 hours a day every day for 5 years, how long does it take the cookie monster to make 6,000,000 batches of cookies?
Dang, you said, "When your history don't matter; it's not essential." Tragically eloquent.
Hence why the new secretary of education in the US has said they will not be teaching the truth about slavery or the native american genocides
Florida has already changed the curriculum to teach slavery was actually a skill opportunity for blacks
Cause they don't want to make white kids feel bad.
You my man… have a heart of gold!!!
The amount of empathy you have for all these people truly makes me believe if we all had that thought process, the world would be a better place
.........it's difficult to fathom that this kind of brutality and massacre of innocent human beings could ever happen - but it did!
Sydney J. Harris once said "History repeats itself, but in such cunning disguise that we never detect the resemblance until the damage is done" -------------- God, I hope this NEVER happens again!
This was edited brilliantly. It's a tough reaction to get through copyright and still capture the level of emotion you did. Bravo!
Keep this movie in mind, in the coming months. You are a good man, and it shows.
This is one of the hardest movies to watch for me. I wasn’t gonna watch it again, but I’ll be there for you. You are always honest and genuine in all of your reactions. I appreciate it,
This movie hits harder than most because you know in your head that this all happened. For no good reason it happened
It’s happening again
That's not entirely accurate. Be careful who you get your history from there are plenty of people out there in positions of power who will work twist and bend events in history to suit their purposes and agendas Spielberg is evil. Causing the death of the young girl that played Carol Anne in the poltergeist movies. It says she died of sepsis but or an anal blockage in her bowel something like that but she was you know to death. It was Spielberg and his friends that did that to her. Remember the devil is beautiful and apparently great films. This movie was used for shock value and to tell a narrative. Yes a lot of this stuff did happen but it's not for the reasons that most people think. And the Jews are not some shrinking violet some little old lady that got hurt by some mean old man. They give just as good as they get, sometimes more so due to all their influence in the top positions of power finance film industry music industry etc, it's almost like they control the world....... 6:14
I would never watch this movie over and over. Honestly, the only reason I'm watching it is because I enjoy watching movies with you. Thank you for being brave enough to share your reaction with us
Thank you for bearing witness. This is such an important movie and I’m so glad you watched it.
You're a good guy with a good heart and a good soul. Never forget this.
is that a prayer or a song? yes
Yes, when JL asked that I answered "Both" aloud.
@@deborahcornell171same.
This has to be Spielberg's finest work. It's astonishingly good and horrifying in equal measure and what it makes it even more disturbing is that it's truthful, although it only scratches the surfaces of the atrocities committed.
Liam Neeson, Ralph Fiennes and Ben Kingsley are superb.
I watched this at the cinema when it first came out in the early 90s. No one wanted to go and see it with me, so I went alone. I cried like you did and there wasn't a dry eye in the house, you could hear people sobbing in the cinema.
This is an absolute masterpiece of cinema.
Thank you for sharing your reaction.
J ... I wish more ppl had a beautiful heart like you do!! I agree human nature shouldn't be this evil. The world is hard enough without all if us fighting each other. Whoever is reading this I love you, you are loved have a beautiful day or night!! 🙏🏽🤍
Thank you for reacting to this movie. It was difficult to watch you suffer but just know that you are not alone. Anyone with a heart that watches this suffers.
It is an ongoing struggle to prevent this from continuing to happen around the world.
Thank you as always for such a slulful reaction.Watching you get upset is very touching, god bless you.
Hope you feel better later.Love to you abd yiur little buds.🤍💌
“It will take more than that”. Chills and tears every time.
I read somewhere that the movie good morning Vietnam was being filmed at the same time of this movie.
Apparently Robin Williams would visit the set for this movie and tell jokes to cheer up the cast and crew because of how dark and heavy this movie is.
Good Morning Vietnam came out it 1987. This film came out in 1993.
The movies were made 6 years apart, so Robin Williams would've had to take very long breaks between filming to go cheer the Schindler's List set up
Close... :) Good Morning, Vietnam was from 1987, 6 years before the release of Schindler's List. Spielberg would call Robin Williams to try and cheer him up.
I have watched this movie many times, I think it should be seen many times so the message is remembered so we never forget.
The thing that amazed me, the most, was Schindler knew every single person's name.
Another very good movie, is The Boy in the Striped Pajamas. 💙
Actually Schindler could only provide a couple names, the list was made by a bigger group of ppl including Mieczysław Pemper, Itzhak Stern, Marcel Goldberg and some more. So the "List Creation" scene never happend as it was shown in the movie, same with the scene where he watches the red coat girl, himself sitting on a horse, or the "i could got more out" scene, actually he was proud about the numbers of ppl "he got out" on that evening. The inaccuracy might be because the movie is based on a novel from an Australian writer, he wrote it after he went to the shop of one of the Schindler Jews Leopold Pfefferberg in the USA, when "Poldek" heard that the man standing in his shop is a writer he convinced him to write a book about the story, he also acted as a advisor for Thomas Keneally, went with him to places in Europe like Krakow, Auschwitz or Brünnlitz, Keneally was a lucky catch for him, as he already unsuccessfully tried to convince screenwriters and filmmakers for years, with the book Pfefferberg then finally was also involved to convince Spielberg to make a movie out of Keneally's book.
I have always said I would never watch this film again after the first viewing. It’s just too much to comprehend.
But I have now seen it at least a dozen. Mainly to show friends that are not aware of the atrocities that were committed, and be close for support. It keeps me humble, and always aware if things in society start drifting to this kind of behaviour. Don’t let hate get you! Always be loving.
I have watched this movie many many times, always with someone who has never seen it before, because people need to know, they need to see it.
My grandfather was part of the Third Army under General Patton when Buchenwald concentration camp was liberated. He never talked about what he saw there to anyone in the family except to say,”I didn’t know people could do that to other people.”
This is one of cinema's most important films. Thanks for braving through this. If you don't feel outraged and heartbroken watching this, you're not human. I had some big man tears with you and I've seen this multiple times. And Blank, I see what you're doing with the movie choices the last few weeks and I have to say, I applaud your efforts. I know what you guys are about and I'm with you. I appreciate you guys like brothers. I only wish I could hang out with you guys in person. Nothing but good will, good talks, and lots of laughs. Thank you guys for making a space like you have on here. You guys would be welcome at my house as family. Take care guys.
It's fiction, you don't have to get that worked up about it lol
@ahoyforsenchou7288 Oh, you're one of those idiot Holocaust deniers? Get bent.
@@ahoyforsenchou7288You one of those foolish deniers? You don't have anything of relevance to say.
Why are you guys deleting my replies? But you sit there and let this SOB deny the Holocaust?!
one of the best movies ever made. first and only time i was in a theatre and at the end everyone in the theatre got up and clapped.
the lady architect he shot...she couldnt win - shot if she told them they were wrong and shot if it collapsed....at least she tried to save lives in preventing a collapse :(
It's a brutal film, respect for giving it a go, and filming yourself. I ugly cried and remembered the film all over again.
Top 3 John Williams scores. It’s beautiful. His other works are awesome too but this score, is beautiful.
When John Williams saw the finished film before he made the music he told Spielberg, “you need a better composer than me for this film” and Spielberg said “I know but they’re all dead”. Funny but Also a compliment. Meaning John Williams was the greatest a living composer to him.
A few things I want to say to you J. One, thank you for watching such a tremendously great movie. Two, getting angry at the inhumanity that is shown shows that you have a heart. And seeing how you react, it's a good heart that truly cares. Three, your statement "I will never watch this again" yeah that's a normal thought for anyone that's seen this.... Your reaction was the most i have seen of this film since I first watched this years ago. Four (and last) yes. Go watch some cartoons or a comedy. For a mental cleanse.
You're a good man, J. Love your videos
You should follow this up with the pianist.... maybe after watching a couple happy movies.
Also, the boy in the stripped pajamas…..excellent
I thought I'd never watch this movie again but I showed it to students in my Holocaust Literature class. Rather than watch the screen, I watched their faces. As I listened to your reaction, I played solitaire on another screen until the final scene in at Schindler's grave. That didn't stop the tears or the gut clinching as if I was seeing it again. I think we need to feel these emotions for the people who had to endure the reality. We need to bear witness. You are a good human being and a strong man for witnessing.
Interesting Fact. The writer of the book called Steven Speilberg's office EVERY day for 11 years before he picked up.
It’s a little more nuanced than that-it wasn’t Thomas Keneally, the author of “Schindler’s Ark,” who was trying to persuade Spielberg, but Poldek Pfefferberg, a Jewish immigrant who worked in Beverly Hills, California, who persuaded Keneally to write the book in the first place because Pfefferberg was so persistent in getting Schindler’s story told.
In fact, in the credits for the movie Schindler’s List, he is credited as a consultant (under the name he took when immigrating to America, Leopold Page), as he also helped Spielberg when he agreed to make the movie.
Another fact about Poldek Pfefferberg was that he was also one of the Jews that Schindler saved. He even shows up as a character in the movie, and even gets a scene where he is called the “little Polish clicking soldier”.
Thank you J & Blank. This is literally is the hardest film to endure. But everyone on this planet needs to see it at least once.
one of Schindlers Jews was brought to set and was frozen in fear of Ralph fiennes because he reminded her so much of the real goeth when in costume
If you look up a picture of him, Fiennes looks a lot like goethe.
If I remmeber correctly it was Hersch who had a panic attack when she saw him.
@@Gradyolson No, it was Mila Pfefferberg. Her husband (Poldek) was the one who had pushed for the story to be written as a book, and then adapted as a movie. He was a consultant on the movie set.
Poldek is the one cleaning the road of the suitcases during the ghetto extermination. Her wife Mila was the one who refused to go to the sewers with him.
@@daedalron Thank you for the update I honestly couldn't remember who it was specifically.
Yo man your dog is super intuitive,he got your back.
This is one of those he will watch once and never watch again, like Green Mile. It's a tough watch.
You already know. LoL
Omg I have watched quite a few reactions to this film Schindler‘s list but your reaction really tore at my heartstrings. I sobbed when you sobbed and especially then when your dogs knew how much your heart was aching tore at my heartstrings even more - thank you so much for sharing and people like you restores my faith back in humanity. ❤️❤️
Spielberg was in such a rush to start Schindler's List that he left post-production of JP to some guy named George Lucas.
Thanks!
Thank you, fam. Means more than the actual money when people show this type of love.
This is why J says we have the best family on YT on literally every video. Can't say thanks enough.
Empire of The Sun is another amazing Spielberg WW II movie that needs more love. It's like Pinocchio in World War II Japan with a displaced Brit kid Christian Bale & 2 American con artists (Malkovich & Joey Pantiliano) trying to find Bale's character's parents. It's more adventurous like Indy so lighter then Schindler/SPR but more reverent then Indy. Amazing movie IMO
@@lordofthereels6790 oh that film does not get nearly the appreciation it deserves, thank you for mentioning it
Letters from our fathers, another excellent movie and the boy in the stripped pajamas
Something to know about this horrific period, that will make you cry and warm your heart at the same time; There were so many people, across so many countries, doing what they could to save people. From smugglers, army officers, foreign diplomats... The list goes on. They saw wrong and they did what they could to make it right. And I know when I watch this movie, I remind myself that he was one of many trying to do right in the face of insurmountable odds, and all of them saved who they could for as long as they could.
17:02 Yes. They were literally removing their teeth in order to take the gold fillings out of them. That’s how little they view them as humans. They would just take parts from them.
"I pardon you" to himself in the mirror...the writing and the subtext to that is just incredible.
I don't know which I should be more surprised/angry at, the people who are surprised by the events in this movie (whether learning about it for the first time or knowing about it but never seeing it depicted), or that there are people who deny it ever happened (I know Jay is not doing that, but I have seen comments in other reactions with people saying it never happened).