- Synopsis:
- During the World War II (1939-1945). Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), an important businessman, organizes a plan to become on well with the Nazis. After the invasion of Poland, he buys an industry in Krakow (1939). There, he hires hundreds of Jews and he get reach quickly doe to his exploitation. His manager, also a Jew, was the real director.
- Year: 1993
Spielberg told us the
travel of a group of people to the horror. He makes us fell
we are in
the trains under the sun and in the baths of the camps and all the
tension and the scare, making an strange sensation that make you
think about the lucky you are because you are alive.
Spielberg thinks about do
a box-office earner and make some scenes sweetest such as in the
ghetto and the camps using effects and music. But been box-office
earner means that it's bad? What's about Jaws, Indiana Jones or
E.T.? But the Schindler's List in my opinion is the best one.
With this film, Spielberg
released a beautiful work about the horror and how could humans be.
It's the voice of a silenced and humiliated people. The actors are
really good, the soundtrack one of the betters, the executions by
firing squad look like you are watching a hard documentary. But
Spielberg finds a needle in a haystack, the exception of the rule and
transform the Jews in supporting actors.
A little girl between the
people at the ghetto means perfectly the horror and make the
spectators fell like Schindler in his horse.
The girl in the red coat is the only color object, other than the Shabbat
candles, presented in the main body of the film. To Schindler, she
represents the innocence of the Jews being slaughtered. He sees
her from high atop a hill and is riveted by her, almost to the exclusion
of the surrounding violence. The moment Schindler catches sight
of her marks the moment when he is forced to confront the horror
of Jewish life during the Holocaust and his own hand in that horror.
The little girl also has a greater social significance. The little girl walks through the
violence of the evacuation as if she can’t see it, ignoring the
carnage around her. Her oblivion mirrors the inaction of the Allied powers
in helping to save the Jews. Schindler later spots her in a pile of
exhumed dead bodies, and her death symbolizes the death of innocence.
It's incredibly the change
of lights (into the black and white) during the film and the change
of brightness between the “fist Schindler” a Nazi businessman and
the “second Schindler” were he helps Jews and care about them.
I think there's a small
mistake or a scene that I would like to change. Why does he run away?
I think it would be better if he stay with the Jews because they can
confirm what he did more
credibly because if the Americans take him,
maybe they don't trust on him or even wait him to explain his
situation.
As a conclusion, this film sows the holocaust as
no-one did before. It's the persecution and extermination of the
Jews, with such an “human, generous, generous and kind” German
and it takes you to the limit of your emotions even the soundtrack
help in that situation and for me is one of the best ones.
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