The "little girl in the red coat" was played by a three year old, Oliwia Dabrowska, who pursued a career in acting. She now works in Poland aiding Ukrainian war refugees.
@WillsonT0115 күн бұрын
A little bit ironic when you consider Ukraine has a good portion of nazi Ideology😬😬😬😬 And if you don't believe me, all you have to do is do some research and No, i'm not a russian sympathizer.
@RoverWaters2 күн бұрын
"She now works in Poland aiding Ukrainian war refugees" false
@daedalron2 күн бұрын
@@RoverWaters She did work helping ukrainian war refugees at the start of the ukraine / russia 2022 war. Not sure if she still does or not.
@NotAProducer8885 күн бұрын
Being from Poland, this movie is special to me. I really suggest watching "The Pianist" as well. Thank you for watching this one!
@grichard15853 күн бұрын
Yeah, The Pianist (2002) director was a 10yr old Jewish boy when the Nazis invaded Poland. He actually lived through this nightmare
@tripwire3992Күн бұрын
@@grichard1585the courage to make that movie with all that in his brain from his childhood 😢
@michaausleipzig4 күн бұрын
Greetings from Germany and thank you for checking out this masterpiece. What happened at this time is the logical consequence of one group of humans deciding that another group of humans aren't human. It's as simple as that. And the first steps down that road have been taken many times in human history. Just never that far down. Never on such a scale, never so bureaucratically industrialized. But the seed is always there, in much more of us than we like to admit. It's up to every single one of us to make sure that seed never takes root again. Amon Göth isn't based on a real Nazi, he was a real Nazi. And to give you an impression of how he really was like: He - an SS-Officer - was charged by the Nazi government - during the holocaust!! - among other things for the "improper" treatment of imprisoned persons. Just let that sink in for a second! The most stunning piece of trivia about Göth isn't even about him though. He had an affair, the woman is featured in the movie, living with him in the villa. They had a daughter, born in November 1945. That daughter in turn had a child in 1970 - with a studend from Nigeria and gave the girl away for adoption right after birth. She grew up in Germany, only learning about her ancestry in her 30s. She is a writer and wrote a book about how she discovered her family history. Her name is Jennifer Teege. The fanatic Nazi Amon Göth has a (half) Black granddaughter. That fact alone is the biggest possible "F*CK YOU!!" to any Nazi, any racist, any white supremacist and all the other scum.
@christopherrobertson80985 күн бұрын
Collette a little known fact for you. The man laying the rose and seen from distance at the grave of Oskar schindler is none other than Liam neeson
@JonathanH12535 күн бұрын
I don't think that's a little known fact, it's pretty obvious that it's him.
@PhuckYT124 күн бұрын
@@JonathanH1253 Joke You
@sianne794 күн бұрын
"litte known" my donkey. A whole lot of audiences took one look at the silhouette and could tell who it was just by looking at his nose.
@RonnieG4 күн бұрын
Yes, and the final scenes the living survivors went to Shinldlers grave to drop stones with the people who portrayed them in the movie.
@RonnieG4 күн бұрын
@@sianne79😅
@jacksonconley51175 сағат бұрын
This is without any doubt Liam Neeson’s greatest performance. The fact that he refused any payment just shows his dedication for the role.
@redviper68055 күн бұрын
My family and I lived in Jerusalem for a couple of years and got to visit Schindler’s grave twice. My Dad, my brother, and I went to Krakow, Poland in May 2006 and went to a few film locations of Schindler’s List. The remains of the factory, including that long staircase, and the hill where Schindler and his riding companion witnessed the liquidation of the ghetto. The music really breaks you; John Williams truly is a master. And Itzhak Perlman, a renowned violinist throughout the world, does that violin solo very well. There’s a documentary about Williams on Disney Plus; recommend watching it after the movie.
@LaaszloKissКүн бұрын
It was so nice to see you recognized and appreciated those fine and very important cinematographic bits holding great values. The shocking and cruel moments depicted in this movie can be so overwhelming, not so many people can still appreciate those little details you recognized ❤
@jamespfp5 күн бұрын
RE: Schindler's List as Art and Black and White; FYI, there's more than the obvious going on here with the choice to go with black and white. Film studies courses spend quite a lot of time analyzing the various shots in this film which use les obvious cinematographic techniques to heighten the experience. For example, shots which involve a railroad station and a lot of people lined up along them are probably using a long lens and zooming in. And, more obviously, there are times and places in this film where color asserts itself for symbolic and artistic purpose. This is probably Spielberg's finest and most elegant production in terms of the post-production presentation.
@joshuawebb58915 күн бұрын
The real Helen Hirsch, said in an interview, that the "hand of 21" scene really happened. Also Oskar was captured fleeing west, by the French. When they read the letter, they let him go.
@sianne794 күн бұрын
Ooh I didn't know THAT part. Off to find out what it said.....
@n0th1ng_ykt4 күн бұрын
*was captured with a bunch of diamonds that were taken from him.
@AFKeveryday22 сағат бұрын
this was really good.. and you handled it with extra care. you didn't have to, but you did. And that is so kind. Thank you for providing this as one of your reviews and reactions. loved it
@stevestoll31245 күн бұрын
I was 12 when when this movie came out and my Grand parents took me to see it opening weekend. They knew it was a good representation of how brutal this time in history, and how my generation must never repeat it. This single movie ignited a desire to know more and more about this time. To this day I watch this movie the same time of the year, between Christmas and New Years.
@ellygoffin42003 күн бұрын
The cousin of my wife's grandfather (Mordecai Wulkan) was the jeweler that made the ring for Schindler. A member of the synagogue I grew up in was one of his secretaries. A couple of historical notes: Stern was a composite of about 3 people one of whom was Stern. The showers in Auschwitz would never be confused with the gas chambers they were open air. Schindlers Jews raised money for him when he was broke and invited him to family celebrations. Finally, the are the ones who paid for his body to be flown and buried in Jerusalem.
@shainewhite27815 күн бұрын
Winner of 7 Oscars including Best Picture. One of the most powerful and most important movies ever made. When Steven Spielberg won his Oscar, he said that schools all over the world should see this film, and how it affects those around us
@xxchaos315xx65 күн бұрын
When I was a kid, they showed this on regular network tv completely unedited and with no commercials.
@pamalter3 күн бұрын
I cannot believe that Ralph Fiennes lost best supporting actor to Tommy Lee Jones in The Fugitive
@robertsistrunk66315 күн бұрын
You missed the girl in red on the cart when you said " Children, so many children"
@stevencass88493 күн бұрын
When I first watched this, in high school when they were showing it in all high schools when the mobile came out, I missed the girl too. Turns out, I’m colorblind and just can’t see it.
@BlueShadow7775 күн бұрын
You misunderstood about the hinge-maker. Goeth wanted to kill him not because he was slow… he was actually fast. Goeth was annoyed at how few hinges he made considering he was fast at making them.
@86leewis4 күн бұрын
No, goeth just wanted to kill someone. It wouldn't have mattered what the worker did.
@jcarlovitch4 күн бұрын
Goeth didn't want to kill him he wanted to torment him. Both pistols were not loaded.
@daedalron2 күн бұрын
@@jcarlovitch Considering how often he killed prisoners for no reason, I seriously doubt he only meant to torment him. It's way more likely he wanted to kill someone, and looked for any reason to do so. Lewartov was just lucky that day, that both guns malfunctioned. But considering the germans at the camp never saw combat, it's not strange they were slacking on gun maintenance. Plus the fact that far-from-frontlines camps would receive the not so good batches of guns / ammunitions / oil
@jcarlovitch2 күн бұрын
@@daedalron They weren't loaded. Every time you pull the slide back it would extract the chambered round and you can clearly see that both guns did not do so. Also two guns of those types malfunctioning is statistically impossible. Furthermore, Goeth killed many prisoners by other means than firearms.
@daedalron2 күн бұрын
@@jcarlovitch You're talking about the depiction in the movie. I'm talking about the real event that took place in real life. I seriously doubt Göth, a notorious killer, only meant to torment Lewartov that day.
@DINGO95285 күн бұрын
Definitely not grabbing snacks for this one, but I have tissues here and let's go watching
@terminallumbago64654 күн бұрын
I once heard that during filming, a survivor named Mila Pfefferberg was introduced to Ralph Fiennes (Amon Göth). He was in full uniform at the time. She began shaking uncontrollably because he reminded her so much of the real Amon Göth.
@kregmaffews4 күн бұрын
Lol
@micheletrainor16014 күн бұрын
@@kregmaffewswtf is wrong with u ?
@Pedro-sq6gq3 күн бұрын
The movie is based on a novel tho
@terminallumbago64652 күн бұрын
@@Pedro-sq6gq Based on a true story. Oskar Schindler, Amon Göth, etc. were real people.
@Pedro-sq6gq2 күн бұрын
@@terminallumbago6465 No, Schindler's List is based on the 1982 novel Schindler's Ark by Thomas Keneally.
@KennyThisIsTheWay20245 күн бұрын
Hi Colette, It's great to see you again and you look nice❤ Happy to watch your reaction to this movie !! Your reactions are always enjoyable to watch.
@andrewpiltenko94325 күн бұрын
The Pianist is another good one, i suggest you watch it too.
@sreyangovender34044 күн бұрын
A Polanski classic
@egeb4 күн бұрын
I'm cold😢
@NecramoniumVideo5 күн бұрын
In 2012, it was estimated that over 8,500 Schindlerjuden were to be living in the United States, Israel, and other countries. It's not something you think about when a single person is saved, you also safe his next generation.
@Kevin.Costner.5 күн бұрын
Only few films thats gotten me to cry every single watch rewatch reaction watch💔 1 More person
@epa3165 күн бұрын
The thing is, this isn’t ancient history. It’s recent. Some of the people who were there are still alive. Don’t think that it can’t possibly happen again.
@GeraldH-ln4dv4 күн бұрын
@@kregmaffews So? It actually happened. If you're a Holocaust denier just go DIAF.
@jonadolfsson77774 күн бұрын
@@kregmaffews Surprised you noticed!
@rschroev4 күн бұрын
It can happen again, has happened again, and is happening again. Not on the same scale perhaps, not as rigorously perhaps, but in any case atrocious . Stalin, Idi Amin, East Timor, Khmer Rouge, Bosnia genocide, Rwandan genocide, Gaza, the list goes on and on.
@epa3164 күн бұрын
@ Lefty dem
@GeraldH-ln4dv3 күн бұрын
@@assrammington7961 Go away, Adolf. and you wonder why you're an incel.
@axr71495 күн бұрын
Glad you reacted to this. You owe it to yourself to now watch THE PIANIST (2002) and also THE ZONE OF INTEREST (2023) as well. THE ZONE OF INTEREST in particular is a must watch IMO, especially as it ties to the modern world in such a unique way.
@davidnewton13435 күн бұрын
A heartbreaking story for sure, I only wish I could feel what you felt while watching it, for my heart was broken a long time ago and I have no more tears to cry.
@phj2235 күн бұрын
Oh boy, here we go. There will be tears.
@Deathbird_Mitch3 күн бұрын
I'm glad more reactors are reacting to this film. I just watched this yesterday on EOM's channel. It was incredible to see a large black man sobbing. You both understood Schindler's character arc and motivations.
@ColetteCherry3 күн бұрын
His video was so great!
@jthomann715 күн бұрын
My favorite fact about Goeth is that he had a daughter out of wedlock from an affair and she had a daughter with a Nigerian man. Goeth's granddaughter is a half Nigerian author who wrote a book titled "My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me." So his heinous legacy died with him.
@terminallumbago64654 күн бұрын
If you believe in karma or poetic justice, that definitely qualifies.
@terminallumbago64654 күн бұрын
Definitely recommend The Pianist as well. It’s also based on a true story, or at least the memoirs of a survivor.
@ColetteCherry4 күн бұрын
I keep hearing that! Will check it out 🍿☺️
@cesarvidelacКүн бұрын
People has no memory. I lost hope on humanity a long time ago but I thank you for at least bringing this part of history back for a while.
@terje43924 күн бұрын
During the filming Robin Williams would fly in and do comedy to cheer people up. He did so for free as he realized how important this movie was.
@alextan147810 сағат бұрын
And Adam Sandler's Red Hooded Sweatshirt song & Seinfeld helped too.
@jahrolo4 күн бұрын
I remember when it came out - there was coverage all over german and austrian TV, showing people coming out of the theatres... Most of them were crying, unable to give an interview or even a statement... I saw the movie first when I was 11 years old in 1995 and watched it numerous times since then, it´s always heartbreaking.
@DrummerXero6265 күн бұрын
I love you Colette!!! Please keep up the hard work ❤❤❤
@tfpp14 күн бұрын
In 1997, when I was in HS I was in an orchestra and we got the opportunity to tour & perform in Europe. We had a tour company with us the entire time and part of that tour was getting to see the grounds of a concentration camp. It was a very solemn experience, one violist couldn't even go through with it because it was too emotional for her and she decided to stay on the bus. You could feel it in the air, it was palpable. Also, the girl I was dating at the time (someone in the first violin section) and her Jewish father (who was the lead chaperone/doctor for the tour) were also there, so it was an especially poignant moment.
@tigqc5 күн бұрын
A highly emotional, well made success story.
@johnpittsii75245 күн бұрын
Hi Colette hope you are having an great and awesome day ❤
@NarnianRailway5 күн бұрын
🏆 Your commentary throughout the film on the characters, personalities and cinematography are a wonderful tribute to the film and Oskar Schindler's story. Magnificent movie reaction video. Thank you.
@ColetteCherry4 күн бұрын
I really appreciate that! This film was extremely powerful
@ReinFrozen4 күн бұрын
You are the best reactor on KZbin and it's not only because you look like an angel, but because your emotions and film choice
@blytheguy75104 күн бұрын
I cried more than you and I've seen this several times. The one more part just gets me every time. This is one of cinema's most important films. Thanks for sharing your experience with us.
@oteroair5 күн бұрын
Oh no, I just seen the cover to this video 😢. Here we go , good ta see ya, missed you.
@GEM202435 күн бұрын
Been waiting for a long time
@kimai16415 күн бұрын
war films that centre on human suffering is emotionally draining. It's fitting that you're watching it around remembrance/veterans day (my birthday is 11-11). Bravo for putting yourself through it.
@Philipp.7014 күн бұрын
The fact that they had to tone down Amon Göths evil acts says alot about him
@daedalron2 күн бұрын
The man was relieved of duty by the SS because he was going too far... That says everything... He was shooting prisoners on a daily basis. Had his cook executed because he was once served soup that was too hot...
@tonydeluna80955 күн бұрын
One of Steven Spielberg s best films! A sad movie , but a damn good one
@generic_sauceКүн бұрын
Definitely one of those movies everyone has to see at least once in their life.
@robertlehnert41485 күн бұрын
A weird bit of Oskar Schindler's background--he raced motorcycles in the 1920s, where if you survive a crash, your bones are shattered, not just broken, and post injury infections, long before antibiotics, were highly likely to kill you as well. Schindler already had the basic guts to do what he did, he just needed the right motivation.
@Praetorian88145 күн бұрын
He also worked as a spy for the German Abwehr (intelligence agency), spying against Czechoslovakia before it was annexed and was arrested once for it. His Abwehr contacts were some of the first important connections he had.
@javelldunn33795 күн бұрын
Hi Colette I wish you have an amazing day ❤
@robertherring92775 күн бұрын
As a jew, I watched it a few times over the years. After having kids I cant anymore. Told my kids I would watch it once with them. Not to ask me again. I think every adult should see it at least once. Schindler is honored in Israel as a righteous gentile.
@matthewcostello35304 күн бұрын
Ralph was really great in Quiz Show
@DarthVader-ig6ci4 күн бұрын
Please follow up this with "Come and See", a Soviet movie about the German occupation of Belarus.
@ColetteCherry4 күн бұрын
🍿🍿
@isabelsilva620234 күн бұрын
@@ColetteCherry Please be aware that Elem Klimov's "Come and See"" is a very demanding watch but it is certainly a film everyone should watch at least once.
@PrinceofPain-wv1lo3 күн бұрын
@@ColetteCherry This movie is Pure Propaganda Rubbish
@Yildirim-f3c2 күн бұрын
@@PrinceofPain-wv1lo Same as most of Hollywood.
@PrinceofPain-wv1loКүн бұрын
@DarthVader-ig6ci Soviet union did the holodomor...Under small hat control
@philpascali40705 күн бұрын
my grand father was postman and was sent for work in germany , my grand mother was making dresses and had the chance to climb on an us tank at liberation of belgium
@Venexes85 күн бұрын
It was said when they were filming or after filming, they showed the survivors pictures of Ralph Fiennes who was playing the role of Amon Goeth, some of them broke down or had severe reactions from seeing him. Something like that. But he was a real person.
@8967Logan4 күн бұрын
When they are told not to go east and not to go west after the war many went back to the home of their people for thousands of years in the south to Israel. A few years later in1948 a country would be reborn. If you hear someone say, "From the river to the sea" they are advocating the same treatment of the Jews that you see depicted in this film. The river is the Jordan, and the sea is the Mediterranean. They want the indigenous people removed from their ancestral home, because they were successful at turning a desert into a garden. What amazes me are the Holocaust (Shoah) deniers. There are literally rooms full of documentation, film footage from the camps, and eyewitnesses, and still they are so full of hate for the Jews, they deny this ever happened.
@4ksahneler4 күн бұрын
Jew is devil and lair.
@m.r48413 күн бұрын
@@4ksahnelerYou Are sick in the head. Get some help, Nazi scum
@DigitalBath3062 күн бұрын
58:45 you missed the girl in red
@ColetteCherry2 күн бұрын
I did miss it :( so sad
@Blunt444 күн бұрын
I am dazzled by your eloquent, easy speech. no cursing, or basic judgement. The faith of the few make do with our faith in the Lord Yet the horror of the easiness with how we fall into evil and grace of revelation of our sins..... is wonderfully juxtaposed. But you seem to be filled with humble discernment. I've been subscribed for a month or two but I find I quite enjoy your faithful takes upon cinema. God bless you in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ
@SarahSchunk-b9y4 күн бұрын
Appreciate the detailed breakdown! Just a quick off-topic question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
@StevePaur-hf4vy5 күн бұрын
Believe it or not, nylon stockings were very valued on the black market during the war. Nylon was used extensively to make parachutes and other items of clothing needed for military use. Nylon stockings were so engrained to women's fashion that in American cities there were parlors where ladies could go and get their legs painted with a fishnet stocking pattern or just a seam going down the back of their legs.
@stanfluellen26895 күн бұрын
Amon Goth said "thank you", because Schindler said it to the girl earlier in the scene. He didn't want to seem smaller than Schindler in front of the girl. You have to pay attention to the details and know a little about human nature.
@Beeza-om9js4 күн бұрын
Thank you for reacting to this. BTW.. I love that shirt, where is it from?
@chriscote84415 күн бұрын
This was the best Schindlers list reaction I have seen. Thank you for not censoring the language and the brutality. It makes watching along with you like I’m there with you ❤ Edit: On a very different topic, will you react to the LOTR the return of king!?
@ColetteCherry5 күн бұрын
Yes I did react to LOTR 3! It’s posted on my patreon.com/colettecherry (the uncut and the youtube version) because I am having copyright issues on KZbin so I took a break from trying to edit it
@alexthorpe65834 күн бұрын
I saw this in theaters when it first came out, and it haunted me for months. I wasn’t sure if I could watch it again. I have seen a couple of reactions to it recently, but they didn’t show as much brutality as you. Thanks for not holding back.
@robertmckenna39945 күн бұрын
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 with the rest of the family except to say,”I didn’t know people could do that to other people.”
@ColmPadraig5 күн бұрын
What? Keep people in interment camps during war? All the allies did this
@henningratjen43645 күн бұрын
@@ColmPadraig thats not the only thing tjat happend there
@scottlilley30775 күн бұрын
@@ColmPadraig GET YOUR HEAD OUT OF YOUR RECTUM!
@ColmPadraig4 күн бұрын
@henningratjen4364 I know, the swimming pools, football field, drama clubs, etc. The allies didn't have that in their camps
@Frightspear5 күн бұрын
"What are they doing to children?" Oh, you sweet summer child...
@coldflamebluedragon1965 күн бұрын
I see that everyone watching has signed up for the group cry session today
@dwichorek46514 күн бұрын
I read up on Amon Goeth about 10 years ago,... Spielberg did not depict nearly all that happened in the camp... endless whipping with a bull whip, hangings where the bodies were left to swing for days as a warning, , even set his dogs on some prisoners who were ripped apart... and other things. He felt that this gratuitous violence would not be believed by the audience and enough had been done to show the brutality of Goeth by then. Ralph Feinnes was deprived of an Oscar for his role which he found to be very difficult emotionally to play
@daedalron2 күн бұрын
Fiennes got the BAFTA, but he was definitely robbed for the Oscars.
@timlewellen63254 күн бұрын
It appeared that you did not notice the little girl in red in the burning bodies seen near the end of the film, I really enjoyed watching with you and your insights.
@Gonzalo_Almendra5 күн бұрын
Hello Colette, How was your weekend? 🙋🏻♂️👋🏻 It's a very sad movie because of its story 😞 The movie is currently on MAX in some countries! Colette will you continue making reaction videos on your KZbin channel? I miss you so much ❤️
@JayPadrig5 күн бұрын
I call this one Spielberg’s BABY
@sigcrazy74 күн бұрын
“You were making out during Schindler's list?” I remember when this movie was released. It was very moving. Its effect hasn’t diminished over the decades.
@aztecgold89973 күн бұрын
Bravo 👏 Colett❤
@donny-ni2zd5 күн бұрын
As most Irish American, I heard many old tales from the old country from where grandparents come. Know it's not as bad what the Jewish holocaust, but the Brits did us the same with the famine, just not as organized. So I sympathize. Just don't understand the hate for Jewish folk. Ok, I did have a Jewish girlfriend that cheated on me and the other gal we didn't really work out, but no reason to hate a folk.
@Yildirim-f3c2 күн бұрын
In medieval times Jewish weren't allowed to buy farmland or to practice any craft all around Europe. Christian religion had real power back then. There was not much left to do for living like trade and finance. You can see that influence of history until now. With trade and their advantage of using the widespread international community of Jews in diaspora some of them gained real power and extraordinary wealth. That produces envy and resentment as you can imagine. Rest is history.
@jdramsey4 күн бұрын
One of the most powerful films ever made.
@pedronavaja48375 күн бұрын
Interesting fact: the SS officer asking "What is your name, mother?" is credited as Dr. Joseph Mengele. Mengele was known as the "Angel of Death," and even Slayer made a song of the same name, describing Mengele's sadistic experiments.
@decariusb715 күн бұрын
Oh I’m expecting to see you take breaks with this. It’s absolutely heartbreaking
@JeffOfTheMountains4 күн бұрын
I saw this movie in 11th grade English class, and it was insane. That's all I can say about it. GREAT movie, but it hits really hard.
@reuz54624 күн бұрын
The fact that this movie has kept showing up all over the place recently.... It's...hopefully not an omen for the future.
@joeyrobertson95233 күн бұрын
Except for the Azov Brigade and the RVC being neo-Nazis within the Ukrainian military..
@Yildirim-f3c2 күн бұрын
It is. But not for Jews.
@nesshane715 күн бұрын
Unless you edited the reaction out, you missed the final appearance of the Red Coat girl, her body on a cart being dumped into the fire
@eternaldarkness62284 күн бұрын
I remember watching this movie and between my PTSD and Schindler breaking down crying.Hell I had to walk out of the theater Jesus Mary, and Joseph human cruelty has no limits I wish with all my heart and soul you guys never see the crap I've seen in my life! God bless you all!🙏
@KennyThisIsTheWay20245 күн бұрын
Your hair looks really pretty Colette 🥰
@0rangedrink11 сағат бұрын
I don't think Goeth is practicing. I think he's realizing he can pardon himself.
@gabrielr33365 күн бұрын
This movie made me cry a river .... It is a wonderful movie
@kellinwinslow19883 күн бұрын
It's refreshing to hear a young woman like yourself appreciate a slower film instead of the constant ADD slop that gets made a lot now. Your patience is appreciated. Shooting the film in black and white was a great choice. Not only does it give it a documentary feel but it contrasts with the girl in the red coat perfectly. She is a symbol of Shindler's change as a person. Just like the real Shindler didn't break down in front of the car at then end that's not the point. And sadly a lot of people at the time never thought this would happen to them. And that's when it happened. There were people like Albert Einstein that left Germany before this happened and moved to America because he saw this coming.
@MaBer-67391Күн бұрын
I heard that Steven Spielberg had a difficult emotional time doing this movie. He said that the Nazis in his Indiana Jones movies were cartoon Nazis, but this movie hits hard.
@darthaeontheeternal17273 күн бұрын
The fact That I am fully Native American by birth and Jewish by adoption, I feel the message and the lessons of both the Holocaust and the Native American Genocides Hit harder than most.
@Anon543873 күн бұрын
Would you QUIT pretending like the North American natives weren't killing each other wholesale before the white man even arrived? You guys weren't sitting around the campfire singing kumbaya.
@fightingidiocy77244 күн бұрын
I've seen 2,225 films. Only two I've never been able to watch twice: This, and The Passion of the Christ.
@PsychoMuffinSDM4 күн бұрын
Wait... This is over 3 hours?!? I have watched this movie SO many times and it always felt like a standard ~2 hour movie. It has never felt like a long movie to me!
@ColetteCherry4 күн бұрын
Right? My recording was 3 hours 45 minutes because I was pausing so much to learn and react and talk haha
@almyska4674 күн бұрын
Reminds me of something that I saw over 55 years ago. My mother's parents had immigrated from Canada and lived in a small trailer park with my aunt and uncle in the small town where I grew up. We met some of their neighbors, an older couple (it appeared to me at the time) who were quite friendly but rather reserved. They invited us over to their place for a late lunch one day. Everyone had a great time, but I noticed during the meal that the man and his wife both had numbers tattooed on their arms. They were both holocaust survivors.
@BrandonMcLean-mn9ik5 күн бұрын
Amon was Voldy!? I can't believe I never noticed or put the names...I will kick my ass forever after 1000 times watching this. I'm so ashamed. And he was my favorite, so crazy, then a switch and switch. It cracked me up so much, "I'd look at Shindler like that too." XD Yes, def. a powerful epic movie and everyone needs to see it. His breakdown at the end always tears me up. Jazz hands!!!!!
@blytheguy75104 күн бұрын
Spielberg explained his choice in shooting in B&W was because when he was growing up and saw anything on the war it was only in B&W. So he only ever saw the war that way. It was the way he remembered it.
@FabioOsorio6195 күн бұрын
Great and insightful reactions as always. If you’re interested in staying on the subject, I highly suggest to watch “Conspiracy”, a movie with superb acting, amazing diologue and so much nuisance to every expression, as it takes place in one room for the majority of the film, while discussing the fate and most horrible execution of one of humanities worst periods.
@fugazi225Күн бұрын
thanks for reaction
@SweetSchnubbl2 күн бұрын
Dunno, if you know or care, but Göth's granddaughter's name is Jennifer Teege. She is a black woman... Very smart and interesting person,who wrote a book, after she had found out about her hertitage called MY GRANDFATHER WOULD HAVE SHOT ME
@joshuacampbell74935 күн бұрын
I recommend Liam Neeson again in Taken trilogy, Non-Stop, The Commuter, The A-Team, Honest Theif & The Marksman. Awesome movies of him ❤.
@robertsistrunk66315 күн бұрын
your interpretation is correct
@Aaron-io8vw4 күн бұрын
One fact the film does not cover is the reason Schindler was protected and had powerful friends and it was not just the bribes. He had been a spy for the Abwehr, the German armies intelligence agency and played a role in gathering the intelligence information that allows the Germans to quickly defeat the Polish army when they invaded. The abwehr interestingly contained many German soldiers who opposed the Nazi ideology including Admiral Wilhielm Canaris, the agencies head for much of the period. Canarisw initially tried to lodge official complaints receiving reports from Abwehr agents of the mass killings the SS Eintzatzgrupen where commiting in Poland and on the Eastern Front. Canaris also saved a number of Jews by giving them documentation that declared they where Abwehr agents. The actions of Canaris and other abwehr agents like Schindler lead to animosity from the SS and the head of the SS , Heinrich Himmler and Gesgapo head Reinhard Heydrich(two of the main architects of the Holocaust along with Heydrich aide Adolf Eichmann). Canaris was later arrested, tried and executed after the failed July 20 plot to kill Hitler by members of the German military, the story of this plot has also been made into a film Operation Valkyrie.
@Maverick479394 күн бұрын
Do The Time Traveler's Wife next!!! You'll love it.
@martinmayhew1454 күн бұрын
Macabre way they played the kindergarten song to get the kids believe they're going on a trip or excursion when they weren't
@sgauden023 күн бұрын
I don't think 20,000 people would've been enough Schindler. In his mind, there probably always would've been the "one more person" he couldn't save.
@GeraldH-ln4dv4 күн бұрын
The sad irony is that Poland was a safe place for Jews for centuries earlier. When Ferdinand and Isabella issued a decree in 1492 that all Jews in Spain must convert to Catholicism or leave the country, many Jews left for Poland which was friendly to Jews at the time. That is why so many Sephardic Jews (the descendants of those from Spain) were living there in the 1900's. A long terrible history of being forced to leave one place to go to safety and then finding that place becoming unsafe eventually too.
@krisfrederick50015 күн бұрын
It's insane to think Steven Spielberg was working on Jurassic Park and this at the same time. This is beyond belief of cruelty and more importantly, reality. I Implore you to see "The Fallen of World War 2." It isn't fancy, no amazing actors, no special effects. Just facts. And it's devastating to see the scale of evil of the Nazi's. Remember they weren't monsters, they were humans doing monstrous things. Never Forget
@ColmPadraig5 күн бұрын
His people are brilliant at fiction and lies
@sean---the-other-one4 күн бұрын
I love how you catch yourself realising you’re talking about how to manipulate people to the people you try to manipulate, but then you just run with it ‘cos you know most of them won’t figure it out or won’t care.
@ColetteCherry4 күн бұрын
Bro you okay? You seem on edge ..
@sean---the-other-one4 күн бұрын
@@ColetteCherry All good, sis. A long way from the edge, but thanks for checking.