Schindler's List | "I Didn't Do Enough"
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- Опубліковано 24 лис 2024
- Schindler's List. Stream now on Peacock. www.peacocktv.com?cid=20200101evergreenownyt002&
As Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson) prepares to leave his factory and surrender to the Americans at the end of World War II, he bids farewell to the workers whose lives he saved. The workers give Schindler a signed statement affirming all he did to help Jewish lives during the Holocaust. This causes Schindler to break down, and he says that he should have saved more lives.
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Synopsis:
One of the most historically significant films of all time, Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List is a powerful story whose lessons of courage and faith continue to inspire generations. Winner of seven Academy Awards® including Best Picture and Best Director, this incredible true story follows the enigmatic Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), who saved the lives of more than 1,100 Jews during the Holocaust. It is the triumph of one man who made a difference and the drama of those who survived one of the darkest chapters in human history because of what he did.
© 1993 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved.
Cast: Liam Neeson, Sir Ben Kingsley, Ralph Fiennes, Caroline Goodall, Jonathan Sagalle, Embeth Davidtz
Produced By: Steven Spielberg, Gerald R. Molen, Branko Lustig
Directed By: Steven Spielberg
In his last years, Oskar Schindler was basically penniless, however for the remainder of his life he received donations from the survivors he saved. It was enough to keep him going till the day he died.
One pay check a year each if I remember correctly.
@@James-C24 abandoned his wife and moved to south america??? Failed businesses left a right after the war??? Its... Not thier fault?
The only member of the Nazi party to be buried on Mt Zion
@@josephgarrett5693 indeed although for schindler i think his membership was more for his own benefit not an ideological one that many had.
SO SAD
“I could have gotten 1 more person, and I didn’t”
Perfect line, perfectly acted, perfect everything.
Perfect for hundreds tears
Such immense kindness, compassion and bravery in the same human being is an amazing thing ❤️❤❤
When I die, I hope I will be remembered as a good man.
Such is the hope of any man, to save all that he can.
Such is the fate of any man, to save only that he can.
Such is the destiny of any man, to save not who he wants, but who he can.
gets me every time
This scene makes me ball like a baby, everytime. Schindler saved my grandfather, great uncles and cousins. They are portrayed in the movie. My cousin Olek was the boy who jumped into the toilet to hide from the nazis. Thank you Oscar Schindler, I'm here because of you. You've given me and thousands of other souls the great opportunity to experience life.
❤❤
Goddamn
I cried while reading this
I am so glad you knew your redeemers name this side of heaven.
I hope to see you in heaven.
It is truly an honor to encounter you in the UA-cam comment section.
That is a sentence I never, ever thought I'd type, yet here we are.
That letter as good as saved Schindler’s life. Some French forces came upon him and things would have gone badly until an interpreter read the letter. It made him burst into tears and he made sure everyone knew what Schindler had done.
He had protected their lives and now they did their best to shelter his. Now I can't stop crying.
The comments section in this video is an absolute gold mine. It makes me shed tears of joy knowing how well Oskar Schindler has been loved and respected till date. He has left behind a very large legacy. God bless his soul, and may God bless you all for sharing your gems of knowledge too.
@@PersistentPureheartMe too man, me too. ❤
boring
Couldn't find this anywhere online but I hope it's true
"There will be generations because of what you did"
That fucking line my god
@@gc99289😢cry more 😢 loser
@@user-zp6ff2gr4nso incredible! He was such a great person and legacy still lives on today ❤
Yeah me too man, tear jerker.
Around 10000 people are the descendants of schindlers jew. This makes the sentence if you save one life it's like saving the entire world especially meaningful
..
Even if he sold the car, pawned off the pin, and sold everything else he owned, including the clothes off his back, he would still think it wasn’t enough
That's a good man's heart that you just described
Selfless men will always believe they're not selfless enough.
That's the point.
this comment is kind of stupid he didnt say he wanted save them all, he sais he coulve got more, because he REALLY couldve got more, you are an idiot
@@baronss7499 first of all, please try to maintain some sense of respect and second, you misunderstood the comment. OP was simply saying that Schindler still would have thought that he didn't do enough even if he had done everything he could.
In my eyes, I see no mention of Oskar Schindler wanted to "save them all" like you said
The way he frantically searches for the ring after dropping it is such an amazing non verbal way of showing how much it means to receive it.
his character was a suave sophisticated and clever businessman, and that combination requires a great deal of counterpressure to allow him to break character, meaning that his sympathies and empathies and humanitarianism had to battle through a huge ego to emerge in that pure vulnerable state of utter frankness that is capable of so much power!
Apparently schindler sold it years later
Its also making the movie more realistic and human its like a little accident that no one would think of to put it on purpose in a movie. But stuff like that happens a few times in the movie and i like that and it remembers me that its not fiction and really something that happend.
And this wasn't intentional.It happened while the were filming and they decided to keep it in the film
He was piss drunk during almost all the films in his career lol so dropping it could have been accidental but added good value to the scene
The curse of being a good person, no matter how much good you do you always feel it's not enough, because it didn't take ALL of you, there's still some of you left so you could have given more.
You can’t save everybody. But better to save the few you can than to do nothing. It’s both a blessing and a curse. God help those who through determined selflessness sacrificed their own happiness and mental wellbeing to ensure the future wellbeing of oppressed human beings and their future generations. Men like that make me question my own humanity at times. May he rest in peace.
Well said.
@@ConfusedRevolutionary
Same here.
"One more person..." I can not imagine being in his position, knowing that no matter how many I saved, I could not save them all
this comment is kind of stupid he didnt say he wanted save them all, he sais he coulve got more, because he REALLY couldve got more, you are an idiot
@Quaker 2019 wtf that has to do with it, u idiot
@@baronss7499 ... morality is centre stage for schindlers list, it portrays how his morals compelled him to try and save as many as he could overriding his greed and 'devotion' to nazism as the little girl in red was a wake up call to what was happening. ideally schindler would of liked to save all of them but of course who wouldn't? his greedy and lavish past haunts him as he believes if he was more selfless he could of saved more jews despite the clearly amazing thing he has already done.
Hell
Very emotional movie.
This man saved over a thousand people, and yet he believed he didn't do enough.
So shines a good deed in a weary world.
Willy Wonka/1971
@@malibustacy3606 the original quote is actually from a Shakespeare play. But I'm glad you caught the reference.
@@benanderson3029 Which play? I caught "In springtime the only pretty ring time..."
It's not how many he saved, it's how many he couldnt save, it's like survivors guilt, I tried to save someone and failed, I'm not faster than a car going 75mph, but I was so close that my mind can not accept that. I failed her and that's the only way my brain can process it.
@@Kajojek, way to downplay someone's selflessness.....
I love the way Stern immediately starts shaking his head “no” at Oscar once he says he could’ve got more. Stern instantly knows where he’s going with that and tries to put a stop to it immediately. It shows how close they became as friends and how well Stern came to know Oscar.
Someone said the same to me. It helps.
Ben Kingsley made this scene for me.
@@felixzayas8190 He was perfect as Stern.
Stern remained friends with Schindler for the rest of his life, corresponding with him until his death in 1969. It was reported that Schindler "cried inconsolably" at his funeral
A lovely historical fact as to how close the two became is that when Stern died, Schindler was apparently inconsolable for some time after.
Though perhaps the nicest detail of the film is the very end with the survivors and their families having come with the actors to place stones of remembrance on his grave.
When someone says, "I didn't do enough," It's always a sign that they did more than enough.
More than the majority.
More than what they believe.
"I didn't do enough"? Let that sink in. He used to be a greedy scam artist who wanted nothing more than to be wealthy. And when he made the fortune he always wanted, he gave it all up. Every penny, to save the very same people he took advantage of. He gave up everything he worked so hard to get. And for that 1100 people got to live. And he still thinks he didn't do enough. No one could've done more than he did.
This scene is my one of my favorite movie scenes of all time. The raw emotion in that scene is so close to what I expect, and it probably didn't do that moment justice. What really was said at that moment (or thought) was far greater.
Before he settled into saving as many workers as he could, Schindler was known for leading a pretty lavish lifestyle. Here at the end he is wracked with guilt, because he knows if he had acted sooner, not spent so much money on drink and women, he could have saved more. Nobody could have done more than he did, but he thinks he could have.
@@CrashB111 that's want makes this scene so powerful- because he did so much, but he knew could have to so much more. That movie was so good
This is the heaviest movie scene ever for ALOT of reasons.Although he saved the people he did, only he knows those moments where he compromised. Those moments where he thought "maybe I should at least keep the car", those moments where he hesitated, and all the while remembering those times when he splurged for personal instant gratification. This scene captures how all of that crosses his mind, the moment where he is confronted with his moral decisions all of which are amplified when he is given the golden ring from the people who have lost everything. A ring made from people that agreed to literally have gold fillings extracted from their bodies.
When Schindler pulls off is own gold pin and realizes this could have been 2 more people, that guilt must have been overwhelming. It takes a certain level of empathy to decide to save 1100 people, and with that increased level of empathy comes increased levels of guilt. Anytime you decide to be charitable, it isn't the times that you decided to do good that stick with you, it is those times that you didn't.
This is inescapable. This is a very hard emotion to deal with. I break down everytime I watch this scene because you see how Schindler overcome with the gravity of the situation, breaks down and literally tries to hide. He cannot though, surrounded by the 1100 people he saved, there is nowhere to go. Yes he is a hero, but in being a hero, he more than anyone else, knows he is broken, and this is on full display
Whatever emotion that I am trying to explain it isn't often portrayed. There are probably people who go through life without ever experiencing some level of this emotion. Yet in this scene, the portrayal of this emotion is as real as it gets.
This part of the movie ties into the ending so well... when stern said “it’s from the Talmud “he who saves one life saves the world entire” at that moment like a real hero Schindler still thought he could saved more and laments the lives he didn’t say... but then you look at the ending and everything comes full circle... he literally saved these lives and the lives of future generations
A foolish man is one who is satisfied with his good deeds, but a righteous man is one who has done many good deeds but still believes he didn’t do enough. May God bless Mr. Schindler and those like him.
@geralt7050 Nothing wrong with being content by doing a good deed, but if you are happy about all your good deeds and think you have done enough and are, in fact, good enough, than you are not a righteous man. It's a very Christian way of thinking.
Rare.
Emulation of jesus is the ideal, but simultaneously an impossible ideal for Christians. A man is not foolish for being satisfied with his good deeds. As long as he stays humble and it doesnt make him arrogant or holier-than-thou
Now that you mention that, I immediately thought of Mother Teresa! A true Saint to the world!
A righteous man is also one who has done many good deeds and has already forgotten about them and never consider he has done any good deeds.
His reaction after dropping the ring as he scurries to pick it up like he's dropped the most precious thing is absolutely beautiful. So much said with absolutely no words.
That was not supposed to happen. He actually drop the ring but it was keep in the film.
@@josebarrozo7620, that's incredible. Just goes to show how good an actor Liam Neeson is by improvising so well.
@@prithviprakash1110 And I thought it was an accident.
@@josebarrozo7620 I thought so! I thought, "Did Liam intentionally do that and stay embodying Oskar?" I wasn't sure because this is too good a movie to not have that planned...BUT THEN AGAIN Spielberg is too good a director to not just let the camera roll and Liam is too good in this role to not stay being Schindler
Yeah, I've always thought that part wasn't in the script. It's just that Liam immersed himself so much in the role, that he reacted like real Oscar Schindler would. Whether it is true or not it doesn't matter, the scene is a pure gold as is the whole movie
he was a terrible husband, awful father, a cheat, greedy, a drunk, and made one decision that transpires beauty and puts in awe of the kindness of man. humans are complex creatures.
It does not take a righteous person to perform a righteous act.
Morally redeemable moral hypocrites, yeah complicated indeed.
At that moment he realized that he didn't need to keep pretending that he didn't care about those people. And his heart broked.
"Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire" that line always got me.
@Samuel I thought it was from Mishnah Sanhedrin 4:9; Yerushalmi Talmud, Tractate Sanhedrin 37a.
@Samuel it’s definitely there. Give it a look: “Whoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whoever saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world.”
Wow.... something about how u pointed that out just hit me.. im not gonna lie. Theres never been a minute in my life that i am myself. 33 years and still just another pretender. And although right now in this very moment i can feel some kind of emotion or somthing, 5 minutes from now ill go back to wearing that mask again. And i wouldnt even care anymore
@Brian Presley had a feeling, was just waiting for him to slip up
@Samuel I know it was in the Torah
“We’ve written a a letter, trying to explain things, in case you were captured - every worker has signed it.”
Would have carried no weight until it's verified as the allied interrogators had to assume the letter was written and signed at gunpoint.
@@aeroAdvocate but they would also ponder that if that was true, then all of then would have been killed after
@@UchihaFabio Well Schindler survived the war and post-war period, making it through the interrogations. I'm not familiar with his entire biography and if the letter part helped him in any capacity.
@@aeroAdvocate i dont remember, who caught him? The soviets or americans?
@@UchihaFabio i assume the letter was written in hebrew and english/german giving it instantly recognizable weight. of course it's no proof but it should instantly raise eyebrows.
Why Liam Nesson didn't win an Oscar for this is beyond. This scene alone should have won him an Oscar
He did get nominated for Best Actor, and just to be nominated for a Academy Award is THE highlight of most acting careers. As for the winner for Best Actor, Neeson had the misfortune to run into Tom Hanks in Philadelphia, which was a great performance as well, along with dealing with issues Hollywood was far more in tune with than this.
Schindler’s List did win a boatload of other Oscar awards, though.
He didn't get an Oscar, because he WAS an Oskar
his performance was beyond what mankind can honor with an Oscar. It was more than just screenplay. This was magic, and the kind of we'll never see again. It is a priviledge to watch this movie, to lay eyes upon such greatness.
Simple, Oscar doesn't deserve him
@stevendebettencourt7651 sorry but people will forget Tom Hanks performance in that movie. Once you see this movie you never forget.
"Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire." What an inspiring thought! After saving nearly eleven hundred lives, Schindler thought it wasn't enough...His compassion, kindness and courage will be remembered forever.
It's fiction you dumbass
It was enough... it was more than enough. It would have been so easy for him to do what so many like him did and abandon those people to die without a thought, but instead he risked his own life and gave everything he had so they would live. He showed incredible bravery and selflessness when far too many either didn't care or were just too afraid. And in his later years, those same people repaid what he did for them by giving him the support he needed.
What I can’t understand is how all of those people turned into killers. They never looked back. They were never forced to be killer, they did that on their own. To send children to the gas chambers. Finding out about that haunted me for years. I just couldn’t wrap my mind around that. A lot of them were parents at that time. How could you get off work to go to your own kids and be okay with that?
I am German and I have asked myself this question since I was a kid and first heard of my ancestors' atrocities. I cannot even think of an answer and just thinking of it will always leave me speechless.@@applepie1923
Its an overwhelming feeling. About a decade ago, I called an ambulance on a teenager who had said on twitter they had eaten a bottle of sleeping pills to commit suicide. I never heard back until a decade later when she tracked down my details and contacted me to thank me for what I did. it was one of the most overwhelming feelings I ever had knowing my panicked spur of the moment decision had let a depressed young girl turn into a happy young woman. Anyone would have done the same, but its still that feeling like you had saved the world. That if I where to die and went to the pearly gates and St Peter asked what was purpose, I could say "I saved a young girl, and she's alive because of me" and that would be enough for me. Oskar Schindler went to his grave knowing he had saved thousands.
The moment he realizes what "one person" means it's perfect, it's what this movie was trying to show us, no matter the race, ideology or the religion, only one person means too much
>pfp related
I'd say Nazis and fascists don't deserve being considered people.
One person is a human being, your mother, father, brother or sister. It’s the reality. One more person saved. So tragic.
says the guys with a pfp who killed 80% of humanity 😭🤣 but i get what you mean and i agree with you 🥲
@@josh6567 hahahaha yeah! About that I really love Eren but I've never supported his decision, though I can understand why he did all that
“One more person”
You can feel the emotion from it in your heart. I personally think Liam should have been the one to get the Oscar.
But O he did, his name says it all, Oskar
Absolutely.
Similar to Andrew Garfield in Hacksaw Ridge
oscars sucks pure ass
@@tommypillay743 Aha so true xD
"Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire."
What a beautiful thing to say.
Allah said that in the Holy Qur’an
I think that's why he thinks he didn't do enough. Because he see's that one life matters that much, even looking at a golden pin remembers him of saving one more. Beautifull...
@@homex9636 it is common passage said by God in both jewdisum and Islam.
@@homex9636 well as alot of things from the quran that sentence is copied from the judisum too
@@harellevi3810 lol show us where in the torah it mentions it
When he looks at his gold pin and realizes it was worth the life of a person--a human being--and he breaks down a sobs, I lose it every time. A truly gut-wrenching movie.
"one more person... is dead... for this?" its truly a heartbreaking moment to realize how little human life can be valued at times, I rewatch this movie every year and it still breaks my heart
The way he looks at every earthly possession he owns and wishes he could have sold it even just to save one more person. Old or young. Smart or dumb. Healthy or unhealthy. As long as it was one more human life.
Pretty sure he said “a person stern” instead of “is dead” but still such a sad line
" We might call you back... "
Yeah. The way he says it is both devastating and just.. flabbergasted. A simple piece of jewellery, a mere ornament on his finger, would have saved two human beings. A father, a mother, a daughter, a son - that these mere things could equal their value to anyone else is shocking.
thats so funny because in the Jewish holy scripture, the talmud, gentiles are referred to as cattle and not as human as pure jews. so what was oskar to them? alpha of the pack of cows?
Oskar Schindler
"A Nazi Buried in Jerusalem."
The Profound Respect This Man still gets in Israel is Heartwarming.
Marmik Saini it is the irony of man, that the oppressed become the oppressers. I wonder what he would think of modern Israel today and if he would question if what he did was right. Not saying that saving the jews wasn’t right or that they are all to blame for Israel. Not at all but among the crowd he saved, many joined Israel and I wonder sometimes if he would blame himself for their actions. If he would think that it was by his hands that the many that now oppress the Palestinians were saved. I wonder what he would think...
He is buried in Jerusalem but was no Nazi
@@tomgauntlestrange he was a member of the nazi party
@@dominikudovicic3573 maybe, but he sure as hell didn't die a nazi
On Mount Zion too of all places.
I can't believe Liam Neeson didn't win the Oscar that year!, Tom Hanks' performance in Philadelphia is very good but Neeson's performance is an acting gem.What an actor!
Fiennes performance was just as good, albeit horrifying.
@@jareddoesstuff1928 your entire comment makes zero sense. 😂😂 I agree, Liam should have won, but no, not just anyone could’ve done that performance as well as Tom Hanks.
Agreed!
Agree. I think the world knows who really won the Oscar!!
Liam was really good but man, Tom Hanks in Philadelphia is at another level, still remember the opera scene where he explains the song to Denzel. Do you think, anybody else pulling that off??
This scene proves Liam Neeson was robbed of the best actor award in 1993.
nope - tom hanks in philadelphia was every bit as powerful; although i love both films - it's toss up, but definitely not a "robbing."
Facts!!!!
Tom Hanks was phenomenal in Philadelphia. It was a very tough lineup that year, but the Academy did right.
I totally agree with you.
@ChrisWolff2013 no they didn't
“There will be generations because of what you did”
Later in the ending we see what Stern meant
@Libs are Nazis my god that's amazing
@Libs are Nazis love your very accurate name!
@Libs are Nazis i watched and bawled
Also look up Konstanty Rokicki. He was polish consul in Bern who fabricated thousands passports to save Jews from holocaust. He was a member of Ładoś group, who together forged around 5000 latin countries' passports to save Jews. He died poor, forgotten and without tombstone.
@@Cephalos666 not forgotten, my friend. YOU know who he is, don't you? And now I do :)
I cried when they gathered to hug him. He thought he had not done enough, but these people’s hugs showed that what he did was already meaningful enough for them.
that pin was a nazi pin but made of gold, two people. he did all he could. i feel for him.deep one.
Well duh they got saved from being cooked.
I cried through the entire scene, what are you talking about lol
I am always crying when I am watching this scene. It is heartbreaking.
we all cried
Every time he said 1 more person I kept thinking of the little girl in red in the village. That scene and this scene is so powerful.
Me too! I think she's meant to be the demon beneath his roads, what he could have done more if only he had begun his crusade earlier, had stopped his greed earlier. Powerful film
@@viddykhaos2896 What I find ironic is that if he had been a good guy from the start, he would never have been able to save so many people, and likely would never have been in power in the first place.
@@user-ez9ng2rw9c That is a good point! Without his crookedness, he would have never amounted the power and influence needed.
Dear Wendy Rotonto The little girl in red is getting out of sight - like Schindler never ever was someone who wanted to save people from Concentration Camps. He loved money, the fruitful network and the world he lived in. He was betraying his wife with younger women. Surely, he was not a Saint, but I'm pretty sure he was a chiseler. Like the littel girl gets out of sight - - innocence gets lost, too. Can his conscience bear it?
Take care and stay healthy
@@user-ez9ng2rw9c @Vidyut Krishnasrinivas The girl in reds significance can not be overstated. According to Spielberg, seeing the raid and that little girl was what fully turned Schindler from an opportunist into the live saving hero he became.
I literally THOUGHT about this scene today, and started to well up. Hands down the most heartbreaking moment ever. To be a caring heart in an uncaring world, to know you can never do all the good that the world needs, is a kind of burden I wouldn't wish on anyone. And yet, to those brave enough to take on that burden, from the bottom of my heart, thank you so much. There will be generations because of you.
Imagine not getting an Oscar for playing Oskar.
So sad
You're right.
TBH, after seeing your comment, I wasn't in the mood to make a joke.
I can see that you are very serious.
There's a time for jokes, and there's a time to be serious.
I took the time to be serious.
Better that way.
Damn :(
Sad that he is better known for having a special set of skills and finding people. His performance in this was brilliant. No more powerful moment in all of cinema than at the end.
Do you really got a plan Dutch?
He saved 1200 people by selling absolutely everything he owned and was left in the streets and he said he didn't do enough. My heart is literally exploding from my chest, today's people all they know is themselves and nothing else and Schindler believed he didn't do enough
I had a similar thought, I'm often so incredibly saddened by how most people around me don't care about any suffering that is not their own. People even get upset at me for caring about important human rights issues (particularly the Uyghur genocide in china for example which is an issue I care a LOT about, because it's genocide...) and some even say, "who cares? why should I care about some random Uyghurs? how about my own life?" It breaks me sometimes because people are so selfish. Why shouldn't we care and try to do EVERYTHING we can do to save lives?
It's not today's people. People always put themselves first, throughout history. But there are always those golden few who can fight back the primitive urge screaming to look out for their own, and sacrifice for another.
Humans are not inherently cruel and selfish. We just have a lot of baggage.
He has treasure in Heaven. ❤
He is the opposite of Andrew Tate in every way. And it's sad how so many young people worship him today. Tate taunted a father who's son was dying of cancer and he couldn't afford payments. Tate offered to save that son's life, if the father only begged. It is flabbergasting who our young people look up to today...
In his case there's also the huge amount of guilt he bears for treating them as slaves to exploit, working with the Nazis for his business. He may not have fully known what was going on, but it still sticks to him personally.
Whoever saves one life saves the world entire
The phrase is in the Torah, the Bible and the Quran, and yet, here we are.
@@guru0011 the fact that these 3 religions are sadly pointlessly fighting each other saddens me
Can somebody explain those words for me, please? It's hard for me to understand :(
@@fried_cabbage5653 a life is as valuable as all the lives
Buddhism states the same....
If only there were more people in the world today like Oskar Schindler, there'd be much less war.
I think you got it backwards ppl like Oskar are made in war
If Caught:
Schindler would have been strung up with piano wire.
That was the risk this man took.
God bless his soul and all the people he saved.
That is a man of real courage!
Yes ❤️
💜
And you mean that literally. I know what the Nazis did to traitors. He was taking the greatest risk to save these people. A truly admirable man.
@@martenhoyle And that's if the ones who caught him were being nice (especially nice would be shooting him outright), if they really wanted to, they would have tortured him for months to make him an example for anyone else thinking to do the same as he did, and perhaps making him watch the deaths of all those he saved one by one.
I doubt it would've been so easy. Poland was the one country Nazis treated ANY help of Jewish people with death... he helped many. Death would've been an easy way out in Nazis eyes.
How can anyone not cry with this masterful scene? Liam Neeson was excellent and masterful. He should do more drama than action.
Just watch the scene 347 times then the pride and admiration you feel for the man overtakes the sad....
Then cry on the next viewing anyway cause dammit this is a masterpiece
i never thought he belongs in action movies. he's not cut for it but he is cut for playing stuff like this masterfully
@@hazardeur
I disagree slightly, I think the first Taken was refreshing and quite enough of a display of his capability in that realm. Unfortunately, he’s worked out that that’s where the money is for him at the moment.
@@Telechontar09 that's weird, i remember Taken 1 to be full of broken up shots and not much fluidity in the fighting moves which ususally is used if the actor is not able to put down a convincing fight scene and/or the driector has not much expertience in th is genre. But I might just not recall those scenes....Can you link me a fight scene that has a constant shot of Neeson doing some convincing stuff?
Tears flowed by right when he said” I didn’t do enough”😭😭😭😭
"I could have got one more person and I didn't" how broken he felt that. We need more like him. He did bad in the beginning but he found his humanity.
Just like Desmond from Hacksaw Ridge. "Just one more"
one of those he saved said in an interview that if oskar was not the type of person he was(including his bad characteristics, especially), he couldn't have done what he did.
The movie downplays it. From the very start itself, Oskar tried to save as many people as possible.
@@davidschwartz6380 indeed if Oskar didn't belong in Nazi party and if he didn't have the right connections and wouldn't have been trusted by other Nazis, he would never have been able to save these people
@Steve Watson You are absolutely right. Thank you for making this comment, I mean that sincerely.
This is a movie that should be shown in every Highschool. This film was produced in a way that had the audience feeling the true impact of what the Holocaust victims had to endure. No Hollywood cheese, no over the top moments that has you feeling like you’re watching a Hollywood movie. It is intense, emotional, and at times downright brutal.
Im very thankful that my English teacher let us watch this masterpiece. I appreciated it then, and I appreciate it even more now, 12 years later. This scene never fails to give me full body chills. Neeson, Kingsley and Fiennes were all incredible.
A true cinematic masterpiece.
Oskar Schindler was a great man, and his story should be shared for generations to come.
They showed this to us in school too, in the 90s. I honestly thought it was a normal part of the curriculum.
.... high school? Really? THIS?
I mean, college, maybe, but this film is REALLY intense.
Like, traumatize a child intense.
@@EnclavegovtofficialUSA yea High School.
You learn about the fucking Holocaust in Highschool.
@EnclavegovtofficialUSA people need to know humanity is a monstrous species that barely clings on to civility and laws and that we need to do everything to keep ourselves and our society from falling into a dystopia like Nazi Germany, China or North Korea. Teach people early that life is precious and being a good person is the exception not the rule and you'll have more accountability to not be a mindless sheep who only thinks about themselves
@EnclavegovtofficialUSA Honestly: Good. It should be shown to #1, prove that there are good people still in the world and #2, because it shows just how horrible humans can be but anyone can change.
The most powerful scene in the cinematic medium. I can’t stop crying when I watch this scene.
Spielberg did his best work with this film.
Me too buddy.
@@HUEnshiro_do_Norte Same here
Seems you haven't seen the Godfather yet.
@Miss White ,
Idiot.
@@Lirim_K fuck that boring overrated shit Schindlers list is far better
Crying hysterically for 15 minutes.
The pain. The guilt. The sorrow. The love for this man to gather and rally around him.
So unbelievably powerful.
It hurts. It literally hurts. I cried even after the Hebrew quote.
As a human being, you cannot be left unmoved. Simply amazing scene and climax to the movie
When you understand how deep is this if you are human with hearth you will start crying even when you just remember this....
I cried for 15 minutes after this scene as well... it hurt my heart and soul, I felt the aching so hard. I am so grateful this movie was made to remember the incredible actions of Oskar Schindler and keep his story alive, reminding everybody how important it is to be kind, to fight for what's right, and that every life saved matters. Every single life matters.
Y en la noche de Estrellas sin ser nos esconderemos
Liam Neeson never gets enough praise for his acting. The emotion here is unreal. I watched this film my senior year of high school in my English Class, and I have never been so drawn and moved by a film I am required to watch in school. This is why history is important. Fuck those people trying to erase it and make their own timeline and events. You can't change the past. Its called accepting it, but never forget it.
Agreed.
Agreed
the problem is accepting the fact that it was dark,I wish all those souls,all those beatiful souls gone by the words of one maniac.I cannot believe it until now,so many lives were lost and I mean the people who survived like how are they able to move forward?Just one death from my family already got me in unbearable tears and schindler?He saved a lot of them,he couldn’t do anything abt it either,If I was in his shoes I would already get shot by the nazis.
PIEKNE CO NAPISAŁEŚ 🙌🙌🙌🙌❤❤ PAMIĘĆ, PRAWDA I PRZEKAZYWANIE KOLEJNYM POKOLENIOM
Republicans
The ending to this movie made me cry so much. I’m not Jewish either, and anti-Semitism makes no sense to me.
@@Howlingburd19 Antisemitism has been around for at least 5,000 years. I wouldn’t expect it to go away in a comparative instant.
Satan has been active longer.😢@@tyrannosaurusburke
It’s because the Jewish community has had such a bad rep for destroying the lives of others and communities around them throughout history just as the Nazi’s did to them. They weren’t any different
Obviously this is a Massive Generalisation and isn’t true for the Majorty but sadly it was a Stain on the Jewish people that they could never truly escape from just like how The Germans will forever be remembered for the Nazi’s.
The Jewish people where persecuted for the Crimes of their Communities/ancestors past.
Eh, there's a thought process, here. This is not to excuse anything evil done by the reich, or any form of antisemitism, but I'll just throw this out here. There's lies that are fed to people, and circumstances that mold these individuals into what they are, and what they become.
Some think themselves superior to the Jewish people. Others are just cruel in general and actually have nothing against them, they just are evil Others look at some of those at the very top, and start loathing the common man because someone who has common ancestry to them is above them. The financial hardships of the early 20th century led to many people becoming bitter towards banks and other financial systems, some of which were headed by individuals of Jewish background. This includes a very powerful family known as the Rothschilds. People felt anger at people like THEM for the horrific financial state they were in. Now, I'm not saying these were not reasonable things to be upset about, however, this anger towards the top of the top was unjustly transferred onto just regular people instead of just these powerful individuals. A certain charlie Chaplin lookalike decided to use them as a scapegoat to give himself more power, and people ate it up. They parroted this mentality to their children, then to their children and so on. That's just 1940s Germany, too. That's not even getting into the theological reasons for this horrible belief, I don't even want to get into that.
We also have a certain tribalism ingrained to our brains and a natural dislike for anything different than us, which once in the days before civilization was useful because different = threat back then. We still had Neanderthals existing back then alongside us, which were ABSOLUTELY a threat (probably also the reason for the uncanny valley). That's the main reason for general racism and other isms and phobias. To this day there are still people who are antisemitic for the same reason the majority of Germans in the 20s, 30s, and 40s were. The Rothschilds are still powerful (and very clearly NOT GOOD), and people start to resent an entire people unjustly because of it.
I could go on, but for now, I feel I have given more than TMI.
TL:DR- it really is based off of your own thoughts and experiences what your beliefs are, and people can manipulate existing bias.
@@tyrannosaurusburkecrazy to me how people can say they’re followers of christ while being antisemitic
"Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire."
Oskar Schindler, you saved the world 1,100 times.
You know it's also mentioned in the hadith
@@outhmanejebli198 Bruh, don't. Focus on the film please.
@@outhmanejebli198 how is that relevant to the movie, this scene, to the discussion under this video or to this specific comment you've put it under? Don't take sides, try to spread love.
@k jeez I didn't do something Wath is it with you Americans when I mention the quran is like you are vampires and I throw at you holywater and between I just said that the parole from this movie is also mentioned in the quran so I am the guy with the friendly vibes
@@Wickerless the parole in the movie is also mentioned in the hadith so that's why it's relevant
The entire cast of this film was seriously amazing. Didn't feel like a movie
A moment of lifetime bhai❤️
It was too upsetting for me but Liam neeson's performance was absolutely incredible.
Indeed amazing acting. It is frustrating that Liam didn't won an Oscar for his performance as Oskar Schindler that year.
He definitely did an incredible acting.
@@fredrydmusic1 no disrespect but this performance was above any of the standards. Oscars aren't made for this much amount of a performance.
Even the roles of Itzhak Stern and Amen Goeth were seriously nailed by them.
The reason why it didn't feel like a movie is because everything is true. I hear some people say it was nowhere near this bad but it was in fact worse. Some of the horrific acts committed can't be recreated.
Couldn't stop crying while watching this scene. One of the most powerful scenes in cinematic history.
Oh tell me about I cried like a baby with no shame and I've never cried in a movie this was a masterpiece
It was a good scene - but one of the most powerful in cinematic history??? That seems a little overblown.
Me too but what i noticed is that a lot of friends that watched the movie cried the most wenn de family's had to get apart from each other but almost no one cried wenn all the people died and were burned. I think thats very intresting and i had the same thing and i think its because its so surreal that so many people die on one spot that our generation cant even imagen that put getting away from your family is more relatable. So i think it was important to have both things in the movie and not just the KZ.
I just wept watching it. Had to turn away from my daughter. Just told her about the movie
Man I cry every time I watch it
Thanks to this man my grandmother lived
How Liam Neeson didn’t win an Oscar for his fantastic acting in this superb movie is beyond me.
Oscars are bs.
Oscars don't deserve him
Because HE IS Oskar
Oh my ...I thought he won Oscar for this....this is a shame.
Well he was up against Tom Hanks that year for Philadelphia which was a huge success in it own rights I believe
I visited his grave in Israel. This was truly a great man.
❤️
An only Nazi to be buried in Jerusalem. He didn't die a Nazi. He lives as a Nazi. And thank god he is. (or he won't be able to bribe so much guard to save these people)
I will one day too.
@@siminoof how many lives have you saved buddy?
@@ethan132 silly
Everything this man did is so powerful. The look in his eyes after he says “ one more person “ is the same look he had when he saw the little girl in the red coat dead. That’s what really made this man break down in pieces after he realized that the little girl in the red coat was a person he knew he had to save… after seeing her walking through a massacre.
Especially because in exchange for that he had the Golden Party Badge instead - of the Nazi Party with the swastika on it.
Crazy this is he was originally an awful person but slowly over time realized the error of his ways. He once recounted wining and dining a Nazi that he considered an abomination but he did it anyways to trick them into letting him hide more Jews. Had he been a good person from the start he never would have managed to save so many.
I believe the girl in the red coat is the person he thought of. I couldn't really hear but I think he says, "...a person who is dead." That's what makes me think he is actually thinking of the girl in the red coat.
@@chrisbcream64 Nah he said “a person Stern”
My god this is devastating. I can't watch this movie without any tears but this scene destroys me every single time. I'm bawling right now typing this. Gut wrenching
I was a jaded angry teen when i saw this movie. And this scene broke me. I cried like a baby. It gave me hope in humanity. What a masterpiece of a film.
“ a l risa dije Enloqueces y al Hedonismo, de que sirve esto?”
Delfooos
Cuidado
Con el pentágono
Es un loco peor que Nos.
Nada es necesario para ser paz
Y en mi desAnimo siempre
Recordaré al Reino.
Por las playas libres
🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶☮️🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶
He truly knows the value of human life, because he doesn’t see the quantity but rather the value that even one person has. That’s why he keeps saying he could have save more. What a wonderful man.
Even if he did save one more person, he'd still want to save another person.
😘🙏🏻🙏🙏🏾
The absolute range of Spielberg to make a historical drama like Schindler's List and then follow it up with a sci-fi blockbuster like Jurassic Park IN THE SAME YEAR! At his peak, Spielberg was the greatest director in history, no one comes close to his range.
You're so right...I was 14 in 1993...I remember seeing Jurassic Park and Schindler's List multiple times, and it cemented my lifelong long of cinema. I know some people condescend to Spielberg and consider him just a "dumb blockbuster" director, but no one has fueled my love of movies like this man has over the course of my life.
@@keefriff99 the people who call him that are morons. You don't become one of the most, if not THE most influential director in cinematic history by just directing "dumb blockbusters"
I was thinking the same thing about the music.
Absolutely 100% true. There has never been a better direction in history.
Kubrick's range was insane too, though he was no where near as productive as Spielberg. He released a couple of movie every decade or so, while Steven made two movies in one year, both being Brak box office records I might add.
When Speilberg offered the soundtrack to John Williams, they watched the movie. Williams said, "surely there are better composers more worthy than me." with which Speilberg replied, "yeah, but they're all dead."
Not only Oskar's regretting message broke my heart but Stern's reaction broke my heart even more.. He shook his head as he wanted to convince him and settle him down with his saying Oskar was already a hero to them.
But he could have done more
@@shmosel_Congratulations: You missed the point of the scene.
Without having to watch the entire movie, this scene alone always gets to me 💔
GR ultra legendary movie
With this i force u to eatch it if you can its art
Mee too.
Yeah.
Truly
Both Schindler and Desmond Doss worked miracles in their own way. To go against an injustice or to save comrades in arms, they gave their all.
Although Doss didn’t hesitate to save lives like Schindler did
I am a 28 year old man, and I cannot watch this scene without bursting into tears. There are plenty of fictional movie scenes that move me, but it hits so much more, knowing this actually happened. May you live forever in paradise, Oskar Schindler.
Fictional?
Bro I’m 27 and if I hear the music anywhere I start crying automatically😂😭
@@Brohskey19 here, same
@@Brohskey damn you bro, I'm also 27 I just cried as well
@@shlapdat2126 He means that because this movie is real, that means this could've happened. That's what heartbreaking
This scene is so powerful because it translates the urge every human has to help others, to be a good person.
Maybe not every but most normal people yeah
@@mide8845 I mean not the Nazis, clearly
I think the best part of the movie is Oskar himself and that commanding officer who likes to kill people. It shows how war truly changes people. If the war didn't happen Oskar would have been a greedy industrial pig who only cared about money, and the officer would have been a kind and lay low man who would have settled down and made an honest living, war truly changed them.
I used to believe that. Sadly, I no longer do. We have tent cities & growing crime in the US which amount to a mental health crisis of epic proportions…fully ignored.
@@courtneyawalshThere are plenty who want to help today too. The trouble is when a full third of your country equates effective solutions to being “un-American,” “communist,” and “woke,” whatever that means, and are generally not afraid to use violence against you and those who feel as you do, it’s hard to feel like you’re allowed to do good.
But do not be fooled by these lost souls and the false prophets that lead them. To do good, to help your fellow person, regardless of race, creed, or nationality, is what we must do. And those who deny this reality of our nature (I could name names, but I think you already know who I am talking about), they will always seem in a way … not human. As if even though they may speak and holler, there is no soul present. I find it extremely unnerving to see such persons.
To quote from a popular musical, “To love another person is to see the face of God.”
The reason this scene breaks my heart is because Oskar seemed to have viewed them as a cohort throughout the movie (for pragmatic and mental health reasons I presume), but now after hearing the inscription he fully realises the immeasurable value of just one single life. Just as one life saved is an entire world saved, one life lost is an entire world lost. Everyone is a person with just as much thoughts and emotions as himself, and everyone is someone's child or parent someone never gets to see again. Those left behind will always be plauged by the thought of their child or parent dying helplessly in horror and agony; and their world will forever be destroyed. What if you would have been a jew under WW2 and he had just saved one single more person and it was your daughter or mother?
And what hurts him even more than keeping the car, was keeping that Golden Party Badge, of the Nazi Party, with the swastika on it. The car was at least useful. And during the regime, I suppose that badge carried a lot of weight - while there were millions of Nazi Party members, only a few tens of thousands had the golden badge which carried huge prestige, opened doors, made people deferential. But still ...
One of the best comments in here. The one moment I like the most is when he says: "One more person... Person, Stern, for this." He was referring to his golden pin, a sign of membership in NSDAP. To think that one golden pin (in weight less than 20 g) is worth a human life is truly heartbreaking.
I don't think there's an eye left dry after watching this scene.
Can we just appreciate neeson as an absolute powerhouse of an actor like oh my god how did he not get an oscar
But we do
@@OmarLivesUnderSpace keep doing it
Daniel Day Lewis did not get for In the name of Father which i felt was more deserving than Tom Hanks. And i felt more than Tom Hanks, Denzel Washington should have got nominated for best actor.
this pin, one more person. oh that breaks my heart. one more person who didn't die in the gas chamber, its deep man.
It's not the trinket won, it's how people are moved that's remembered. That is the power of sublime story telling.
Reason why Spielberg will remain as a legendary film maker even after several centuries. The sheer story telling involved in a ring falling from his hands in this iconic scene is insane
Can you please explain?
Sometimes you just feel the need to cry, but it won’t come out, so you find something to make you cry.
This has done that for me for my whole life.
No matter how many times I see it, I can’t stop the tears
Same
Same, I don't get how, even when I totally don't have any need to cry I'm here sobbing with him.
Very sad. People reduce to numbers and value. And he wishes he calculated them better
I am a callous thirty-something man. It's difficult for me to cry, even when I'm over-burdened with emotions. When I need to cry--when I need to feel pain and love for my fellow human beings--this is the scene that I watch.
ABSOLUTELY RIGHT!!!!!!
How Liam Neeson never won an Oscar for his performance in this film is an injustice, incredible acting.
knowing this was real it makes even more heartbreaking
ya sure about that bud?
@@drovid008 Oh fuxk off you Holocaust denier
@@bosertheropode5443 i think he means this specific scene
@@diegorubio2625 I dont Think so, there are tens of thousands of neo nazis out there, if it wasnt meant that way I apologize
@Jeff Rutt Yeah, you could say that. However, many of them died because of the japanese, Sovjets, italians, british, americans...
One of the best and most painful scenes in the history of world cinema. This is not a scene from a movie, this is an extract from one of the darkest phases of history.
Números reales 🎶#Progresiones sin Woke
😅
In Europe, it happens all the time...
👏🏻👏🏻
That’s how I felt about this movie. It didn’t feel like a movie really. It felt more like…almost a documentary but not even that it just showed the realness and horrors of one of the darkest moments in history in a very realistic and gut wrenching way. It felt almost like I was watching the real Holocaust play out in front of me and not a movie
I remember my history teacher showed us this movie in class back in high school. We had to let our parents know if we can have their permission to watch this movie in class because of how graphic the movie is, Which I told my mom I wanted to see it. I was one of the few students who was crying through the movie because I couldn't believe people would do such horrors to others just because of what they are.
You won’t be the same, if you have ever heard the firsthand stories, and truly unimaginable suffering that happened in that time.
It will happen again to the people that stay with God in the end
And history repeats itself year after year
@@TheBarefootedGardenerI feel compassion for the victims but at the same time I don't understand- Why does this one war deserve so much focus? Why was this the pinnacle of evil?
We've done this for as long as humanity has existed. There's so many that have died just because of their origin, who their parents were- On massive scales. It's just unfathomable that people don't understand this to me. Genocide isn't unique. This is part of humanity's dark side, not just a one-off. It'll keep happening, generation after generation, there will always be another monster.
@@wesleytheanonymous3751so? do you enjoy devaluing a genocide because others happen? what a stupid take.
It's unbelievable to think I live right next to the apparment this dude lived and died in after all this happened.
Frankfurt may be a horrible city.. but there lived some great people here..
"Laughs"..I threw away so much money...."weeps"... You have no idea..." This entire scene is so powerful.
Liam Neeson acting as Oskar Schindler is masterpiece. I can't believe he doesn't win an oscar for that amazing role
@@muhammadnabilhakimi9237 He should've
At first I thought he was just laughing at the fact he threw away all his money that he originally wanted, but actually what he was regretting is all the money he threw away that could have gone to save another person.
@@freddieevans1668 The oscars are a joke honestly. Never giving awards to those who most deserve them
@@muhammadnabilhakimi9237 Tom Hanks got it instead.
Music - Genius
Acting - Masterclass
Directing - Unmatched
Story - True
And thus you get a timeless milestone and warning for generations to come.
Hotel-Trivago
@@l.vucko996 I was crying and you made me laugh lol
Unless you live in the US today. Sadly.
@@sheridixon190 What do you mean?
@@l.vucko996 Stop it
When he said one more person my memory went to the girl in red. I don't think he forgave himself for not trying to save her, and later seeing her dead and disfigured from burning, thrown onto a cart and added to the pile just drove the nail.
Is your eye evil?
@@coopersheldon394 I'd hope not because it's my eye lmao
"One more person."
He's talking about the little girl in red. I wish he had saved her too. 😢 Liam Neeson should've won the Oscar for this heartbreaking but moving performance.
If Oskar Schindler was able to save at least one more person, he’ll still feel guilty for not saving more other Jews
Goes to show that one life means everything and can make such a difference.
Who else wanted to be part of that group hug? I did!
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing.” ― Edmund Burke
When he was thinking that 1 person he could have save I think he was thinking about the little girl in red. That iconic scene.
She's name Anna Mucha actress
Those scenes with the girl in Red are short but so moving. They represent the insanity of what the Nazis where doing to histories scape goats. Anna Mucha and thanks for mentioning her name, Tomek m. Such a sad but beautiful movie.
She survived in real life
This scene always makes me cry, it shows how little some value human life over material goods versus those who give up everything and feel they still haven't done enough. Schindler was on both sides of this, so it's even more heartbreaking to see how he realizes he could've always done more a lot sooner. I'm glad people like him still exist in the world, and that those he saved are still here. Even the actor who played him, just seeing hom give a flower on Schindler's grave...that part broke me for a long time.
So beautiful and heartbreaking at the same time!
“Whoever destroys a soul, it is considered as if he destroyed an entire world. And whoever saves a life, it is considered as if he saved an entire world.”― Mishnah Sanhedrin 4:9; Yerushalmi Talmud, Tractate Sanhedrin 37a.
Quoted in Schindler's List as "Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire."
PS: I came here to purposely cry...🥺 🙃
No Spoiler here: That Movie is a Masterpiece and absolutely timeless.
Universal please, this movie should be free to the world, let such moments of recollection and humanity be available to everyone, specially in such divisive times.
That’s actually a good idea. But those who need to watch it are stuck on the endless scroll of memes
@@alphaturtle3806 im here boomer, bawling my eyes out, the sheer power of this scene, the weight he carries with him of not being able to save one more, his remorse. you can see when he dropped the ring the panic in his body, loses the air in his lungs, such powerful emotion conveyed with no words, my opinion of Liam Neeson has improved considerably
What's more sad than seeing a man cry is seeing a man trying as hard as he can not to cry but still ending up in a puddle. What an amazing performance.
This scene says so much. How much is a single human life worth? Talking about something as simple as a ring or a car, saving a dozen people. Hard to imagine the horror those people went through
Fun Fact: Schindler dropping the ring wasn't in the script. It really happend at the set. But Spielberg decided to keep the scene in the movie.
It's heartbreakingly human. Spielberg knows what he's doing.
@@cherylhulting1301You really should work on learning how to identify when people are making it up out of whole cloth for attention like Jennifer is.
It implies his hand may have been trembling from emotion. It also implies the industriousness of the Jewish People... to make a ring that probably never even received so much as a scratch upon hitting the ground.
@@BrianPresley-r8x why do you think so? Check it yourself. Sadly I cant include links in comments because they will be deleted immediatly.
Its a well known fact.
My dad I a history professor, & he shows this, or other Holocaust movies in his history in film class. A few years ago while watching this movie everyone was in tears, save for one person. A young female student approached my father in tears & asked "why would you show something like that" his answer "so that my students never forget how truly horrible humans can be, & how one's person's good, can change the world". The young man who didn't cry then approached, my dad looked at him, & before asking the young man said "Thank you professor, as a young Jew, I would grow up hearing these stories. As well as those of ones who didn't make it. Thank you for keeping there memory alive".
My dad never forgot those words
Specially these days. When hate and propaganda go hand in hand. I'm afraid we're going towards flat out denial of the holocaust. The next won't be jews, it will be Latino people in the US. Right now there's a candidate saying that Latinos poison US blood. JESUS FUCKING CHRIST.
This movie is so incredible, it can't even be called a masterpiece...it is completely undefined.
The woman on the far left of the screen crying as they rush to comfort Schindler at 4:16 reduces me to tears each and every time I watch this.
I am 51 years old and this is still the only film scene that ever made me weep- still does.
Must say, I'm not a Jewish person, but I wouldn't have lasted long for other reasons. But . . . " I could have got more . . . " , It breaks me every time. I'm your age, and I wouldn't be here now, my family would have been destroyed.
Schindler had his flaws - like we all do -, but he chose to save the lifes of 1100 people. And I don't think he even cared about the risks that much. He just knew it was the absolute right thing to do. The only option he could go with. The only option his heart would allow him to choose. This is an absolutely heart-breaking scene. And it gives me hope. For no matter how bad things get, there will always - always - be people like him.
Lol grow up jason
@@l.g.3956 I started the "It took you this long" but I backed off. I was crying at Never Ending Story at 7.
@@l.g.3956 Try taking your own advice
Kubrick always wanted to make a ww2 movie, but after seeing Schindler’s list he gave up because the best movie about it had already been made
Agree.
But also best movie about WW2 is soviet film "Come and see."
"Иди и смотри" 1985
The best movie about war ever
Kubrick was very critical of the film. He said: "Think that's about the Holocaust? That was about success, wasn't it? The Holocaust is about 6 million people who get killed. Schindler's List is about 600 who don't."
@@rv2167 Soviet. About Belarus
@@Leviwosc I don't think that he was being critical when he said that. It actually seemed like a praise to me as if Schindler's List brought focus to the positive side of the situation of a selfless person helping the jews and bringing light to the fact that there is still good in the world. Plus Schindler's List did show the brutality as well through Ralph Fiennes' portrayal of Amon Goeth. The evil and lack of remorse of that character was terrifying.
"Hitler was right about everything, almost everything." -Stanley Kubrick, during the filming of Eyes Wide Shut
This literally made me cry. It is SO well portrayed! Oscar Schindler, you are a HERO
This film is such a masterpiece. It truly shows just how much horror these people experienced. Oscars reaction to being given the ring and how shaken he is when he knows he could've saved someone with just selling a possession he had. Heart-braking
Yeah having to do manual labour for the first time in your life must be pretty traumatising.
Must have been traumatising for them to poison the water in a bid to kill six million destitute German citizens after the second World war as well.....
Yes ❤️
this little pin, two people, the implications are wow but he did a lot but in his mind not enough. sad really
Lets do one about the horrors the people of Palestine feel everyday now.
@Stan Taylor el niño don't forgot to watch what they do to israel every day
there wasn't one time that israel ever started attacked them before they attacked israel
and it is funny because Hamas hurt Palestine way more than israel ever did
instead of giving food and worry about people that are living there
They wasted it for more missiles and more way to hurt israel
look for history a bit more before you even talk about palestinas
jews try to live with them but arab, only wants to kill them and throw them to the sea
iews deserve to be in israel the same as arabs deserve to be there and instead of trying to be peace with them
and live with jews together they only care about killing and terror
when jews get the country , they have deal with arab half and half
and instead of being happy with their half , they tried to get all and you still care about this ego
What a movie, what an actor and what a scene.
What an everything about this movie.
And imagine what a man in the real life too. Respect 😎
Please tell me the source from where I can see
RAVI KANT GUPTA Please, read the Wikipedia biographical article.
British Actors,truly are the very best......
@@ravikantgupta8659 torrent
Liam Neeson is Irish.
Oscar was a hero. There will be a place in heaven for this man. He saved as many as he could from a horrible. A fate created by an Axis Of Evil the world had never truly seen. Oscar, there would be so many things I wish I could say to you for your blessed work. I truly hope there will be more men like him in our time. Especially in our world today. “I didn’t do enough.” Oscar, you did more than enough. Good bless this man.
He was no saint, but when humanity was at its lowest point, boy, did he step up and did something incredible!
@@kittylover62 yeah, that’s all I was trying to preach. A man choose a side, realized what that side represented, and then turned his back on that side and went the other way. I’m glad he was able to save these people. I truly hope more men like him are out there.
We are not saved by good deeds but saved by faith in Jesus Christ and the Forgiveness of our sins. But I have no doubts that God raised this man up to keep the Jews from being exterminated because the Twelve Tribes play a crucial role in the last days. It is my hope that Oscar rested his head in peace and faith in Christ in his last moments. What he did was beautiful and only God could have set something like this up.
@@TazHall well said
@@TazHall Guess this same god was just fine with the six million Jews that did get murdered in the camps though, eh? What a wonderful god you’ve got there
Its crazy how he feels almost like he killed somebody by not saving 1 more person..
The way he drops to knees and sobs breaks my heart EVERY time
When I saw this scene at the age of 15 I wept, almost inconsolably, I’m 40 and I’m weeping now.
You a real person with a real heart. Never feel ashamed of that, NEVER!
too many psychopaths around today would find this stuff boring
Me too
I was 16 and also cried. That was in the year that I found out I had Jewish ancestors. There are no coincidences.
I saw it for the first time when I was 13 and when he motions to the car and says, “10 more people right there” it hit me and I just lost it. Same with the scene where it’s “snowing”.
the only film my late father was able to watch without falling asleep during it, all 195 minutes of it...he was so emotional while watching it, Spielberg one of the great film directors of our time!
What gets me most is the way he looks at his accomplice Stern at 2:00. Of course the music sure tugs at the heart too.
For some reason, the moment around 1:00 stands out to me. Basically handed a list of every individual he saved, he takes a second to look through in shock at how many names there are, but quickly composes himself and gives a simple 'thank you'.
Also, shout out to another person deemed righteous among the nations, Chiune Sugihara. Japanese diplomat in Lithuania as the Molotov Ribbentrop pact came in, squashing the baltic states between the fascists and the communists. Sugihara saved thousands of Jews by allowing them through the least anti-semitic of the Axis, the Japanese, and then onto America or elsewhere. He forged travel visas to get targeted groups like the Jews who were fleeing both sides, to the point where as he took the last train out of the country, he's reported to have thrown visa passes out the window till the very last second.. Estimates place the descendants alive of Sugihara's visa recipient at 100,000 people.
They weren't forged passes, they were real ones, he had the authority to give them. He was recalled to the main embassy in Berlin and then returned to Japan, but continued issuing visas out of the train window right until the end. He later visited Israel and met a prominent politician, who still had the visa.
@@michaelmartin9022 yeah, he had the authority to issue them, but he wasn't doing them in accordance with the wishes of Tokyo, and faced dismissal back in Japan because of it.
Some men have backbone, brains, & Brawn.
The Poles and the Japanese were very strong allies, and the Japanese hated how the Jews were treated
About as much as the Nazi’s hated how the Japanese treated the Chinese
🤷🏻♂️
It was a very very strange time
@@MemekingJagKinda sad He didnt Saved The Chinese , filipinos, malayans , Thai people , And literally any living being Than was in asia and during Japanese Occupation