first time watching *SCHINDLER'S LIST*

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  • Опубліковано 23 тра 2024
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    Original Movie: Schindler's List
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,1 тис.

  • @einflinkeswiesel2695
    @einflinkeswiesel2695 24 дні тому +1966

    Whenever this movie is shown in German TV, there are no ad breaks at all, no matter what TV station it is shown by, to not draw attention away from the seriousness of the story

    • @PROVOCATEURSK
      @PROVOCATEURSK 24 дні тому +18

      That both sides claimed they were chosen by god and both were proven wrong?

    • @josephwallace202
      @josephwallace202 24 дні тому +62

      @@lucasgrey9794 ok, this is just a bad sockpuppet

    • @dylpickle0927
      @dylpickle0927 24 дні тому +44

      ​@@lucasgrey9794history just repeats itself over and over, watching the same people who have fallen victim to the crimes against humanity slowly become the perpetrators of those crimes. Mass extinction event, anyone?

    • @josephwallace202
      @josephwallace202 24 дні тому

      @@dylpickle0927 "human nature" is a bourgeois sentiment that disintegrates under even minor scrutiny. This kind of counter-revolutionary fatalism and despair is what they want you to feel.

    • @lucasgrey9794
      @lucasgrey9794 24 дні тому

      @@PROVOCATEURSK The Nazis never even claimed to be chosen by God.

  • @codohundo
    @codohundo 24 дні тому +1331

    When Spielberg showed the film to John Williams and asked him to score the film, John said "You need a better composer than I am for this film", Spielberg responded, "I know, but they're all dead!"

    • @Marcus_1001
      @Marcus_1001 24 дні тому +46

      Yes! Love that line.

    • @Edninety
      @Edninety 24 дні тому +41

      If anyone's interested in hearing that from Williams, check his lifetime achievement speech^^

    • @johnohrstrom5112
      @johnohrstrom5112 24 дні тому +23

      Hell of a conversation from 2 all time greats!

    • @MrRezRising
      @MrRezRising 24 дні тому +15

      And then they called Yo Yo Ma.
      Incredible score, even for Jay Dub.

    • @Dr_PCR_Ph.D.
      @Dr_PCR_Ph.D. 24 дні тому +18

      Spielberg couldn't have gotten anyone better than Williams to score this movie.

  • @Bodyknock
    @Bodyknock 24 дні тому +448

    Liam Neeson is terrific, the scene at the end where Schindler breaks down chastising himself for "not doing enough" gets me every time.

    • @IrishCarney
      @IrishCarney 24 дні тому +8

      yep, and how gentle Stern is with him

    • @HighlanderReactionsZA
      @HighlanderReactionsZA 24 дні тому +7

      Just reading this comment and remembering the scene is enough to wet my eyes. This is one of those movies I can only watch once. But, I will watch Nat's reaction as an exception.

    • @glasgowrangers5525
      @glasgowrangers5525 24 дні тому +1

      That's my favourite part, it always cheers me up

    • @leifgunnartoth8070
      @leifgunnartoth8070 23 дні тому +2

      Came here to say the same. Tears rolling down my face... It hits so hard!!!

    • @peeweewallabowski7084
      @peeweewallabowski7084 23 дні тому +3

      He did so many great movies back in the day. It's sad that he only makes terrible action movies now

  • @TazorNissen
    @TazorNissen 24 дні тому +392

    A survivor visited the set one day. When she saw the actor playing Amon Goeth, she almost fainted because he looked so much like the real person, who was even worse in real life.

    • @MichaelJohnson-vi6eh
      @MichaelJohnson-vi6eh 24 дні тому +20

      Hard to believe he was even a WORSE monster than he appears to be.

    • @cleverusername8319
      @cleverusername8319 24 дні тому +38

      Yeah, apparently, he was such an atrocious person that many things he did would be too cartoonishly evil to be believed

    • @Theomite
      @Theomite 24 дні тому +8

      Which is weird because Fiennes and Goethe don't look remotely alike.

    • @timnordstrom7383
      @timnordstrom7383 24 дні тому +27

      @@Theomite The likeness could be more than looks. A horrifying thought is that Ralph really captured the mannerisms of Göth and is the reason she almost fainted.

    • @vanessabreuer3730
      @vanessabreuer3730 23 дні тому

      Amon Goeth's daughter thought her father was a good man. By seeing Schindlers List she revealed the truth

  • @Edd25164605
    @Edd25164605 24 дні тому +396

    'I could have got one more person....and I didn't' 😢 😭.
    Hits me in the feels every time.

    • @acidrain92
      @acidrain92 24 дні тому +22

      I cant believe Natalie didn't openly weep during this scene. Her insistence that Spielberg is an overly sentimental director, and that Oskar probably wasn't actually like this was surprising! She can be pretty cynical sometimes.

    • @glawnow1959
      @glawnow1959 24 дні тому

      @@acidrain92 If Schindler said that, it was for only one or two people. He actually drove off with his wife in one vehicle and his mistress in the one following and jewels hidden in the tires. Leon Leyson wrote "The Boy On the Wooden Box," about his family and their rescue by Schindler. He describes the moment they were freed in wonderful detail.

    • @Spartenjak42
      @Spartenjak42 24 дні тому +8

      ⁠@@acidrain92yeah, it seems weird to believe the financial sacrifice while doubting the man’s compassion. I can’t help but feel that the only way a man like that, in that position, sacrifices that much power and wealth, putting his entire life at risk, is if he’s experiencing and feeling the true horror and emotional devastation that was happening around him. That said, I respect that it’s harder for women to identify with Schindler.

    • @acidrain92
      @acidrain92 24 дні тому +1

      @@Spartenjak42 Agreed on all accounts. I also respect the suggestion that the film feature more of his wife.

    • @garysmith965
      @garysmith965 20 днів тому +4

      Before he saw it, my father said," I lived during this time, I won't cry". That scene BROKE him!

  • @opalviking
    @opalviking 24 дні тому +322

    Jerry Seinfeld sent Spielberg new and unedited episodes of his TV show to watch during his down-time. Robin Williams called Spielberg every night to riff some comedy in his ear.
    This movie was unimaginably hard to create without sinking into depression

    • @grego-geek
      @grego-geek 24 дні тому +23

      Robin Williams miss me so much 😭

    • @josephwallace202
      @josephwallace202 24 дні тому +3

      Yeah, I wonder what else Jerry Seinfeld and Steven Spielberg would have been trading with each other at that time, maybe with Jeffrey Katzenberger's help

    • @DerMoerpler
      @DerMoerpler 24 дні тому +25

      The making of this movie becomes even more impressive when you think about the fact that Spielberg was still working on Jurassic Park at the same time. So he would finish shooting Schindlers List for the day only to discuss editing decisions about his dinosaur adventure movie. I mean, talk about emotional whiplash. And it really took a toll on him. But putting both of those movies out in the same year cemented him as one of the greatest directors of all time. Making two movies in one year would be hard enough even if one of them wasn't absolutely devastating to create. But making two films that are _both_ considered timeless classics for reasons that couldn't be more different? Absolutely astonishing achievement.

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 24 дні тому +2

      @@DerMoerplerWell post production was also largely given to George Lucas.

    • @CitizenScorn
      @CitizenScorn 24 дні тому +5

      Came to the comments to make sure this was said; especially about Robin. Thank you 🙏

  • @torbjornkvist
    @torbjornkvist 24 дні тому +126

    The Line Producer of Schindler's List is a man named Branko Lustig. He was born in Croatia but lost his family in the Holocaust. He survived it all and was adopted by two other survivors. He grew up in Israel, became a film producer, and moved back to Europe, to Germany. He also produced the film Amadeus. Mr. Lustig has said that he never understood how adults survived the Holocaust. As a child, he could coup, but as an adult? Lustig appears two times in the movie. He plays the old head waiter in the restaurant scene in the beginning. He says: "That's Oscar Schindler". He also appears as a story in the story, as the little boy who hides in the latrine. That's his story.

    • @mardyjane7664
      @mardyjane7664 24 дні тому +1

      Which Amadeus movie are you talking about?

    • @tonyhoable
      @tonyhoable 24 дні тому

      I didn't see his name as having anything to do with the film Amadeus but he has been involved with quite a few big movies

  • @dasdovian7785
    @dasdovian7785 23 дні тому +70

    They made us watch this movie as young students and now there are people that are surprised we've taken the message to heart: "Never again means never again for anyone."

    • @garethbattersby
      @garethbattersby 22 дні тому

      This is what's worrying about what's happening today.
      In the UK we've got marches that are constantly calling "From the River to the sea." There are people openly talking about the removal and extermination of Jewish people and its all covered by a thin veil of anti war activism.
      The worst part are young western people who have really taken that side on board and are chanting anti Jewish sentiment... it really makes you look and think, it really is that easy to convince certain people. Like in with Germany in WW2

    • @KittyPieVibes
      @KittyPieVibes 19 днів тому +4

      Well said

    • @Quotenwagnerianer
      @Quotenwagnerianer 16 днів тому

      Yes we are actually surprised, because you fall for the lies of Hamas who framed the military operation against them as something it isn't.
      Islamist terrorists in whose charta the erradication of the State of Israel is a fundamental principle.
      And who have wide support by the people in Gaza.
      People who actually helped facilitate the October 7th attack, people who are complicit in hiding their weapon stashes in hospitals.
      Standing up for Palestine is stupidity of the the highest order.
      Yes at the start pre 1947 both sides where guilty of violence and terrosim. But since 1947 it is only one side who won't just let up forcing the others to a protective iron grip.
      The palestinians reap only what they have sown since the 60's.
      The young generation who stands up for this is just showing their ignorance.

    • @Whateverxo56
      @Whateverxo56 15 днів тому

      Unfortunately it happened since, and it will happen again.

  • @ReadingRambo152
    @ReadingRambo152 24 дні тому +433

    Apparently Amon Goeth's daughter, Monika Hertwig never knew the truth about her father until she saw this movie. She was even friends with Schindler, and he never told her about the atrocities her father committed.

    • @ChienaAvtzon
      @ChienaAvtzon 24 дні тому +142

      She was a toddler during the war, and became friends with several of the Schindlerjuden. None of them judge her by what her father did to them.

    • @larrybremer4930
      @larrybremer4930 24 дні тому +51

      @@ChienaAvtzon That is honestly very inspirational. It give me some hope in humanity. I hope one day we can look past our "tribalism" and such transient things as Government and Territory and learn to live and work together in peace. Sadly tribalism and colonialism are alive and well in race relations and geopolitics.

    • @phousefilms
      @phousefilms 24 дні тому +40

      @@ChienaAvtzon Theres a documentary called "Legacy". She became friends with Helen Hirsch, Goeth's whipping girl.

    • @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck
      @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck 23 дні тому

      🤮💩You are not going to get the truth about ww2 on UA-cam💩🤮

    • @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck
      @giffysstiffy8874giffytuck 23 дні тому +1

      This dumb movie is PURE PROPAGANDA🤮 Our comments are often erased just for giving our own views and opinions

  • @theunholygamer6474
    @theunholygamer6474 24 дні тому +218

    The fact he made this and Jurassic Park in one year is amazing

    • @benschultz1784
      @benschultz1784 24 дні тому +4

      Not really. JP was filmed September 1991- April 1992. SL was filmed March to August 1993. JP released May 26, 1993. SL released December 25, 1993.

    • @beedubree2550
      @beedubree2550 24 дні тому +36

      @@benschultz1784 they weren't filming the two at the same time, but Jurassic Park was in the editing process while Schindler's List was filming. Spielberg was going from directing detailed recreations of the Holocaust to reviewing CGI t-rex footage in the same afternoon, it's a wild filmmaking story

    • @jackabalas
      @jackabalas 24 дні тому

      @@benschultz1784but still incredibly impressive all the same

    • @Dularr
      @Dularr 24 дні тому +3

      ​@@beedubree2550also getting George Lucas to supervise sound editing.

    • @deadinthebed963
      @deadinthebed963 24 дні тому +2

      ​@@Dularr George Lucas would be wise to stay out of spillberg's way

  • @KSDVLmom
    @KSDVLmom 24 дні тому +84

    The fact that Ralph fiennes plays Goeth, Voldemort and chef what's his name on The menu, and is still such a beloved actor and human blows me away. I love him so much I was actually rooting for Voldemort tho. Also Ben Kingsley is such a gifted actor too. So versatile

    • @phousefilms
      @phousefilms 24 дні тому +2

      Chef Julian Slowik in "The Menu".

    • @KingPleaseMusic
      @KingPleaseMusic 24 дні тому +6

      If you haven't seen it, I can't recommend enough his movie "the constant gardner'. Conspiract thriller/romance. I think it's his best work after this movie.

    • @zachtbh
      @zachtbh 24 дні тому +2

      Also as pharaoh Ramses in prince of Egypt

    • @captainsplifford
      @captainsplifford 24 дні тому +6

      Honestly, I kind of think that actors who play villains of that caliber can't be anything but stellar humans in real life, otherwise no one would want to work with them.

    • @flybriur
      @flybriur 22 дні тому +1

      Can you believe he lost the Oscar for this film to Tommy Lee Jones for The Fugitive?

  • @takewhataway
    @takewhataway 23 дні тому +47

    It always bafflles me how humans cant see how this thing can happen to anyone and is still happening in a lot of places. It's crazy we choose who we allow to get through this when we condemn them as enemy. This movie is about the jewish europian holocaust but the message is clear that we shouldnt let this happen to ANYONE regardless of what and who you are

    • @marca7542
      @marca7542 23 дні тому +12

      I’m Armenian and I appreciate this message (am sure innocent Palestinians as well)

    • @takewhataway
      @takewhataway 23 дні тому +6

      @@marca7542 I agree. Im glad that what happened to Armenian in Ottoman era are no longer trying to be hidden as much. Or the Japanese American back in WW II. We have to remember and talk about these things so it wont happen again and again because its disgusting. Keep being safe, brother

    • @smittyDXPS3
      @smittyDXPS3 21 день тому +7

      ​@@marca7542 Don't forget the thousands of innocent Israelis on October 7th

    • @josephwallace202
      @josephwallace202 21 день тому +11

      @@smittyDXPS3 "thousands"? Quit trying to invent some kind of moral equivalence where none exists.

    • @miriamweller812
      @miriamweller812 19 днів тому

      @@smittyDXPS3 Was hundreds and majority were killed by Israesl with gunships firing missiles into the crowd without care, then lying about it.
      Not even staring with that Gaza is a Ghetto created by Israel with hundreds of innocent people there being slaughtered year by year by Israel soldiers and Israel continue to steal the land of these people with the whole argument, that their religious book tells it is theirs.
      Insane.

  • @Fjoravaleris
    @Fjoravaleris 24 дні тому +184

    When the Movie was released I was 14 and here in Germany just every School went to Cinemas to see it. Just about everyone in our class was completely devastated. Our Parents were Kids when it happened and Our Grandparents were possibly the ones who did it.

    • @residentzero
      @residentzero 23 дні тому +4

      wow, thank you for your comment

    • @lepersonnage371
      @lepersonnage371 23 дні тому

      What did the js do though to deserve this? Tell me objectively

    • @jedenzet
      @jedenzet 23 дні тому +2

      @@lepersonnage371 literally every single country when they went expelled them. Why? Dunno but it seems that there is some common thing going on.

    • @alalalala57
      @alalalala57 22 дні тому

      ​@@lepersonnage371 Be a nuisance to the insanity of others.

    • @lepersonnage371
      @lepersonnage371 22 дні тому

      @@alalalala57 wym nuisance to the insanity? they were a nuisance in general, others were not insane

  • @hubertef
    @hubertef 24 дні тому +376

    "The Courageous Heart of Irena Sendler"
    a film about a woman who saved 2.5 thousand Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto, taking them away and hiding them in Polish families, orphanages and monasteries.
    Worth watching for people interested in the subject.

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 24 дні тому

      Another brave case of “One guy doing what he can with limited means” is the actor who played Goldfinger hid a Jewish family in either the attic or the basement of his house.
      He actually kept quiet about it until the movie was being produced and someone tried to dig into his nazi-working past.

    • @BeeWhistler
      @BeeWhistler 24 дні тому

      It might sound weird, but I have a little Google doc file where I keep the names, just the names, of people who saved Jews during WWII. I always wondered as an older child why people let the Holocaust happen. So when I began to find stories of people who saved Jewish people I wanted to make sure I could find them again.
      If you’re interested in more stories, here is my list:
      Chiune Sugihara - that’s right, an actual Japanese guy. Moral character above national pride. A wonderful man who gave many visas to Polish and Lithuanian Jews despite the fact that many did not meet the criteria. Was still tossing visas from the train when he was finally ordered to leave.
      Albert Görring - Hermann’s brother! He used his connections and anything else he could think of to help people escape. Notably once dropped down to help an old Jewish woman scrub the sidewalk and drove a truck into a concentration camp, picked up a bunch of Jewish people and then drove off to set them free. Would suck up to his brother every time he got caught and got away with it. Some of the people he helped were able to save him in turn after the war, since he was arrested due to his family connection.
      Raoul Wallenberg - a Swedish businessman. Like Schindler and Sugihara combined into one guy.
      Dietrich Bonhoeffer - a bit different from the rest… he was a German, Protestant theologian who spoke openly against the genocide and the Reich and even plotted to overthrow Hitler. He could have escaped to New York but returned to continue his work with the resistance and was martyred in 1945.
      Sir Nicholad Winton - British stockbroker who quietly saved hundreds of Jewish children from Czechoslovakia when the Nazis were clearing out them and their families. I don’t think any survived who weren’t saved by him or some other person, but I don’t know that for sure. No one even remembered him until his wife found a detailed scrapbook in their attic in 1988, of the children he saved.
      Aristedes de Sousa Mendes - A Portugese consul… another who wrote visas against orders.
      Father Giuseppe Girotti - ran a full-blown Underground Railroad type of thing in Italy until he was caught and sent to Dachau, where he died. He was remembered for his kindness as a prisoner himself.
      And of course Schindler and Sendler. I know my list isn’t complete. It’s true that it should have been more… but it helps to know that not everyone just accepts that this is how things are.

    • @LM48888
      @LM48888 24 дні тому +1

      Thank you! I'll look it up.

    • @LKFT111
      @LKFT111 24 дні тому +4

      I second this recommendation! It’s an amazing movie!

    • @chrisdoyle5450
      @chrisdoyle5450 24 дні тому +2

      Irena Sendler was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2007. She lost to Al Gore.

  • @timd.3837
    @timd.3837 24 дні тому +60

    Be careful to not be too dismissive of the historical accuracy of the film, as Spielberg had to get from point A to point B to point C in 3 hours and 15 minutes what actually took place over the course of 5-1/2 years; in a manner which really gets the audience to feel and understand what transpired. To have made a truly, historically, accurate portrayal, he'd have had to have made a very long mini-series, and even then, he would have never been able to show everything due to the absolute brutality of what they lived through. If he'd filmed even a tenth of what they actually went through, the film would garner an X-rating. In addition, characters were combined as is often the case. There were actually two maids named Helen - which were combined; and the movie character Itzhak Stern was a combination of several historic people. Oskar, if memory serves me correctly, was actually in jail at the time the list was drafted. But none of the events of the film are actually fictional..... just filmed in a way to get the audience to better understand the importance of each moment in time. For instance, in the film, Oskar sees the girl in the red coat (which is colored red against the black and white backdrop) and then rides away. In reality, when he saw the little child in red, he slid off his horse, hugged a pine tree, and vomited his guts out at the realization that this wasn't an instance of a small group of individuals, but was the policy all the way from the top down being carried out. It was at that moment that he changed from being a businessman to being a humanitarian.
    I could go on, but this is one instance where reading the book (that the film is based upon) is extremely recommended. There's a lot of misinformation going around the internet regarding Oskar Schindler ~ both regarding the reality and the film. Was he a perfect human being or a man to be idolized or looked upon as a role-model? Not by a long shot. But if one focuses on who he was instead of what he did when very few other people were doing anything constructive, then we undervalue the 1,200 lives he saved. It wasn't the efforts of just him and Stern.... and the key line in the movie is when he tells the survivors to thank the many other people who did what they could to save as many people as they did. It was truly a collaborative effort, but one that wouldn't have been possible without Oskar Schindler doing his part, as it was his membership in the Nazi Party and the influence he possessed that made it all possible. Beyond that, he wasn't a great human being or someone to emulate or look up to. He was a drunk, and a playboy, and a party-boy until the day he died, and relied on the charity of those he saved to sustain his lifestyle after the war since he never was a very good businessman.
    But, 1,200 people were alive after the war because of what he did, who wouldn't have been, otherwise. Nothing is ever black and white. Nobody is perfect, and no one is pure good or pure evil ~ we just like to convince ourselves that such is the case. What matters is what we do in key moments during our lives. Do we stand up even when the odds are against us, because it's the right thing to do, or do we simply look away and tell ourselves it's someone else's problem? Do we live with courage and conviction when it matters most, or do we fade into the background and hope nobody sees us just going about our business? Do we care or not care? Do we sacrifice only when there's something in it for us personally?
    To present historical events in a movie, it's more about capturing the essence of the moments than a moment by moment factual reproduction. We can't make a movie 5-1/2 years long to capture all of the facts...... we just can't. But we must remember what happened in order to prevent such horrific events from ever occurring again ~ and we are horrible at preventing or stopping repetitive atrocities. They keep happening every single year, with different places and different people being affected. Not a single continent is ever spared the worst human nature has to offer..... BUT, that doesn't mean we should just quit trying or give up. To turn a blind eye would only result in things escalating further if unchecked.
    This, in all honesty, is one of those books which should be required reading in my opinion. Especially in the face of holocaust deniers and white supremacists..... before things get out of hand and spiral past any point of no return. We like to tell ourselves that what the Nazis did "could never happen here" ~ but the truth is that they can, and will, if too many people keep lying to themselves and/or turning a blind eye.

    • @miniroseyo
      @miniroseyo 24 дні тому +3

      thats a whole ass essay

    • @jozzetv
      @jozzetv 24 дні тому +8

      ​@@miniroseyo one worth reading

    • @LadyBeyondTheWall
      @LadyBeyondTheWall 23 дні тому +5

      @@miniroseyo It's only 5 paragraphs, lol.

    • @unstrung65
      @unstrung65 23 дні тому +3

      Young people seem to know little about the Holocaust , so we are condemned to repeat what we SHOULD have learned .

    • @vampdan
      @vampdan 22 дні тому

      It did happen here. Several times. The Nazi's got a lot of their ideas and tactics from the activities of the likes of Andrew Jackson and the eugenics movement, which was an outgrowth of Antebellum thinking. That's why in QUIGLEY DOWN UNDER Marsden is praising how America delt with their "native problem," it was a pervasive idea. LAST SAMURAI also deals with it.
      It also keeps happening all over the world, even now, because of the negative feedback loops of human group psychology. "All of this has happened before. All of this will happen again."

  • @palladorgaming4401
    @palladorgaming4401 24 дні тому +53

    Being a German myself who was born in the mid 90's, everything regarding WW2 and the hoorifying things that happend to millions of innocent people seemed so far away and something, that happened so long ago. It was always strange to me, annoying almost, that our school system (especially in history class) and the teachers (even the younger ones) tried to nearly hammer everything that happend in WW2 into our minds, saying over and over again: "Something like this can never happen again! YOU need to be aware of signs, that could lead to somthing like this happening again! YOU need to make sure to be better! YOU must feel this shame that comes with it!". And I asked myself again and again, when this subject was thaught in school: "Why do I need to feel ashamed for things that people did almost 70 years ago (now almost 80 years ago), just because I am German? Why can't I feel pride for my country and my heritage when even my grandparents where mostly too young to even be involved in the war and the things that happend? Why is every grown up telling me to be aware to not be something I never even heared of before I learned of WW2?" ... I didn't really understand what was going on and why everyone was shying away to even really talk abount these subjects unless it was in a very dry "just facts from history books" kind of way.
    The first time I really began to understand why it is handeled this way in Germany, was when this movie was shown in History class. It was in 10th grade (so everyone must have been around 15 or 16 years old at that time) and I have never witnessed a classroom being this quiet for so long. Almost everybody cried during the movie at least once and noone was unmoved by the things shown in this movie. It was truly eye opening and much more understandable, why everyone was acting the way they were and why things are the way they are in Germany after watching this heartbreaking movie ... so, yeah, even after all these years WW2 and the things that happened hang over my country like a very dark shadow to the point, you can't even express pride for your country. Everywhere you go outside of Middle-Western Europe you get asked, if you are a Nazi just because you are from Germany. It truly changed everything: Germany, the lives of so many innocent people (on every side of the war), the World even ... truly horrifiyng. And at this point WW2 ended almost 80 years ago and it still is almost uncomprehensible how something like this could have happened in the first place. But here we are ...

    • @Deathbird_Mitch
      @Deathbird_Mitch 23 дні тому +11

      I never blamed current Germans for what happened. When I found out how the history is treated over there and how Germans felt about what happened I had even more sympathy.

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 23 дні тому

      I think this is also because if you look into the history of Germany at the time it is because Hitler came into power thanks to the votes of not nazis but of a lot of normal people. Germany wasn't filled with racists those were on the extremes of society yet thanks to normal people not fighting back and just letting it happen history is what it is. So it isn't that those teachers are fearing that you would become a nazi nearly as much as the normal German citizen who through not knowing history could allow it to happen again.

    • @rbrainsop1
      @rbrainsop1 23 дні тому +9

      I was friends with a few German girls when I lived in Russia, and they said the same thing, about feeling like they couldn't be proud of their country and heritage. And that is a terrible shame. I don't know what the balance is, between the necessary awareness (to make sure nothing like that ever happens again) and the recognition that German history, culture, and heritage is so much more than just that one tragic moment in history. But I hope you are able to find it. Much love to you

    • @siddery8080
      @siddery8080 23 дні тому

      Not to say compare at all but its like when everyone reduces white people to colonising and slavery, you can't be proud of where you're from without the rest of the world bringing up history that has nothing to do with the present people

    • @lepersonnage371
      @lepersonnage371 23 дні тому

      You germans have been lied about for almost a century. Research your history and rediscover your real enemy.

  • @devildham
    @devildham 24 дні тому +259

    The second I saw this in my notifications I immediately responded with "Oh, fuck". I'm not even here for the watch along, at this point it's just parasocial morale support.

    • @emosam07
      @emosam07 24 дні тому +3

      It's like, why people enjoy watching SAW

    • @RenegadeShepTheSpacer
      @RenegadeShepTheSpacer 24 дні тому +2

      ​@@emosam07I'm not sure if this was rhetorical, but I'll answer anyway. I like horror and I don't personally have trouble with blood and gore, so I like the Saw films (the ones that aren't shit) because they truly are horrifying. Humans are monsters, not the paranormal things in most horror films, and Saw is a perfect representation of that in action.
      Bonus point: the creators actually made me sympathise with John as a person in Saw X, which was a stroke of genius on their part.

  • @cshubs
    @cshubs 24 дні тому +95

    I saw this in the theater. A family of three sat behind us. When the engineer was murdered, their son, who looked about 12, started bawling and they left.

    • @BeeWhistler
      @BeeWhistler 24 дні тому +14

      Poor kid. That was the right response, though. I hope he’s still that caring.

    • @VGJunky
      @VGJunky 24 дні тому +2

      Not the best choice for family movie night with the kid

    • @jsmithers.
      @jsmithers. 24 дні тому +1

      ​@@BeeWhistlerHe killed himself since then unfortunately.

    • @EdilbertFernando
      @EdilbertFernando 23 дні тому +3

      @@jsmithers. yo wtf

    • @jsmithers.
      @jsmithers. 23 дні тому +1

      @@EdilbertFernando Yo wtf

  • @Dr_PCR_Ph.D.
    @Dr_PCR_Ph.D. 24 дні тому +39

    I'm a 57 yo man & STILL cry every time I watch this powerful movie.
    Some of the "actors" are actually holocaust survivors e.g. the mom of Danka (little girl with glasses) is the REAL Danka Dresner.
    One of THE MOST powerful hitting movies of all time.

  • @user-rn3vx7kt2c
    @user-rn3vx7kt2c 21 день тому +12

    My dear girl. I have a REALLY tough time with cruelty. I never thought I would see this film. But when I saw it on your channel, I knew you were the one I could watch it with. Not only because of your heritage, but also because of your immense capacity to love. Thank you for being the one I shared this with. ❤

  • @calibadgerdude6082
    @calibadgerdude6082 24 дні тому +169

    I’ve been to Auschwitz/Birkenau twice, I’ve seen these places and these things with my own eyes. This was 30 years ago, it still haunts me to this day. For those who’ve never been, it’s almost impossible to describe the feel of those places, but I’ll try. Do you know that feeling when you dive down to the bottom of a pool and stay down there for a little bit, that feeling of weight not just in the downward direction, but all around you, pressing in on you? Imagine that feeling on your spirit rather than your body. You feel… compressed, like your very being has been squeezed into a box that’s too small for you to fit in.
    The main camp at Birkenau, in particular, really feels that way. It’s in this huge open meadow surrounded by birch groves, and it’s a beautiful, idyllic spot, but once you’ve been there for more than a few minutes you start to realize how weirdly silent it is. No birds, sound doesn’t seem to carry more than a few feet so ambient sounds are pretty much non-existent, the only thing I remember hearing there was the buzz of some flies and the rustling of the wind through the grass and trees. These places are haunted, not by anger, but by sadness and a plea to never forget what happened here and to never let it happen again.

    • @TheAngryMoth104
      @TheAngryMoth104 24 дні тому +11

      I'm glad i'm not the only one who noticed the haunting silence that these sites hold

    • @MatthewVanVleet
      @MatthewVanVleet 24 дні тому +20

      I visited there as well. There is a gravity to this place beyond words. One of the tour guides was asked what the most shocking thing they ever witnessed while working there. They said that when they were showing the room with the stack of suitcases, someone recognized their own bag in the pile. It was then retrieved and given to them. It's one of the most humbling experiences of my life.

    • @ADayinMyLife
      @ADayinMyLife 24 дні тому +2

      Haven't had the chance to go TO those places but there was an amazing exhibit in Kansas City two years ago. Very moving...

    • @rustyshackleford3293
      @rustyshackleford3293 24 дні тому +3

      The spookiest part is that the chimney isn't even connected to the building.

    • @brijones
      @brijones 24 дні тому +5

      how do you feel the attacks on jews today by youngsters, i see it as the same as the nazis in 1938

  • @tomstanziola1982
    @tomstanziola1982 24 дні тому +52

    11:09.....In the book, Natalie, Schindler's attention was captivated by this little girl in a bright red coat, walking amidst all the carnage. This was the point where he started to realize what his people were doing to the Jews.

    • @bryter00
      @bryter00 24 дні тому

      This has pretty much been discredited for many reasons. Basically, whilst the ‘girl in the red coat’ was probably a real person (there would have been countless poor girls in red coats) it is more than likely a separate event that has attached itself to the Schindler story.

    • @dr.burtgummerfan439
      @dr.burtgummerfan439 24 дні тому +12

      Someone said she was a representation of "one more person"

  • @bethgoldman2560
    @bethgoldman2560 24 дні тому +41

    I went to the Theater on Christmas Day(the day it was released). There were gasps, sobbing, but what stick in my mind, is the entire theater sang Yerusheliem Shel Zahav during the movie. After it was over, a small group said Kaddish. My uncle liberated a camp and was made a NCO so he could translate the Yiddish and work as an interpreter.

  • @jackspry9736
    @jackspry9736 24 дні тому +21

    RIP Oskar Schindler (April 28, 1908 - October 9, 1974), aged 66
    You will be remembered as a hero

    • @Jonas-xl4wg
      @Jonas-xl4wg 24 дні тому +2

      wait so schindler wasn’t even 40 yet when the war ended?

    • @davidw.2791
      @davidw.2791 18 днів тому

      @@Jonas-xl4wgYeah he was dashing fuckboy. 😅

  • @tomstanziola1982
    @tomstanziola1982 24 дні тому +55

    In my opinion, this is Spielberg's masterpiece.

    • @donkeydarko77
      @donkeydarko77 24 дні тому +3

      Do I have to see the first one before I watch this?

    • @fajenthygia5760
      @fajenthygia5760 24 дні тому +2

      @@donkeydarko77 Bot? Bot.

    • @jsmithers.
      @jsmithers. 24 дні тому +1

      ​​@@fajenthygia5760No...🤡

    • @jsmithers.
      @jsmithers. 24 дні тому +1

      Jurassic Park and Jaws much better.

    • @OGTonyP
      @OGTonyP 21 день тому +2

      ​@jsmithers. Cmon now. Great films but they aren't as impactful as this

  • @danishprince2760
    @danishprince2760 24 дні тому +239

    For years she said it wouldn't happen.. She finally gave in and now here we are. Get ready y'all

    • @TianmaoMa-rd1rn
      @TianmaoMa-rd1rn 24 дні тому +9

      How appropriate the timing to watch this historical adaptation. A reminder for older generation and a lesson for the younger generation... to comprehend the collective psyche and trauma inflicted upon the Jewish people for thousands of years. The Jews have been the victims of persecution and genocide since the Egyptian times, let alone during WWII. The insidious nature of racism towards Jews, whether by religious zealots or by the moderate masses, is something the world needs to reflect on.

    • @miniroseyo
      @miniroseyo 24 дні тому

      @@TianmaoMa-rd1rn "The Jews have been the victims of persecution and genocide since the Egyptian times, let alone during WWII"
      wonder why that could be

    • @Petrixxxxxxx
      @Petrixxxxxxx 23 дні тому +1

      ​@@meganwilliams7434are you dull?

    • @Azraelxdd
      @Azraelxdd 23 дні тому

      @@TianmaoMa-rd1rn more think it's a reminder of the ACTUAL attrocities faced by honest, innocent Jewish men and women that get spindoctor'd into modern day ZIonist, Globalist propaganda by Genocidal murderers like Netanyahu, so as to compare anyone who disagrees with Israel & Netanyahu's narrative as "antisemitic" and a "nazi"

  • @philliptucker4788
    @philliptucker4788 24 дні тому +10

    This film was so close to Spielberg’s heart that one year after he completed the film, he established the Shoah Foundation, a major nonprofit organization dedicated to making audio-visual interviews with survivors and witnesses of the Holocaust (which in Hebrew is called the Shoah) a compelling voice for education and action. Thanks to him, there are thousands of recorded interviews with Holocaust survivors that are now permanently preserved. If I recall correctly, he also would not accept payment for his role as director.

  • @realitycheck5376
    @realitycheck5376 24 дні тому +39

    The story of Schindler was fictionalized to a degree. The list itself was not made by Schindler and the ending speech where he said he could have gotten one more person also never happened. At the same time Schindler, many times, had to talk authorities out of doing harm to his people as was shown when he talked the guards into letting them back on the train from Auschwitz. He also went completely bankrupt afterwards and was adopted as a family member by many of those he rescued. They allowed Schindler to live with them for a while and even had their kids call him uncle Oskar.

    • @Stubbies2003
      @Stubbies2003 23 дні тому +11

      While it is true that Oskar didn't live most of his life as a saint no one can deny the absolute good of what is depicted in the movie. There are a lot of people around who wouldn't be if he hadn't put it all on the line to save them.

    • @realitycheck5376
      @realitycheck5376 23 дні тому +1

      @@Stubbies2003 So true.

    • @realitycheck5376
      @realitycheck5376 22 дні тому +7

      One more thing: The speech Schindler gave at the end of the movie in the warehouse with the Nazi guards was word for word what he actually said except it was cut short for the movie.

  • @SubzeroBlack68
    @SubzeroBlack68 24 дні тому +49

    "I could have gotten one more person, and I didn't. And I didn't!"
    😭

  • @joharp
    @joharp 24 дні тому +111

    Another WWII movie that will absolutely destroy you, "Grave of the Fireflies" from Studio Ghibli. It shows the war from the perspective of 2 Japanese children. It is frequently called "The best movie I will never watch again" and was originally shown as a double feature with My Neighbor Totoro as a Sad Movie/Happy Movie combo. It's the best anti-war movie I have ever seen.

    • @NoHandleGrr
      @NoHandleGrr 24 дні тому

      Jews, fireflies: perhaps not ideal comparisons.

    • @joharp
      @joharp 24 дні тому +18

      @@NoHandleGrr ... its a metaphor ...

    • @jona.scholt4362
      @jona.scholt4362 24 дні тому +15

      Some people take things way too literally

    • @josephwallace202
      @josephwallace202 24 дні тому +16

      @@NoHandleGrr the fireflies in the movie in question are not the direct analogue anyways

    • @kyttenn
      @kyttenn 24 дні тому +20

      @@NoHandleGrrHave you ever seen it? because you wouldn’t be saying that if you had

  • @ChienaAvtzon
    @ChienaAvtzon 24 дні тому +20

    I have a family friend whose father was a Schindlerjuden. He stayed close with Schindler for the rest of his life. Much of the sentimentality is due to how many of the survivors viewed him.

  • @correquetepiyo
    @correquetepiyo 22 дні тому +6

    I visited Auschwitz once. I lived in Krakow for almost a year and visited Auschwitz on a Friday. I went with some friends and the idea was to go out for a drink after come back to the city. We weren't in the mood at the end. It was... hard to see. But I think it is also a necessary visit, especially now with what is happening in Palestine.

  • @axr7149
    @axr7149 24 дні тому +219

    Interesting Fact: Steven Spielberg, fearing he wasn't up to the task of telling the story, initially tried to offer the film to several directors before deciding to take it on himself. These included Roman Polanski, Syndey Pollack, Martin Scorsese among others, none of which worked out for various reasons.
    Martin Scorsese was responsible for the hiring of the film's screenwriter Steven Zaillian, but ultimately backed out due to a combination of backlash for making THE LAST TEMPTATION OF CHRIST (1988) and feeling that he could not do the story justice (Scorsese directed CAPE FEAR (1991) instead).
    Roman Polanski - who is a Holocaust survivor himself having lived in the Krakow Ghetto as a child (the same one shown in this movie) and whose mother died in Auschwitz - turned it down as he wasn't ready to address the topic yet at the time. He eventually made THE PIANIST (2002), which I sincerely hope you react to. No excuse for his later life actions, but Polanski's life story makes him a uniquely tragic character.

    • @CraigKostelecky
      @CraigKostelecky 24 дні тому +22

      Along those lines, Steven Spielberg frequently collaborated with John Williams for his movie scores. When Spielberg asked Williams, Williams said to Spielberg, "You need a better composer than I am for this film." Spielberg responded, "I know. But they're all dead!"

    • @joekaput747
      @joekaput747 24 дні тому +15

      To add to this, John Williams didn't want to do the score either, fearing that HE was not up to the task and a better composer should do it, to which Steven replied with something along the lines of "I know, but they're all dead."
      No one thought they could do this story justice. And it became one of the greatest cinematic achievements in history

    • @Kevin.Costner.
      @Kevin.Costner. 24 дні тому +1

      when his given crazy script shows his talent like Nolan with Ras Al Ghoul

    • @aznthy
      @aznthy 24 дні тому

      later life story? roman polanski had underage kid sex crimes since the 60s, later life story is a lie. He's been doing it for more than 40 years

    • @ae1337
      @ae1337 24 дні тому +10

      You mention Polanski's "later life actions". Didn't that happen decades before Schindler's List?

  • @lindseysquire8417
    @lindseysquire8417 24 дні тому +5

    I have been waiting for this reaction for a very long time. Thank you for uploading this!

  • @Sigma0283
    @Sigma0283 22 дні тому +5

    Oskar Schindler and Emilie Schindler never divorced. He abandoned her when he went bankrupt in 1957 and that was the last time they saw each other. At the end of the movie when the survivors are putting the rocks on his grave, it was the first time she visited his grave and had forgiven him.

  • @BoothTheGrey
    @BoothTheGrey 24 дні тому +12

    Thank you very much for your deeply emotional reaction.
    As a german... this movie is a very special piece of critical art for me. My ancestors did this. And yes - they really did this. And relatively only a few were pure psychopaths like Amon Goeth (who actually was even worse than shown in this movie) … many German Nazis were quite normal people. A lot even well educated.
    Its so important to not forget. As much as I despise and condemn what my ancestors did under the Nazi regime... as much I am proud that in Germany we established a deep memorial culture about the crimes our ancestors did. We start in school talking about Nazi germany and WW2 - and although many German dont want it and even think it is something to make us feel ashamed I see it very different: We can be proud to be so much aware of our past and to try to learn from it and try to show responsibility because of it.
    I think EVERY nation should face the crimes of ancestors and try to learn from this.
    When we Germans who did one of the most horrifying crimes in history can face these crimes... every nation should be able to do this.
    Its all about NOT dehumanzizing others and create social systems to actively avoid it. We still are really bad at this. Even in "modern" countries our economical system allows to "outsource" really bad behaviour in other countries and almost force people with money to do crimes. But of course so many other elements in the human world exist that makes us dehumanize each other.
    We must stop this. Every human deserves respect. Every human has dignity and this should not be violated.
    This movie can help to understand this.
    The only critique I have with Schindlers List is that its not clear how many German Soldiers and Nazi were not bad people but rather normal who just "operated" in the murderous system. And of cause ideology and brainwashing helped a lot to support it.
    Although Schindler WAS a hero he could not do a tiny bit to prevent this. And even more important: In the beginning he didnt want to prevent at all but just make profit. Many german capitalist profited A LOT - still there are some very rich Germans where the ancestors profited from the Nazi regime.
    We have to understand that social systems must be created that let not profit inhumane behaviour. We still have a long way to go. Hopefully we will make it.
    Thanks a lot for watching this both very great and very painful movie. Thanks for sharing your emotions and thoughts.
    Wish you all the best for your channel and your whole life.
    Disclaimer: This text was written by me for another reaction to Schindlers List and I just copied it cause it suits my thoughts still perfectly.

    • @danigar
      @danigar 23 дні тому +1

      I like this. Unfortunately in the US I feel like we're going in the opposite direction. With some states hell bent on erasing history, banning books, not teaching about certain subjects because "kids are too little to deal with that", etc.

  • @MISTERBABAD00K
    @MISTERBABAD00K 24 дні тому +84

    Fellow Jewish person here: My grandparents were Holocaust survivors (they have since passed). I am grateful that you took the time and had the nerve to watch this on your channel. It is not an easy watch and it still barely covers the atrocities committed during the Holocaust and World War II. Sadly, they don't really teach a lot about this in school. I remember in high school only a few short paragraphs in our history books about it, and that was it. My city even has a Holocaust museum (my grandmother has a remembrance plaque there) and our schools never organized a visit. Thank you for this. Your content reaches so many people; people who otherwise may not have watched this movie.

    • @larrybremer4930
      @larrybremer4930 24 дні тому +11

      At this point I don't know how many people with living memory of WWII are left. Only some children perhaps, who are now in their 80s and 90s. I remember in 6th Grade (mid 1970s) we had an assembly where real footage of operating camps and the aftermath as they were liberated were shown in full and graphic detail. This was followed up by a guest speaker. He was about 50ish by my recollection. He showed us all his number tattooed on his arm and told his story from Kristallnacht to Liberation including the details of the murder of his entire family. It is a pity that everyone cannot have this living experience to meet a survivor and truly understand the horrors we are capable of if we fail to learn from the worst, most painful lessons of our past. Look at the trail of tears and internment of Americans in WWII, we were not saints either. Those are all lessons that need to be learned so not to be repeated.

    • @mikealvarez2322
      @mikealvarez2322 24 дні тому

      The philosophy that created the Holocaust is alive and well today but instead of a master race we have a master religion threatening, not only the Jews (they're first on the list) but all Western Civilization.
      The day Hitler took office followed by Hindenburg's death the Nazis were at war with Western civilization. Unfortunately Western civilization, and the Jews, Gypsies , and Slaves did not see the danger until it was too late. The West thought it could appease the Nazis but all that did was embolden them.
      Fast forward to 2024 and the exact same situation exists today. Western Civilization will either recognize the threat to its existence or it will collapse into a New Dark Ages.

    • @johannesvalterdivizzini1523
      @johannesvalterdivizzini1523 24 дні тому +4

      I was a NY City high school history teacher for 30 years, and we all certainly taught about the Holocaust--it was part of our curriculum. Nearly every school in which I taught there were teachers who had family members who were in the Holocaust, so there were personal stories to relate.

    • @charliesotelo1966
      @charliesotelo1966 24 дні тому

      no one believes you your grand parents are making it up for money your lies are finally being revealed
      thank god everyone is starting to realize you guys made this all up for sympathy points
      say goodnight jew

    • @jsmithers.
      @jsmithers. 24 дні тому +1

      ​@@larrybremer4930There are still literally 100,000 soldiers from WWII that are still alive today. And for people alive in general that witnessed WWII, it is millions. They will be alive until the 2050's.

  • @reconsoldier135
    @reconsoldier135 24 дні тому +39

    The first reaction of yours I ever saw was Revenge of the Sith and you specifically mentioned that you would never be able to do this movie because of how sad it is but here you are!

    • @jona.scholt4362
      @jona.scholt4362 24 дні тому +1

      Nice avatar! Go Blue, 15-0 National Champions!

  • @bryancomer1984
    @bryancomer1984 24 дні тому +10

    Robin Williams had a hand to play with this movie, he regularly called Spielberg to keep his spirits as high as possible while filming, or so the rumor goes

  • @abaracskai
    @abaracskai 24 дні тому +35

    Never again means never again regardless of who it is.

  • @shouldntyoubecooking
    @shouldntyoubecooking 24 дні тому +90

    Get ready to cry. 😢

    • @Kevin.Costner.
      @Kevin.Costner. 24 дні тому +3

      when his given great script, it truely shows his talent, like Nolan with Ras Al Ghoul

    • @shouldntyoubecooking
      @shouldntyoubecooking 24 дні тому

      ​@@Kevin.Costner.What?

    • @Kevin.Costner.
      @Kevin.Costner. 24 дні тому +2

      @@shouldntyoubecooking Liam Neeson like outside of Taken and all those Hostage movies

    • @thechonus3858
      @thechonus3858 24 дні тому +2

      @@Kevin.Costner. Sorry, are you comparing Schindler's List to Batman?

    • @Kevin.Costner.
      @Kevin.Costner. 24 дні тому +3

      @@thechonus3858 Jesus christ no i’m comparing his performances when given good scripts

  • @Little1Cave
    @Little1Cave 24 дні тому +35

    This movie won 7 Oscars:
    Best Picture
    Best Director
    Best Adapted Screenplay
    Best Original Score
    Best Art Direction
    Best Cinematography
    Best Film Editing
    It was also nominated for an additional 5:
    Best Actor for Liam Neeson (lost to Tom Hanks for Philadelphia)
    Best Supporting Actor for Ralph Fiennes (lost to Tommy Lee Jones for The Fugitive)
    Best Sound (lost to Jurassic Park)
    Best Makeup (lost to Mrs. Doubtfire)
    Best Costume Design (lost to The Age of Innocence)
    Truly an iconic and important film. ❤

    • @beautybysaranwrap
      @beautybysaranwrap 24 дні тому +4

      Ralph was absolutely ROBBED

    • @Little1Cave
      @Little1Cave 24 дні тому +2

      @@beautybysaranwrap And it was insane lineup too. Also had John Malkovich for In the Line of Fire, and Leonardo DiCaprio for What’s Eating Gilbert Grape.

    • @DerMoerpler
      @DerMoerpler 24 дні тому +5

      It's crazy that Jurassic Park would've cleaned house on the technical awards any other year, but because Spielberg is Spielberg he put out two masterpieces in the same year and won against himself several times.

    • @moderncomet9810
      @moderncomet9810 24 дні тому +1

      @@DerMoerpler Yes, I remember people being *extremely* upset that John Williams' score to Jurassic Park not get nominated when it was obvious that it was held back--had both that score and Schindler's were nominated he would likely have split the vote and lost (probably to Nyman's The Piano).

    • @axr7149
      @axr7149 24 дні тому +1

      @@moderncomet9810 THE PIANO was not nominated for Score that year. I believe THE REMAINS OF THE DAY would've probably won here mainly because it would've been it's only win had that happened. You need to see that movie too (Anthony Hopkins should've won Actor for this IMO).

  • @andrewroberts9885
    @andrewroberts9885 23 дні тому +2

    Thanks, Natalie. One of the best reactions you've done. Appreciate your insights.

  • @iggystompbarnyard
    @iggystompbarnyard 24 дні тому +1

    Being a long time fan of this channel, I didn't expect to get this movie on here. But I'm glad because of its historical significance to film and the general wider scope of human history. Thank you for your reaction Natalie!

  • @LordNifty
    @LordNifty 24 дні тому +120

    One thing I think is important to remember about the Holocaust is that it was not limited to Jews, but also homosexuals, autistic people, and more. In fact, there was one physician named Hans Asperger who was known for sending autistic people to death camps as "unworthy of life", and he is where the term "Asperger's Syndrome" comes from. There is a lot of twisted history there.

    • @PROVOCATEURSK
      @PROVOCATEURSK 24 дні тому +1

      So sad the bad countries were helped by the west to be one of the wealthiest.

    • @benschultz1784
      @benschultz1784 24 дні тому +7

      The term used was "Nutzlos Esser" (Useless Eater)

    • @samirabdel-aziz478
      @samirabdel-aziz478 24 дні тому +22

      And the Romani too

    • @ladyhitchhikerjackmanson8097
      @ladyhitchhikerjackmanson8097 24 дні тому +11

      Me tally ill, war veterans, senior citizens, mentally ill, developmentally disabled.

    • @josephwallace202
      @josephwallace202 24 дні тому +3

      Essentially a vast program to maximize the extraction of surplus labor by eliminating any social element deemed "inefficient" relative to the baseline. A very cynical way to "streamline" socially necessary labor time.

  • @2044Nick
    @2044Nick 24 дні тому +18

    The pianist would be another good movie to checkout if you’re up to it.

  • @CitizenScorn
    @CitizenScorn 24 дні тому +5

    Thank you for sharing this experience with us 🙏

  • @vivacious_me
    @vivacious_me 24 дні тому +1

    Omg! SENDING BIG HUGS NATALIE...❤
    You did it 👏🏾🙌🏾

  • @omertoledano4725
    @omertoledano4725 24 дні тому +5

    Thank you, Natalie 🙏🏼 you are amazing woman!!

  • @MrDimox
    @MrDimox 23 дні тому +17

    You'd think that people would remember that genocide is bad.

    • @sen.m7832
      @sen.m7832 19 днів тому +1

      Especially those who were the victims of genocide!

  • @lilgrasshoppah
    @lilgrasshoppah 20 днів тому +1

    i can't tell you how impressed i am by your courage, Natalie.

  • @ftrevino4493
    @ftrevino4493 19 днів тому +2

    Oh my sweet Natalie. You're such a good person. It breaks my heart seeing you cry. 😢

  • @s1lm4r1l6
    @s1lm4r1l6 24 дні тому +16

    I've been to Auschwitz. The most eerie place I've ever been. I went in January too so it was cold. They absolutely do not sugar coat it at all. Tubs the size of swimming pools overflowing with shoes and suitcases.
    Creepiest bit was walking into the death camp, looking down the wire and being unable to see the end as it disappeared into the fog. Just the most incredible sense of weight and memory in all aspects of the site.
    "Whoever saves one life saves the world entire." - I will never not cry at that line.

  • @RenegadeShepTheSpacer
    @RenegadeShepTheSpacer 24 дні тому +15

    Ralph Fiennes was utterly robbed by the Academy for this role and it's a genuine disgrace. His portrayal of Göth was so realistic and so chilling that one of the survivors had a panic attack on set, because they thought momentarily that he actually was Göth.

  • @nathanbarnes8535
    @nathanbarnes8535 19 днів тому +1

    I applaud you for being willing to tackle this kind of content. May we never forget.

  • @vickyy518
    @vickyy518 22 дні тому

    I really enjoyed your reaction and thoughts post-viewing of the film, Nat - your videos have come so far and it's been so cool watching your channel and content grow as the years go on!

  • @jamesh2401
    @jamesh2401 24 дні тому +8

    This movie is horrific and incredibly haunting, but also well shot. It's one of those that I think everyone should try to watch at least once.

  • @smavtmb2196
    @smavtmb2196 24 дні тому +15

    Amazing movie. There are no excuses for atrocities like this. Unfortunately its the 21st century and humanity refuses to let go of hate, and killing. Atrocities commited against any civilians must be condemned regardless of who commits them. Yet Hypocrites make excuses for mass killing and starvation of innocent civilians going on right now. Sorry I got negative/serious.

  • @RoadDoug
    @RoadDoug 10 днів тому

    Wow! Just, wow!
    This is why I love your reactions.
    You are so well informed on this subject.
    It grieves me to see some in this world pushing for the same atrocities.
    Love ya Natalie.❤❤❤

  • @ValdraThaliasSilme
    @ValdraThaliasSilme 17 днів тому

    My family have been a fan of yours Natalie since the begining. We know you and your heritage, we know you said you would never watch this. We know how hard this is especially for you. You are so brave for this and we are very proud of you for sharing this story. We will watch this for you, with you, for all the survivors and all those lost.

  • @KalElvis
    @KalElvis 24 дні тому +6

    Crimes Against Humanity - We're going to be hearing that A LOT very soon.

  • @baguioblues6350
    @baguioblues6350 24 дні тому +3

    man, after watching this in the 90s as a young teenager in the movie theater, it was my first and only time crying uncontrollably. i have since avoided watching this again despite acknowledging that it's a masterpiece...til now. i felt i might be ok watching it in this reaction format...still cried a lot. lol.

  • @aint_just_whistlin_dixie
    @aint_just_whistlin_dixie 22 дні тому +1

    Thanks, Natalie, it took courage to sit down and watch this through to the end for your audience and subscribers.

    • @bossfan49
      @bossfan49 21 день тому +1

      This is how she earns a living. She's not doing it for you or anyone else.

  • @danaclinton7105
    @danaclinton7105 23 дні тому

    I had to watch your reaction a few minutes at a time because as much as I love this movie, it's just so emotional. And watching your incredible reaction to it made it even more so. Love you. ❤❤❤

  • @marcosis78
    @marcosis78 24 дні тому +3

    An absolute beautiful movie

  • @firedoc5
    @firedoc5 24 дні тому +3

    Natalie, my dear, you have the best insight on this film than any other reactor I've ever seen. This needs to be shown in every age-appropriate history and social class. Regardless of being one of the darkest periods in history, it must still be taught and never forgotten or canceled. Even though the characterization of Schindler was not completely accurate, it is the best portrayal of the Holocaust and the atrocities of the Nazis. While Spielberg was working on this, he was also doing the cartoon "Animaniacs" back in the US.

    • @dinazina55
      @dinazina55 24 дні тому +1

      Agree - Natalie's perceptiveness and quickness to grasp the meaning of numerous cinematic details is very impressive. Well done! I would like to see more from her channel.

  • @zman8184
    @zman8184 24 дні тому +1

    I gasped when I saw this thumbnail. I'm glad you're watching this even though I know it tears you up. It is difficult but important. Everyone needs to see this one.

  • @icywinterof88
    @icywinterof88 24 дні тому +1

    your hair looks glorious my dude!!

  • @tatemalmsteen
    @tatemalmsteen 24 дні тому +15

    Gene Siskel said that Schindler's List should be required viewing for everyone on the planet. I totally agree with this!

  • @axr7149
    @axr7149 24 дні тому +40

    Now that you’ve seen this, you absolutely have to watch THE ZONE OF INTEREST now. It in my opinion serves as the perfect companion piece to this, showing the other side of the equation (but no less disturbing). It deservedly won 2 Oscars at the recent ceremony (Best International Feature Film (UK) and Best Sound) and it utilizes sound design in a way I’ve never seen a film use before.

    • @sreyangovender3404
      @sreyangovender3404 24 дні тому

      Absolutely 👍

    • @josephwallace202
      @josephwallace202 24 дні тому +1

      Haven't seen Zone of Interest but by all indications it's much better than this

    • @system0fadowner251
      @system0fadowner251 24 дні тому

      ​@josephwallace202 not better. Different. While Schindlers list shows the horrific reality of the atrocities being committed and what the victims go through, Zone of Interest is about the banality of evil and how it allows atrocities to be committed mere yards away from people living what they consider a normal existence.

    • @deadinthebed963
      @deadinthebed963 24 дні тому

      Martin Amis died last year too from same cancer as Hitchens

  • @theFILMaDDICT16
    @theFILMaDDICT16 24 дні тому

    Yes! My #1 favorite film of all time! Thank you! 😭

  • @deadinthebed963
    @deadinthebed963 24 дні тому +1

    I've watched this film at least 8 times gets me every time and it was interesting Natalie pointed things out even I didnt notice

  • @Briana73
    @Briana73 24 дні тому +17

    I saw this movie when it came out in theaters. I was 20 and in college. I remember that when people first heard that Spielberg was doing this film, some people were apprehensive, since Spielberg at the time was best known for Indiana Jones and Jaws. It was the same type of apprehension people had when they heard Tom Hanks was going to play a man with AIDS in the movie "Philadelphia", another absolute must watch if you haven't seen it. But watching "Schindler's List", sitting in that packed theater with everyone crying....it was one of the most emotional times I have ever had watching a movie. I remember it swept the Oscars, and all the standing ovations and tears and emotional speeches. The movie came out after the Soviet Union collapsed and before 9/11, when there really wasn't a "common enemy" for Americans. But "Schindler's List" reminded everyone what complacency can bring, and that peace should never be taken for granted. It was one of those very rare movies that didn't just impact the culture of one nation, but rather the whole world.

  • @Kevin.Costner.
    @Kevin.Costner. 24 дні тому +9

    Only Movie i’ve cried Multiple times within it, The 1 More scene chokes me up man every single time

  • @Rickjarmin4225
    @Rickjarmin4225 24 дні тому

    Natalie, you are my favorite reaction creator. I learn a lot from your responses. Things I don't pick up on my own.

  • @wwk68tig
    @wwk68tig 20 днів тому

    I very much appreciate how you differentiate between a film's THEATRICAL presentation and whatever really might have occurred in the HISTORICAL event (unless the movie presents itself as a documentary, then the adherence to what is being portrayed is different)....it makes for a much more effective post.....another riveting reaction..........thanks for sharing.

  • @Michael_L_Morrison
    @Michael_L_Morrison 24 дні тому +3

    Amon Goeth has a half-German, half-black granddaughter named Jennifer Teege. There is a book called My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me: A Black Woman Discovers Her Family’s Nazi Past that details her discovery of this information. Very interesting read.

  • @HerpaDerp999
    @HerpaDerp999 24 дні тому +5

    My wife is from Munich and she can't watch this movie because she is so ashamed. Her great grandfather was a devout party member and hes basically been removed from family lore. I will say it is pretty funny to hear her yell at the screen anytime she sees Hitler on it.

  • @okabayashijoe
    @okabayashijoe 21 день тому

    Very much enjoy that you've added ratings at the end.

  • @VictorVonGrooove
    @VictorVonGrooove 24 дні тому

    Oh shit!! You're actually doing it! I haven't started the video yet, but I'm just going to do this ahead of time... *hugs*

  • @fixer1140
    @fixer1140 24 дні тому +11

    Hey Natalie, there's one movie you should definitely rect to, do Coco.
    Edit: The woman who plays Danka's mom, is the actual Danka Dresner

    • @TheKrislaf
      @TheKrislaf 24 дні тому +3

      Couldn't find anything that indicated Danka Dresner was in the film herself, but the woman playing Dankas mom was a holocaust survivor. Her name's Miri Fabian and she was born in a concentration camp in 1943, her family barely escaped being sent to Auschwitz thanks to the wars' end. Apparently she had a hard time completing the scene in Auschwitz due to that personal history with the camp.

  • @markieman64
    @markieman64 24 дні тому +6

    You did SO well. I'm so proud of you for making it through that!
    The shot that always gets me is very subtle. When Stern is walking back in through the gate, scratching his head pretending he has lice, he walks along a road made of gravestones. The camp was built on a Jewish cemetery. This road was real. It was a very intentional desecration. Bits of this movie are fictionalised and condensed. I just always find that little detail which you would kind of need to know already really powerful. Pretty sure they don't explain it in the movie.

  • @JimFinley11
    @JimFinley11 11 днів тому

    Thank you for including this film on your channel. It was easy to see how hard it hit you.
    As you probably know - so this comment is for others here - when the camps were liberated, General Eisenhower ordered that as many Allied troops as possible tour them and see them in person. When someone asked why, he said that he knew a time would could when some people would deny that the Holocaust had happened, and he wanted to make sure there were as many eyewitnesses as possible.
    The best commanding officer I ever had in my military career, shortly before I retired, set himself a similar goal. This was in the mid 1990s at Camp Pendleton in San Diego County. There were a fair number of Holocaust survivors still around and living in that area. Every year on Holocaust Remembrance Day, he organized an all-hands luncheon for his officers at the Officers Club, to which he invited all the Holocaust survivors in the area. Each year he asked them to choose one of their number to speak to us, on any subject they chose. We sat together with the survivors at big round tables that seated eight, alternating one Marine with one survivor, and had lunch as we listened to the talk; then we would just spend the afternoon chatting with them. I was always struck by how upbeat and funny the survivors were. I guess when your yardstick for how bad things can be has been stretched that far, anything normal is heavenly. I particularly remember one old guy who always clapped his hands and said, "They tried to kill us. We're still here! Let's eat!"
    The colonel knew that those folks wouldn't be around too many more years, but we would, so he was creating more eyewitnesses.
    I decided to try to do something similar with my own children, so when they were in the upper grades of elementary school - they were both very bright, perceptive, precocious kids - I took them to the Holocaust Memorial Museum in L.A. It made a deep impression on them. They asked me why people would do things like that. All I could tell them is that the only way it can happen is for people to see other people as things rather than as human beings, and that treating people as things is the ultimate evil.
    I''m old now, and my kids are in their forties. I hope they do something similar for my grandchildren.
    There's a book you might find worth reading: "My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me." by Jennifer Teege. She is Amon Goeth's granddaughter. She is half white and half black, because her mother, Goeth''s daughter, had a relationship with a black man.
    Thanks again for this review.

  • @ChesterGlover
    @ChesterGlover 23 дні тому

    I been waiting for this reaction for years

  • @pricemoore2022
    @pricemoore2022 24 дні тому +4

    Awesome reaction of my favorite movie!!!!!!😊😊😊😊😊😊😊

  • @ryangibson5462
    @ryangibson5462 24 дні тому +4

    I was surprised when this popped up. Congratulations on overcoming a personal doubt. Definitely a film that takes some mental preparation but important to watch. Your fans are proud.

  • @AliceI7764
    @AliceI7764 24 дні тому

    What a beautiful and thoughtful breakdown of this film!
    Something you said caused a little epiphany for me. It was when you were talking about the people finding small moments of hope to cling to. They had been stripped of everything and only had each other and their faith.
    Thanks, I hadn't thought of it in those terms.
    I thought you did very well with this film even though you have been avoiding it for so long.
    Reaction - 10/10❤

  • @johnmiwa6256
    @johnmiwa6256 23 дні тому

    I've been waiting for Natalie to react to this movie. 7 minutes in and I'm getting tears in my eyes.

  • @AFMountaineer2000
    @AFMountaineer2000 24 дні тому +8

    An absolute must watch movie. When i was in high school we had 2 Schindler Jews come and speak to us. They met and married in the camps.

  • @jordan1446
    @jordan1446 22 дні тому +3

    I can’t emphasize just how important what you are doing is. Sharing an experience like watching this movie for the first time at a time like this is so important to remind the world what happened and how it can impact what is happening right now. Thank you.

  • @DanABA
    @DanABA 24 дні тому +1

    I've been subbed since COVID, and I remember you saying you wouldn't do this movie. I like to think that I understand why. Glad you did it. Your feedback on it was very insightful.

  • @Dene181
    @Dene181 24 дні тому

    Thank you so much for finally finding the strength to watch this movie. I really thought you would never do it, but I am glad you did! 😢❤
    There are many moments in this movie that always get to me, even with me not being an emotional person. Greetings from Germany.
    We can just hope Spielberg would also do a movie like this about "Witold Pilecki", that would be crazy but very needed to show what unbelievable brave things he did.
    Praise Sabaton for bringing us his story with "Inmate 4859".

  • @kevind4850
    @kevind4850 24 дні тому +3

    At the time, it would have been almost impossible for Schindler's wife to divorce him (as Roman Catholics). She did play a significant role, but only toward the final months once the factory had been moved to Czechoslovakia. I expect that Spielberg omitted a larger role for Emilie - as in so many other details - to simplify the story for audiences and for runtime considerations. She appeared at the end of the movie at the graveside but was very bitter toward Oskar. Schindler wasn't quite the altruistic convert as he is portrayed at the end of the film. At that point, he was still hoping to salvage his business after the war and continue to utilize his workforce. He and Stern (whose film character is a composite of three people) did not actually create the list, though they definitely had a role behind it. The Göth character was worse in real-life than depicted in the movie, and though he was a monster, he was a fairly cultured person who had a lot in common with Oskar Schindler and was from a wealthy family with wife and children back home in his native Austria. He is a warning that, even among people who one would expect to be above such barbarism, latent bigotry can turn into fanaticism with horrifying results. War always is brutal, but it is sobering that so many otherwise "normal" men and women easily turned into the tools of unimaginable, systematic, deliberate, unnecessary, and sadistic cruelty.

  • @gemsicle1720
    @gemsicle1720 23 дні тому +3

    Steven Spielberg pushed aside every cent of his salary from this film calling it “blood money” and instead donated it to Shaoh Foundation for survivors of which he founded

  • @DannyRobalino
    @DannyRobalino 24 дні тому

    Love your reaction, especially the moments where you heavily cried, which were the moments where I don’t think any human can not feel complete devastation.
    In an interview, Spielberg himself said that a lot of the stories were true, but he included them or put many stories from different people into one or two characters. An amazing movie, an amazing achievement for Spielberg that granted him a well-deserved first Oscar as a Director.

  • @torontomame
    @torontomame 24 дні тому +2

    The mother at 7:25 telling her child to "Look at the snow, look at the snow!" rips my heart every time.

  • @arpitdint535
    @arpitdint535 24 дні тому +12

    Your reaction to 'Schindler's List' was so genuine. This film is truly powerful. Thanks for sharing! 👍

  • @djlow9915
    @djlow9915 24 дні тому +5

    The movie that finally got Steven Spielberg his much-deserved best director Oscar. And John Williams his 5th and last Oscar to date, although he's been nominated 22 times since 😊 Thanks for your beautiful reaction to this film Nat 💛

  • @jaredschemanski3294
    @jaredschemanski3294 15 днів тому

    There is a memorial near Detroit that I visited when in high school in the 90's. We got to listen to a survivor tell his experience at he end of the tour. It was one of the most profound experiences of my life that I remember to this day.

  • @sspdirect02
    @sspdirect02 24 дні тому +16

    While making this movie, Spielberg wouldn't even communicate with the actors playing the Einsatzgruppen. These were actors of the German theater playing these parts. Spielberg would give them direction but he wouldn't make small talk with them as he couldn't get past the Schutzstaffel uniforms. That is until a beautiful thing happened very early in production. A Passover Seder was held at the hotel the cast and crew were staying. Spielberg had all the Jewish actors sitting around at a table, then all the German actors walked in wearing yarmulkes and participated in the rituals of the Passover Seder and Spielberg was moved to tears.