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Schindler's List (Full Screen Edition)

Schindler's List (Full Screen Edition)

List Price: $26.98
Your Price: $18.89
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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Spielberg's Best!
Review: It's hard to imagine the same guy releasing two films in the same year with such varied tastes and quality. Jurassic Park was a summer blockbuster in 1993, then in the fall this one hit and proved yet again what a master filmmaker little Stevie is.

What isn't nearly perfect in this film? Nearly perfect, because a completely perfect film has yet to be made.

Schindler's List is one of those life-altering film experiences (JFK and Lawrence of Arabia are two others, personally) that fuel your mind and compell you to read more about history.

Though not entirely accurate -- Oskar and his wife didn't have that tearful goodbye to Stern (they fled in the wee hours of the morning), this is excuseable for it's awe-inspiring visuals and teary music by John Williams. The final shot (won't give it away, for those who haven't seen it) is incredibly powerful and moving.

This film also introduced audiences to Ralph Fiennes, playing the fiery Amon Goeth. Unfortunately, though, his career took a dive pretty quickly (though he was good in Quiz Show, Strange Days, and Baby of Macan).

This is one of those films that will stick with you forever, make you think, and inspire you beyond belief.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Reality To The Extreme
Review: Schindler's List is by far the greatest film ever made. It's brutal, shocking and sad but it's a reality we all must face and in the end be inspired by. Oskar Schindler was a hero of epic proportion and the brave souls he rescued from certain death are a great testimony to the power of the human will and to the ultimate victory of good over evil. After seeing this movie I strongly recommend reading the book and another book called Schindler's Legacy, they too are inspiring.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Waiting for something better?
Review: It's been ten years since the release of Schindler's List. Some good films have arrived since then but I think there is no doubt there's hasn't been anything else better.

It's plain simple. And watch out what has taken XXI century. Has any other film moved you or made you think? Soundtrack, photography, art direction and sound are of the highest quality ever.

You will say Neeson and all actors don't make an excellent play. But is it a matter of actors? Who cares about films like Training Day or Leaving Las Vegas? And their actors won an Oscar...

"Schindler's List" is by far the best film of 90's. Only "Gladiator" is a bit closer than other mediocre films. Keep waiting for something good...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Sad tale
Review: I watched this movie in history class. There is no word that can describe the movie the black and white really pointed out the different in the movie and the history seems realistic. The tragedy of this movie is pointed out in a man who became rich because of the holocaust. There not much to say about this movie but watch it with out your kids and maybe bring a tissue box.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: movie
Review: I had to watch this film for school, I was very young and I didn't understand everything that happened in the film, but it had a profound impact on me. It is a very sad story but I definetly think all ages/races should see this film so something like this will never happen again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Schindler's List
Review: I cannot help but cry whenever I see this movie. However, I feel very strongly that historical movies (no matter how shocking), MUST be told so that they may be REMEMBERED...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the most important films of any generation...
Review: It is hard to state the importance of this film, either socially or morally, but to call it anything less than that would be a mistake. Schindler's List was not the kind of film I had at first expected to come from Steven Spielberg, having grown up with E.T. and Close Encounters. To say that I was surprised by the power of this film would be a gross understatement, never before I have found myself so moved by a work of cinema. The subject matter is so disturbing, the images haunt you long after the film has ended and Spielberg's use of black and white is a stark contrast to what we expect from movies today. If there is any movie that I would recommend, any film that I would beg my friends and family to witness... it is Schindler's List. It will stand throughout the ages as a testament to the horrors of the Holocaust, and the power that we each, as individuals, have to change the world even in the face humanity's worst. With a little help, and powerful reminders like this, maybe one day we truly will make certain that such a horrific act will never again take place.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Fair review ??? Nobody can remain fair with the film's topic
Review: I am not a fan of Steven Spielberg, in fact I do consider him childish and unable to deal with serious topics in a mature complex matter. In fact , there is always his annyoing childlike view of the world underneath the surface of the technical brilliance that characterizes his films. It would be unfair to call Shind'ler's List biased against Germans. That would be idiotic as the very hero of the story is German himself.
Yet one has to look pretty deeply to see Spielbergs resentments.
- The role of Amon Goeth, the Austrian SS Commanderof Plaszow was to be casted with a German Actor at first, Spielberg wanted Goetz George, who is a known acto in Germany and who until today openly admitted his suffering from his fathers (Heinrich George) appearance in Nazi Propagande flicks during the 1930s. George declined Spielbergs offer vehemnetly as he knew that working with a notorious German hating dircetor like Spielberg who is known for bitching around on the set is nothing a serious actor would want. Strangely though the "good German" Oskar Shindler himself is played by an American, how authentic.
So instead an "ugly Brit" like Ralph Fiennes has to do the job.
Goetz George had no problem whatsoever to play the Auschwitz war criminal Mengele in "After the Truth", a film that was made five years after SL.

- Spielberg many times admitted that he felt repulsion for the German actors who played the SS. Well, it was Spielberg who wanted them to wear the uniform, not themselves. Also again, why not use Americans for them as well ??? How about Ed Harris or Clint "Granite Face" Eastwood as the guy who shoots the kid ??? No that job needs to be done by the Germans of course. Every German actor with a bit of self esteem should turn down any offer from Spielberg. The biggest insult was that Spielberg received the Bundeverdienstkreuz (Federal Cross of Merit) from the German government.

- Recently the German TV channel VOX broadcasted a two hour special about the real Shindler. The had shown the original footage of Amon Goeth's execution by the Russians. Goeth did neither lift his arm for a last Sieg Heil nor did the Russians had to kick the bucket three times underneath his feet. He was hanged at a makeshift gallow without any emotional reaction.
The survivors of Plaszow themselves said in the interviews that the movie treis to bring the horror close to the viewer yet does not come even close to the real atrocities commited by Goeth.
Also GOeth had two housemaids called Helene. On said in the interview that Goeth's affcetion for her in portrayed in the film was just another Hollywood invention. In reality he just would mistreat his slave workers without warning and with absolute cruelty.
Spielberg could not resist to add Hollywood cliche to the film.
Something he did in every "serious" film he ever directed (and ruined).

Except for that Shindler's List is one of the better films about the Holocaust, although there is no film that can bring the Holocaust "close" to the viewer. As film always creates a "safe distance". The best would be to visit one of the Concentration camp memorial sites at Auschwitz or Belsen. That is a haunting experience.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Think twice
Review: For the first time in nearly 100 Amazon reviews, I am giving a product a five-star rating while more or less suggesting that it may not be worth buying.

The thought occurred to me just after my heart jumped a bit upon realizing that Schindler's List was about to be released in DVD, something that has been a long time coming.

This is a rare example of a film that met with great commercial success and well-deserved critical acclaim, and it may be the film that hugely talented and prolific director Steven Spielberg will be remembered for. This is one of the greatest motion pictures ever made, and when I started building my DVD collection a few years ago I always considered the film's absence a glaring one.

But now that now that I can finally add it to the collection, I wondered: do we buy DVDs of great films, or of films we want to watch again and again? If the answer is the former, Schindler's List is a perfect fit. But it it's the latter -- and I think it is -- then I am not so sure.

This is not the kind of film one can watch without becoming involved, and involved in a profound way. It is important and difficult and uncomfortable and a masterpiece of modern cinema -- but is not enjoyable. Can anyone who has seen this film imagine watching it again to pass the time on a rainy night? Is it the motion picture you'd select to watch after ordering out for pizza when friends stop by? Not from my perspective, and that is why this great film won't soon be on the shelf with the rest of my DVDs.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A very important film.
Review: I find myself compelled to take issue with the "viewer from San Jose", and his/her review titled "good movie, bad research" dated January 23 2004.

While I do not suggest that Mr. Spielberg was 100% spot on regarding the historical accuracies of the film, I believe that this reviewer has completely missed the point. Oskar Schindler was a flawed man, no one will deny that. It is however historical record that that he personally saved some 900 Jewish lives. Mr. Spielberg has simply chosen his story to inform a wide audience of a limited number of events from a period that was probably the lowest point in human history. I guess the reason why he chose Schindler above, say, Rauol Wallenberg, is simply due to the existence of the excellent Novel by Thomas Keneally.

(I personally believe that the one real flaw of Schindler's List is to portray a story with an essentially happy ending, but of course this is the problem with almost all holocaust films, since they portray "survivor's tales". The true horror of the holocaust lies in the stories of the those that did not survive, but conventional wisdom suggests no one would pay money to sit through a film that depressing, and they are probably right)

While the reviewer is correct to point out that tens of millions of other people were killed during the Second World War, comparing 20 million Russians and 8 million Germans dying as the consequence of the war, mainly through fighting and starvationas a result of war, to the industrialized wholesale slaughter of the Jews is misleading. Hilter set his sights on one particular people above all; the Jews. At the end of the war, cattle trains transporting Jews to the gas chambers were given priority above trains transporting troops and supplies to the front lines. The entire War finally boiled down to a psychopathic desire to rid Europe of Jews once and for all. (lets not forget that had the Nazis succeeded in North Africa, the same fate would have awaited Jews there).
As for the 5 million Poles he mentions, 3 million of them were Jews for crying out loud. A typically misleading statistic commonly used by Holocaust deniers.

Now, for the reviewer's suggestion that Poland was full of people trying to help the Jews, the only reason why Poles make up a large proportion of the list of "righteous gentiles" is because half of the Jews in Europe happenned to live in Poland. They were therefore afforded far more opportunities to save Jews than any other nation. Why does the reviewer think that the camps were located in Poland? The reason is twofold - firstly, it was logistically the closest location to the largest Jewsish population, secondly, it was well known that Poles would tolerate the camps since they were among the most anti semitic people in Europe. A non Jewish friend of mine while visitng the Holocaust Museum in Jerusalem (Yad Vashem) upon viewing the 13000 names of the "righteous gentiles" commented that there should in fact be millions of them, that every European should have tried to save Jews. It should be the rule, rather than the exception, shouldn't it?

As for the reviewer's comments of the brutality of the Jewish police, this purely and simply an indication of being influenced by Holocaust deniers. While I will not deny that these people did not act in a despicable manner by cooperating with the Nazis (they did this out of a sense of self preservation mostly) it is ridiculous to suggest that they were as evil as the murderers of the SS. There are no stories (except perhaps concosted lies) about "Judenrat" stomping on pregnant women's stomachs or shooting children in front of their parents. And to complain that Schindler's List is too focused on the Jews is like complaining that 9-11 documentaries and books are too focused on American losses when there were dozens of other nationals that died.

In the end, the most important point about this film is that it has drawn the attention of many people to the most shameful event in history. To paraphrase a character from the last Woody Allen film, if the punishment for the occurence of the holocaust would be the ceasation of mankind's continued existence, it could be argued that this punishment would be deserved and fair.


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