Schindler's List (1993) GROUP REACTION

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Пікірлер: 660

  • @everforward5561
    @everforward5561 Жыл бұрын

    I think the most interesting on set story from this is when survivors were visiting the set, and one of the women nearly fainted when she saw Ralph Fiennes step out as Among Goeth in full uniform. She said for a moment she thought Amon had somehow come back from the grave to finish her.

  • @Stubbies2003

    @Stubbies2003

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup I also related that in my post. Obviously I feel most sorry for the survivor to have to relive that in her mind but I also feel quite a bit sorry for Ralph as he was just acting a part and just happens to be a good actor who also shared a visual look with Goeth.

  • @everforward5561

    @everforward5561

    Жыл бұрын

    @GeorgeAdept No one curr, Nazi muffin.

  • @joshuagrover795

    @joshuagrover795

    Жыл бұрын

    But Ralph Fiennes did his best to reassure the victims of Goeth on set that he meant them no harm that he was only acting a part, unfortunately his character turned out to be a SS Death Head psychotic.

  • @ritathomas3926

    @ritathomas3926

    Жыл бұрын

    Omg

  • @padfolio

    @padfolio

    Жыл бұрын

    If you read up on Goeth and the things he did, the movie almost makes him look tame by comparison.

  • @bobcobb3654
    @bobcobb3654 Жыл бұрын

    I remember being in the 10th grade when this came out, and my history teacher arranged a field trip to see this movie. On the bus ride there, we were typical high school kids happy to get out of a half day of classes to go to a free movie. On the way back, you could have heard a pin drop.it’s a great movie and a very important one. But for people that went in not knowing much about the story and history, it was pulverizing.

  • @damianboj3809

    @damianboj3809

    Жыл бұрын

    Holy... You had school trip for this movie? Nice. Good idea to take kids to see some important movies. What country it was?

  • @Ashmo613

    @Ashmo613

    Жыл бұрын

    @@damianboj3809 So did we, in America--Texas

  • @MomCatMeows

    @MomCatMeows

    Жыл бұрын

    Same! I was in 11th grade, and we saw this in the theater with our history class. It was awful. 😰

  • @Trip_Fontaine

    @Trip_Fontaine

    Жыл бұрын

    We had a field trip to the newly-opened Holocaust Museum in DC when I was a senior in high school. It broke me about 10 minutes after entering. I cried so much that one teacher who didn't know me thought that I was Jewish.

  • @EM-cs7jw

    @EM-cs7jw

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Trip_Fontainethey didn’t know you were Jewish? Sorry trying to understand

  • @guslakis
    @guslakis Жыл бұрын

    I’m actually glad that you four ladies reacted so strongly to this film, this is how we SHOULD react to such inhumanity, your sadness and shock from the horror of it is exactly how human beings should react to this tragedy.

  • @orangewarm1

    @orangewarm1

    Жыл бұрын

    this is how most people react to this film. you seem surprised.

  • @ReligionOfSacrifice

    @ReligionOfSacrifice

    Жыл бұрын

    @@orangewarm1, I did not cry during the movie, until he began speaking about the ring and car saving a dozen more humans, because that was not how Oscar Schindler was at all. Read the book.

  • @guslakis

    @guslakis

    Жыл бұрын

    @@orangewarm1 , the ongoing wars and suffering humans have been put through since the holocaust is disappointing to me, the ladies’ reaction was reassuring but it isn’t close to universal, at least not among some of the world’s political leaders.

  • @ReligionOfSacrifice

    @ReligionOfSacrifice

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@guslakis, the women's crying caused me to cry more than the movie did. I watched this movie in the theatre with men. I believe there is a reason why Adam looked at Even and said "woman, for she was taken out of man" and it had occurred at the breast. Noah - "from toil of hands, this same shall be Comforter of" woman - "this same shall be Comforter of man" Yahweh - "The Lifted High, this same shall be Comforter of" In the Garden of Eden, the Holy Spirit was still in man and so Adam was stating that though he had just named all the animals in the Garden of Eden nothing was like the Holy Spirit of God to him until he saw a woman. English came from the Germanic language which was unified upon Martin Luther writing the first Germanic Bible which caused Germany to be created as suddenly all the Germans wished to speak that germanic language and to be able to read the Word of God in their native tongue. Man was made upright, but finds many devices, while women were deceived, but can bring salvation through childbirth. Yet women will find that upon the man stepping out from being under the correct God why would he submit to serve the weaker sex; hence the curse of the fall for women as the Pentateuch (first five books of the Bible) gives more written rights to women over 4,000 years ago, which caused Proverbs 31 society over 3,400 years ago until Jewish women led the feminist movement in Christian lands to create more written rights than the Pentateuch. Just my thoughts as to why women have the better spirit, and why lands which give rights to women are closer to the Bible and the thought and mind of Yahweh. Germany was great when Martin Luther created a Protestant Bible and was created as a nation and Germany was great when the Gutenberg printing press made the nation into intellectual readers who created more Bibles than any other nation before as a gift to the world of what makes a nation great. Hitler made Germany weak as it slew off their people and they replaced it with Muslims who were drawn to the area.

  • @guslakis

    @guslakis

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ReligionOfSacrifice , what evidence do you have to support all of your assertions here?

  • @GS-xt8fu
    @GS-xt8fu Жыл бұрын

    Yes. Thank you for your hearts. My grandmother lost two sisters and one brother in the concentration camps. There were four of them….they were taken. They were also moved to different areas based on age. She never seen them again. She was the only survivor. She died five years ago. She was 93. Her maiden name was Zelinka.

  • @shaundavenport621

    @shaundavenport621

    8 ай бұрын

    I was very moved by your Grandmother,s story!She must have thought about them all of her life. Very sad indeed. 😢😢

  • @lissi2213

    @lissi2213

    6 ай бұрын

    I am so so sorry 😭💔

  • @Patrik_Ironside

    @Patrik_Ironside

    3 ай бұрын

    so sorry 💔😭

  • @enginestarter664
    @enginestarter6647 ай бұрын

    Amon Göht's granddaughter Jennifer Teege is of German-Nigerian descent and wrote a New York Times bestseller called "My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me: A Black Woman Discovers Her Family's Nazi Past". She studied in Israel and didn't find out she was Göth's granddaughter until she was 38.

  • @marktallentire3464
    @marktallentire3464 Жыл бұрын

    I genuinely believe every young person should be made to watch this film. We should NEVER forget these horrors

  • @dennissheckleburg9775

    @dennissheckleburg9775

    Жыл бұрын

    Best comedy of all time

  • @dennissheckleburg9775

    @dennissheckleburg9775

    Жыл бұрын

    @Dank Waifu cheers niggaaaaa

  • @isak2209

    @isak2209

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dennissheckleburg9775 Digital footprint

  • @TheGundamsword

    @TheGundamsword

    Жыл бұрын

    Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it. And I fear it may be repeated very soon. 😔

  • @marktallentire3464

    @marktallentire3464

    Жыл бұрын

    @@TheGundamsword The way Jewish people are treated these days so do I

  • @J_Rossi
    @J_Rossi Жыл бұрын

    It's been almost thirty years since I first saw this movie. 'I could have got more....' never fails to break me.

  • @migiplayz91
    @migiplayz91 Жыл бұрын

    "I could of gotten more." Hits me every time

  • @jeffreykaufmann2867

    @jeffreykaufmann2867

    10 ай бұрын

    A Seinfeld Episode made fun of that line.

  • @jeffk1722

    @jeffk1722

    9 ай бұрын

    Probably was thinking of that girl in red, when it became "one more person."

  • @jeffreykaufmann2867

    @jeffreykaufmann2867

    9 ай бұрын

    @jeffk1722 Oskar Schindler never said that anyway. Thats Spielberg's invention. You and I can save many lives a year just by donating $30/month to UNICEF.

  • @jeffk1722

    @jeffk1722

    9 ай бұрын

    @@jeffreykaufmann2867 I understand this is a fictional scene (or a speculation). I'm talking about this film's character and what Spielberg was conveying with Neeson's expressions.

  • @jeffreykaufmann2867

    @jeffreykaufmann2867

    9 ай бұрын

    @jeffk1722 At the end of Schindler's list, it falsely mentioned that more than 6 million Jews were murdered.

  • @sr71ablackbird
    @sr71ablackbird Жыл бұрын

    just some notes, the concentration camp there which was called plaszow (pronounced, `plashow") was built on top of what was a jewish cemetery. the factory that oskar schindler had was converted into a museum which has pictures and names of the folks that he helped. also the apartment that in that movie where liam is staying at, is actually oskar schindler's apartment where he stayed, seeing that the movie was filmed in krakow, poland.

  • @sjholmes10
    @sjholmes10 Жыл бұрын

    This movie is only going to get more important as years go by and we lose the last of the generation that suffered and survived. It shows that we can all do more to help others and reactions like this decades after the fact prove that we are one people, that's why we shed tears for those we don't even know

  • @ReligionOfSacrifice

    @ReligionOfSacrifice

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm sorry but hatred is in the DNA and these girls wonder what do they mean by good old anti-semitism. The country of Spain under Islamic rule (711 A.D. to 1491 A.D.) was doing pogroms every decade of their rule against Jews and Christians, but in the 14th century they got pretty awful toward the Jews. They only slew 4,000 Jews in one city in one circumstance in 1391 A.D. They piled the bodies and heads in two separate piles and like a Bible reference the bodies got so high a man on a horse could not see over the pile. These two piles were put before the vizer of Granada who was a Jew being crucified on a cross. Russia did pogroms against Jews from 1821 A.D. to 1920 A.D. and under communism ripped down every steeple of a church throughout their whole land, so after 1917 A.D. Eastern Europe did pogroms against Jews from 1881 A.D. to 1922 A.D. These things are drops in the bucket and the German is referring to policy of complete decimation in the sense Triblinka and Sobibor and Belzec were built for complete annihilation as opposed to places like Auschwitz which were work camps. In Triblinka alone over 600,000 Jews were slain in less than 16 months and the whole thing was disassembled and unrecognizable. No one would have ever found it had it not been for the Germans meticulous data collection. They found it, even though all that was left was trace shadow of building sites and nearly unrecognizable bone tissue since it was nearly gone. The movie "Amen," from 2002, covers how the Germans believed it would go, but it was not so... We know the truth.

  • @johnO21

    @johnO21

    Жыл бұрын

    .. in a way could say Obama was doing the same thing ripping families apart at southernUSA Mexican border

  • @ReligionOfSacrifice

    @ReligionOfSacrifice

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnO21, whether Obama hates Jews or not is still a subject of debate in regards to his policies, but I'd say he's against them. I don't think we can say a nation dealing wtih families coming at their borders is relatable to a holocaust. Your logic is dicey at best.

  • @nickc3250

    @nickc3250

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnO21 let’s go Brandon

  • @joefriedman9843

    @joefriedman9843

    Жыл бұрын

    @@johnO21 He was doing the same thing as the Nazi's did during the holocaust??? Wtf are you saying, that he killed millions of people?? This is a completely insane comment that I know I probably shouldn't give attention to but wow

  • @kennethwhigam2199
    @kennethwhigam2199 Жыл бұрын

    I’ve been to Schindler’s factory now converted to a museum. There are pictures of every person he saved on the outside of the building etched in each window. It was a depressing and emotionally draining place to go to.

  • @Mustang318
    @Mustang318 Жыл бұрын

    The reason why he didn't stay with them at the end is that the approaching Soviet army would not likely have cared if people spoke out on his behalf - particularly Jewish people. He was a card carrying member of the Nazi party and would have very likely been shot. Thank you for such a sincere and emotive reaction as always, worth the watch!

  • @garyjohnstone6422

    @garyjohnstone6422

    29 күн бұрын

    Contextually.......of course he only kept the card as a cover while working against them

  • @redviper6805
    @redviper6805 Жыл бұрын

    During my two year residence in Jerusalem, Israel 16 years ago I took a Holocaust school course that included a 10 day field trip in Poland. One of the places we visited was Krakow. Where the events of Schindler's List took place. Most of my family and I were actually at what was left of the factory, including that long staircase to his office. Also on the hill where Schindler witnessed the liquidation of the ghetto and saw the girl with the red coat and one other film location. My whole family and I got to visit Schindler's grave a couple of times.

  • @dizzy_dmc9047
    @dizzy_dmc9047 Жыл бұрын

    Glad u guys watched this together, I swear everytime u guys cry I just wanna give each of u guys a hug 🫂. Luv ya homies ❤️

  • @Logan_1991
    @Logan_1991 Жыл бұрын

    Didn't think this was a Christmas movie but it certainly makes you appreciate life and family.

  • @mR_wIgHt
    @mR_wIgHt Жыл бұрын

    Thomas Keneally (the author of the book "Schindler's Ark") has claimed in an interview that he was personally shown a six-hour-plus "rough cut" of the film by Steven Spielberg that he found far better than the final theatrical version. As of 2016, this rough-cut version has never been released in any authorized format.

  • @isaaclosh8082
    @isaaclosh8082 Жыл бұрын

    17 of my family members were murdered in the holocaust. Thank you for honoring their memory. May we never forget.

  • @joefriedman9843
    @joefriedman98437 ай бұрын

    All the homies reacted beautifully to this but I especially love the empathy from Ellie and Viki. Their level of emotion here is really beautiful.

  • @livvyb3583
    @livvyb3583 Жыл бұрын

    Liam Neesons final scene broke me. No matter how many times I watch this movie, I cry at this scene. I read that Ralph Fiennes appearance in character was so close to the real Amon Goeth that one of the survivors (Mila Pfefferberg)who was on set when introduced to him began shaking uncontrollably. Great movie!

  • @a.g.demada5263

    @a.g.demada5263

    Жыл бұрын

    Really ?

  • @livvyb3583

    @livvyb3583

    Жыл бұрын

    @@a.g.demada5263 Yes. He had taken on not just the appearance but mannerisms for the role and when the survivor saw him, she shook with fear because it reminded her of the real Goeth.

  • @a.g.demada5263

    @a.g.demada5263

    Жыл бұрын

    @@livvyb3583 oh, that's crazy

  • @Stubbies2003

    @Stubbies2003

    Жыл бұрын

    @@a.g.demada5263 Yes if you look into the story of the movie this is a fact.

  • @joefriedman9843

    @joefriedman9843

    7 ай бұрын

    @@livvyb3583 Such a testament to what a great actor he is but weirdly scary in specific instances like this. Like he's just doing his job really well but he must feel a twinge of guilt traumatizing a survivor like that..

  • @garychambers6848
    @garychambers6848 Жыл бұрын

    My father served in Patton's 3rd Army 42-45 (687th FAB)....Thru Normandy ( Second waves.) , the battle of the hedgerows, Battle of the Bulge... One of his last duties in Europe was helping "clean up" Buchenwald concentration camp in the spring of 45....He brought back pictures he took there.....Any depiction of the "camps" in this movie are toned down!!!!

  • @goanna83

    @goanna83

    Жыл бұрын

    And to think there are some people out there that think that the Holocaust never existed! 😡 Some people need to get properly educated these days. Much respect and salute to your father in his services by the way

  • @garychambers6848

    @garychambers6848

    Жыл бұрын

    @@goanna83 Thanks

  • @robertdurant7934

    @robertdurant7934

    Жыл бұрын

    How did your father react to what he experienced during the cleanup of the camps?

  • @garychambers6848

    @garychambers6848

    Жыл бұрын

    @@robertdurant7934 My mother later burned those pics...She said because those corpses were naked but it was because he would take them out and look at them... He only made few statements about the war... Like "You don't know stink until you smell burnt humans" ....He mostly left the war behind and raised a family.....He would tell me a few things like when I was in school he said "The Germans had guns that could shoot around corners"...I thought he was nuts until years later I saw those type firearms on the History Channel ......But when the first SWAT teams were on tv (With SS helmets dressed in SS black) storming into people's homes...His fingers dug into his recliner with rage.....He saw Stormtroopers!!!

  • @puzzled012

    @puzzled012

    Жыл бұрын

    yet Patton prefered NSDAP folks to Jews and Slavs...

  • @kutsukutsuu202
    @kutsukutsuu2026 ай бұрын

    I remember in high school, they used to show us such films to educate us on the subject. I used to cry every time and the kids would make fun of me.. how sad of them..

  • @degaulle30
    @degaulle30 Жыл бұрын

    The bit where they drive the children off and they're all waving and the mothers are screaming is fucking diabolical.

  • @johnhenrygrzyb7970
    @johnhenrygrzyb797010 ай бұрын

    I saw this movie when it came out. Even today it still wrecks me. We as humans can be so cruel to each other. I will never understand how come we can’t all get along. Or just respect each other and live in peace.

  • @IdioticTrolling

    @IdioticTrolling

    5 ай бұрын

    While other animals will fight for territory, mate, and food, only the human animal will fight for such intangible things as thoughts and ideals. As long as there are two humans left in the whole wide world, sooner or later, they will try to kill one another.

  • @garyjohnstone6422

    @garyjohnstone6422

    29 күн бұрын

    "We, as humans", at large are not. Place this blame firmly where it belongs with Hitler`s National Socialist Party`s doctrine to use extreme violence to overthrow. This is not a speculation, it is their well known policy and history. Socialism requires revolution. It has murdered 100M ppl so far. Socialism, is, thus undeniably proven to be evil. Satanic, maniacal and the most evil ideology ever. Ppl who support it are willfully ignorant.

  • @krystallvinter7438
    @krystallvinter7438 Жыл бұрын

    I just rewatched Schindler's List 2 days ago, and I think it's my 3rd or 4th time watching it. I make it a rule for myself to once in a while watch a movie about the Holocaust (Schindler's List, The Pianist, etc.) to remember how brutal, unhumane and disgusting all of it was. A few years ago, my mom told me that my great-grandfather (mom's grandfather) helped about ten Jews escape from Copenhagen here in Denmark to Sweden, as Sweden was not a part of WWII. I'm proud of my great-grandfather, even though he didn't save anywhere near as many people as Mr. Schindler did. I love you girls' reactions, and I hope you're doing well :)

  • @mariaschreurs8904

    @mariaschreurs8904

    5 ай бұрын

    He who save 1 life save the entire world.

  • @gdansk87

    @gdansk87

    4 ай бұрын

    really nice story 😊

  • @ericdenney3302
    @ericdenney3302 Жыл бұрын

    Poor Ellie, torturing herself watching all these super emotional movies this week for the SECOND time. She's going to need therapy 😂.

  • @manduheavyvazquez5268

    @manduheavyvazquez5268

    Жыл бұрын

    😂😂😂😂 jajajajajajaja. Greatness

  • @sayemahmed7439

    @sayemahmed7439

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah lol. But she has a good heart. You don't normally see people get this emotional like her these days.

  • @latinasawntop

    @latinasawntop

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm like Ellie, lol. It's kinda hard to escape bc there's lots of movies that have sad scenes. Even if the scene is just remotely emotional, I'll still having tears streaming down my face🤣. Maybe it's bc I'm autistic but it's not a bad thing, just a little embarassing LMAO.

  • @_Shadoh_

    @_Shadoh_

    Жыл бұрын

    @@latinasawntop Imo crying is never embarassing, it's just showing you are human and have emotions. Nobody should ever be ashamed of crying. And this movie is one of the saddest, I could never not cry watching it, and I'm an older guy 😄

  • @halfdead1380

    @halfdead1380

    Жыл бұрын

    I saw all 13 faces of death at 9... lol.. they will be fine

  • @Hardrada88
    @Hardrada8811 ай бұрын

    This film, and the reaction speaks volumes. I'll share a story my granny told me; during the war she was one of 4 women picked from a large group of women and children being taken to execution through a wooded field outside poland. The 4 women would take all the clothes (the victims were ordered to strip naked first) and unstitch them whilst the men would fill in the mass grave. She said they walked in a column through a wooded area on a beautiful summer day. They saw squirrels and birds and a little girl, a tot of (as she said) probably 4-5 let go of her mothers hand and ran over to some flowers. She started to pick a bunch of them which enraged a soldier and, in her words now. "He kicked her like a football. She tumbled over and over and sat bewildered in the grass. Still clutching the little stems without flowers." She didnt cry, but toddled back to her mum and handed her the stems. Now i am a grown adult man and still well up with tears when i think of that story. How can a human do that to a little one? As my granny said, your going to kill them anyway. What is one moment to pick flowers, to smile and laugh again? Would it hurt? When my godson and I would walk through the woods hed always find a stick or flower or something and come back so proud and full of joy. It breaks my heart to think of it and it happened to hundreds of families. The hardest thing is to forgive and it is essential, it takes courage. Dont carry hate, pity them. Forgive for your grandmothers and fathers sake and the world can be at peace. I think of them, those people, granny everyday and say in my mind that i love them. Kindness & forgiveness go a long way though its a hard road to walk

  • @garyjohnstone6422

    @garyjohnstone6422

    29 күн бұрын

    No. God will never forgive them and nor should anyone else. Never. Germans supported Hitler`s actions enthusiastically because they believed they were supreme..

  • @ofi1009
    @ofi1009 Жыл бұрын

    Esta pelicula solo la pude ver una vez , terminas de verla y te quedas increiblemente triste ..... Steven Spielberg demuestra que es un director increible...

  • @hartspot009
    @hartspot009 Жыл бұрын

    Spielberg's The Color Purple is equally as emotional with fantastic performances and beautiful story. Nominated for 11 Academy Awards

  • @orangewarm1

    @orangewarm1

    Жыл бұрын

    i didn't find it equally as emotional.

  • @Progger11

    @Progger11

    Жыл бұрын

    That movie sucks

  • @hartspot009

    @hartspot009

    Жыл бұрын

    Lol..so do you. Maybe because it's about black people?

  • @kendelacruz5909

    @kendelacruz5909

    Жыл бұрын

    That is inferior quality compare to this classic

  • @davidsalinas676

    @davidsalinas676

    Жыл бұрын

    Not the same doesnt even come close to the shoah.

  • @johnstrong4089
    @johnstrong4089 Жыл бұрын

    Liam Still visits Oskar Schindler grave with his family to this day

  • @oh2button
    @oh2button Жыл бұрын

    The four of you were so incredibly brave to watch this movie and let us see your reactions to it. It is one of the most heart-wrenching movies and yet it tells a story that so needed to be told. Thank you all for your love and devotion.

  • @AMMS10
    @AMMS10 Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact: That actor is Voldamort from Harry Potter by the way.

  • @iuripaiva5988
    @iuripaiva5988 Жыл бұрын

    This movie is really sad...one of the best of all time

  • @orangewarm1

    @orangewarm1

    Жыл бұрын

    isn't that mentioning the obvious?

  • @rbodee
    @rbodee Жыл бұрын

    You all should watch "It's a Wonderful Life" together. It's a great Christmas movie.

  • @jackbrereton7286

    @jackbrereton7286

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes I Agree!!! I think they’d love it!!

  • @oscarparedes4033

    @oscarparedes4033

    Жыл бұрын

    I see what you’re doing there 😏

  • @philwragg9756

    @philwragg9756

    Жыл бұрын

    @@oscarparedes4033 I do grow up !!

  • @80sGamerLady

    @80sGamerLady

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes! My favorite Christmas movie! So heart touching.

  • @michellewalters7097
    @michellewalters7097 Жыл бұрын

    Escape From Sorbibor is another good one that is based on a true story. On October 14, 1943 the inmates pulled off the only successful escape during WW2

  • @thesailjunkie
    @thesailjunkie4 ай бұрын

    This is not a movie; it's a documentary - a real life horror movie. Watching it is a life-changing event. Abi gezunt.

  • @ephennell4ever
    @ephennell4ever Жыл бұрын

    It's amazing when you think about it, that such a *horror* as the Holocaust could, when the right people tell the story of a part of it ... a *wonderful* and _transcendent_ work of *beauty* is produced, that is _so_ *very* powerful that people are moved to tears by it - and *celebrate* their tears! Thank you for the reaction/review. It was almost as powerful as the movie itself!

  • @jamesba-xd7xf
    @jamesba-xd7xf Жыл бұрын

    what movie was number 2?? schindlers list is 1st, forrest gump 4, and the green mile 3. THANKS!.

  • @coldflamebluedragon196
    @coldflamebluedragon196 Жыл бұрын

    There was a man Nicholas Winton who saved over 600 children like this in the war. Decades later they held a ceremony in an opera house to honor him and asked everyone who he saved or was descended from someone he saved to stand up and the entire audience of the opera house stood before him

  • @carmenburton4918

    @carmenburton4918

    5 ай бұрын

    He saved 669 children. There was another business mand that did the same thing. I can't rmrbr his name. However , there is a statue to him at liverpool Street Station EC1 London.

  • @thearsenalmisfit2414
    @thearsenalmisfit24144 ай бұрын

    I remember going to see this with my wife the day it hit town. Never had a film effected as much as this one did right from the opening scene. The theater was packed that night, and when it ended, there was complete silence. You could hear a pin drop, and I don't think there was a dry eye in the house. I remember the people from the next show looking at us with one of them saying this is going to be a brutal watch. They all look shattered. The film is a master piece and everyone should be made to see it.

  • @erco9167
    @erco91675 ай бұрын

    what finally got me was realizing every name spoken was a real person from the maniacally detailed historical record

  • @ManuelAlejandroTorresMonroy
    @ManuelAlejandroTorresMonroy Жыл бұрын

    In think sadly, Bulgari did participated in the Holocaust: As an ally of Nazi Germany, Bulgaria participated in the Holocaust, contributing to the deaths of 11,343 Jews, and though 48,000 Jews survived the war, they were subjected to forcible internal deportation, dispossession, and discrimination. However, during the war, German-allied Bulgaria did not deport Jews from the core provinces of Bulgaria. Bulgaria's wartime government was pro-German under Georgi Kyoseivanov, Bogdan Filov, Dobri Bozhilov, and Ivan Bagryanov. It joined the Allies under Konstantin Muraviev in early September 1944, then underwent a coup d'état a week later, and under Kimon Georgiev was pro-Soviet thereafter. I want to know more about it since maybe I'm lacking information. Thank you!

  • @gluuuuue

    @gluuuuue

    Жыл бұрын

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Jews_in_Bulgaria#World_War_II

  • @Pinylyn
    @Pinylyn Жыл бұрын

    Awww you all are the sweetest. So tender hearted. 💛

  • @melme82

    @melme82

    Жыл бұрын

    Not to disagree with you at all, but god even the NOT tenderhearted (like me) get destroyed by this movie. Lady in the left was going through it, I wanted to give her a hug and a bottle of water, she was looking like she was dehydrating. The best part of this type of movies is that they stay with you, years after. The worst part it’s the same. We should all watch and cry and hopefully learn

  • @Worldwide505
    @Worldwide505 Жыл бұрын

    *According to me 2 most heartbreaking scenes ever in world cinema.* 😭😭 *1. (**53:11** to **56:09**) on Schindler's List.* *2. When Amitabh Bachchan died in "Sholay 1975".* *I am 100% sure that even a stone hearted person will cry after seeing these 2 scenes.* *Nothing can match these scenes in world cinema in terms of most emotional heartbreak scenes.*

  • @terminado5977
    @terminado5977 Жыл бұрын

    Ustedes comparten emociones muy dificiles de aceptar ..ustedes muestran el valor mas puro de sus almas.. eso requiere mucho valor..

  • @jamenta2
    @jamenta2 Жыл бұрын

    One of the few films I've only watched once, and will not watch again - because it is too hard to get through emotionally.

  • @jonathancruz5932
    @jonathancruz5932 Жыл бұрын

    This movie is powerful and how important to treat other people as human beings

  • @kirstyc2176

    @kirstyc2176

    Жыл бұрын

    @GeorgeAdeptyou need help

  • @lindawolski3173
    @lindawolski31738 ай бұрын

    We must NEVER, NEVER, EVER forget! Though this movie should be shown to our young people instead of this woke garbage, we won’t show it because we’re afraid to offend people!

  • @joescott8877
    @joescott8877 Жыл бұрын

    Not surprisingly, I found y'all's reaction to the unforgettable"I could have got more out" scene to be the most moving moment. And how. Thank you, and thank you, Steven Spielberg & Company!

  • @ButcheryTapes

    @ButcheryTapes

    Жыл бұрын

    Fiction.

  • @dafunkyshit

    @dafunkyshit

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ButcheryTapes No. You're an edge-lord that isn't funny at all.

  • @KM-vc2yp
    @KM-vc2yp9 ай бұрын

    Where are you recording this from

  • @Borisam
    @Borisam10 ай бұрын

    It is good to tell their stories. It was so hard for all of them. May they rest in peace. Thank you Oskar, you are Righteous!

  • @handsomestik
    @handsomestik Жыл бұрын

    Liam kills it in that last scene

  • @orangewarm1

    @orangewarm1

    Жыл бұрын

    killed the whole film. i think its his best.

  • @JordanCesaroni93
    @JordanCesaroni93 Жыл бұрын

    I watched this movie for the first time last year and I cried through half of the movie. And by the end, I just couldn’t believe I didn’t see the movie that made Steven Spielberg an Oscar winner director sooner. Did this movie deserve Best Picture, yes. Did Spielberg deserve Best Director, hell yeah.

  • @jollyjohnthepirate3168
    @jollyjohnthepirate31682 ай бұрын

    If you watch this film and don't cry.......you aren't human. When Spielberg showed a rough copy of this film to John Willams hoping he would write the music for it. Willams had to leave. He went outside and cryed. He came back inside and told Spielberg he needed someone better to score the film. Steven told him that everyone better than him was dead.

  • @shreyashpatil6727

    @shreyashpatil6727

    15 күн бұрын

    It is Jewish propoganda film

  • @conureron3792
    @conureron3792 Жыл бұрын

    Very challenging movie to watch and review. I couldn’t leave the theater for 15 minutes after the movie ended. Took me awhile to compose myself.

  • @ShilohSmith
    @ShilohSmith Жыл бұрын

    The real life horror movies are truly the most horrific, the fact that we humans could be filled with so much hatred an animosity that we decide the death of more than 6 million innocent people is not only warranted, but justified. “Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it” this should be shown in schools, these are the real world lessons we should be taught as kids. This is where the path of hatred leads.

  • @alexwildner6369

    @alexwildner6369

    Жыл бұрын

    6 million jews, 5 million other undesirables, plus the millions of soldiers who fought to continue their hateful spread and to defend it with their lives

  • @fumblingdetective
    @fumblingdetective7 ай бұрын

    I like how both Brünnlitz and Auschwitz end with the letters -itz at the end. If someone was speaking about those two places, they would say names sound very similar. Kind of similar, but this is far from the truth, they are quite opposite of each other. First is safe haven, hometown of Jew protector Oskar Schindler and during the day while Schindler himself awaits men on the train station. Auschwitz on the other hand is hell on Earth, it's dark and foggy , there are searchlights, soldiers with dogs. I loved the contrast between the two.

  • @toddlevin

    @toddlevin

    7 ай бұрын

    All the German/Slavic suffix -itz basically means is "of", "belonging to", "originating from" - like a family name. So Auschwitz means coming from the location of Ausch (ashy earth) and Brünn means coming from the location of Brünn (a well, fountain, or stream). It's how family surnames are created from those areas.

  • @32446
    @32446 Жыл бұрын

    I went to see Schindler’s factory. It was very moving. You might be interested to watch Inheritance where Helen meets Amon Goethe’s daughter Monika. Monika did not know who her father was, until she watched this film.

  • @stormtroopertk8
    @stormtroopertk84 ай бұрын

    Every single reaction I’ve ever seen of Schindlers list always starts with a smile, and ends with tears

  • @jamesjay6642
    @jamesjay6642 Жыл бұрын

    This movie was so difficult and harrowing to make that whilst they were filming, at the end of some days Steven Spielberg would ask Robin Williams to phone him to tell him jokes and make him feel better and hopeful again about life.......

  • @markroberts2943
    @markroberts294310 ай бұрын

    Hello from lreland, your heart makes me feel better. This movie while hard to watch,makes people learn about about a part of history that should never be forgotten. Thanks for letting me watch it with you. Slainte from Dublin. Your all brilliant. ❤️🇮🇪

  • @hillena
    @hillena5 ай бұрын

    Well done girls, I am 51 and back in the day I did see it in the cinema you could hear a pin drop and only here and there some silent crying , I still cry watching it and I have seen it at least 100 times , The sound track is amazing especially Ithzak Perlman , Thank you for this

  • @xasthurwithin4178
    @xasthurwithin4178 Жыл бұрын

    As you are Bulgarians, you should be proud of the actions of your people at that time. The government at the time was absolute trash that allied with the Nazis, but when they tried to form the Waffen Grenadier Regiment of the SS (1st Bulgarian) the soldiers at many points just refused to fight. There was popular resistance.

  • @nelo62pt
    @nelo62pt7 күн бұрын

    I just regret that Hollywood never thought of making a film about the greatest hero of all , saving 30,000 Jews , his name ARISTIDES SOUSA MENDES , Portuguese , at the time consul in Bordeaux who saved around 30 thousand people from death by issuing visas to pass to border , even though it was closed by the Portuguese government , he went against the order , later being dismissed from his position and never being able to hold any position again , dying in poverty

  • @AximandTheCursed
    @AximandTheCursed Жыл бұрын

    Oh my sweet lovely darlings... this is not a film to take lightly! If it does not tear the heart out of you, you are not a human worthy of life! It is a bucket list film, though I have yet to meet the woman or man that could watch it without bawling their eyes out, nor do I care to, it is a journey that defines the inhumanity of the human creature, while simultaneously showcasing the most noble virtues of humanity in the worst situations...

  • @paulobrien9572
    @paulobrien9572 Жыл бұрын

    This movie reveals the similar yet just as unique manner each of these exceptional women's personalities approach watching a film such as this. Lia constantly trying to figure out and truly comprehend what she is watching. Michelle always projecting a stoicism and guarded humor when you know that deep down she has a heart of gold. Vicki and Ellie are an open book emotions sad or joyful simply laid bare for all to see genuine with no sense of pretense. Each one of these ladies are a pleasure to watch in their own way. Lastly Vicki and Lia must react to one of my favorite movies that Ellie and Michelle have already seen Good Will Hunting

  • @gazlator

    @gazlator

    Жыл бұрын

    Spot on analysis, Paul. Couldn't put it any better.

  • @AnthoTvReacts24
    @AnthoTvReacts24 Жыл бұрын

    Oh gosh 1 hour of full reaction that’s surprising and first time for me watching this and first Christmas with the homies as well 🍁💯♥️🎞

  • @marcondesm100
    @marcondesm1006 ай бұрын

    Eu tive a mesma reação, até hoje eu choro mesmo tendo assistido mais de 20x

  • @James-gn6jb
    @James-gn6jb Жыл бұрын

    He saved thousands but he actually saved hundreds of thousands of the future generations Oskar schindler may he rest in peace was a true angel from God one of my goals is to visit his grave and put flowers

  • @Giovanni_Gabrielli
    @Giovanni_Gabrielli Жыл бұрын

    If you got the guts to see that film twice, either you have balls either a compulsive wish to cry. Or both. P.S. I personally heard german people say "To be german is an unforgiving burden" 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. Talmud, Sanhedrin 4:1 (22a)

  • @webvader3006
    @webvader3006 Жыл бұрын

    To answer your guys’ question at 53:40, Shindler couldn’t stay their because the Soviet Red Army wasn’t exactly known for treating their prisoners very well, especially German ones. For example: of the 91,000 German soldiers captured after the battle of Stalingrad, only 6,000 returned home to Germany in 1955, ten years after the end of the war. So Shindler was going west to surrender to the Americans, who were viewed as less ruthless than the Soviet Red Army.

  • @LukeWatson121
    @LukeWatson121 Жыл бұрын

    Its history that should never be forgotten .......... and hopefully never repeated.

  • @MooseMeus
    @MooseMeus Жыл бұрын

    you should watch " a little princess" came out in 1995. great movie, you will all cry uncrontrollably

  • @wheelz8240
    @wheelz82404 ай бұрын

    I love that your doggos joined you. You definitely needed snuggles support!

  • @jimmysmith5418
    @jimmysmith5418 Жыл бұрын

    I love you guys so much for watching this movie again it takes a lot of nerve, I hope in given time as a group you rewatch saving Private Ryan 🤷‍♂️ but I love you guys so much you have no idea how happy this made me for you guys to rewatch this takes great deal of courage because this movie is so powerful. But I also hate war. Slava Ukraine 🇺🇦 and love to Bulgaria 🇧🇬.

  • @TheHomiesReact

    @TheHomiesReact

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you :)

  • @berkeslaw
    @berkeslaw3 ай бұрын

    I have been to Auschwitz 3 times, Schindler's factory once. The camp is 30 km from Krakow. Ghosts abound. Never forget.

  • @pohanahawaii
    @pohanahawaii Жыл бұрын

    📷 Famous LEICA camera and lens company in Germany also saved many Jews in WW2. They hired them as workers and sent them to America, each with a Leica camera so they can sell it to survive in their new home.

  • @mr.vesper5659
    @mr.vesper5659 Жыл бұрын

    I always tear up watching this movie.

  • @lensnart1303
    @lensnart1303 Жыл бұрын

    It is sad how badly his life turned out after the war. He was able to survive on the grateful generosity of some of the people he saved though;.

  • @steve1964
    @steve19649 ай бұрын

    every High School Student should see this movie, let's all remember this happened and should never happen again!

  • @joshgellis3292
    @joshgellis3292 Жыл бұрын

    Its an incredibly good, extremely bittersweet masterwork by Steven Spielberg. ...Spielberg would routinely at one point, after a days worth of shooting scenes for this movie- got so emotionally messed up that he would *_call Robin Williams_* to be cheered up by him. ...Williams is gone, BUT, in an extremely-tiny, but countable way, WILLIAMS kept this movie ON SCHEDULE, because he KEPT Spielberg going when making this. Robin Williams' faith was Episcopal, and he was a great friend for Spielberg- a fantastic and epic, Jewish film maker. I hope to at least see Spielberg far off in the distance somewhere. lol. At least we can meet BOTH after hopefully long lives, in the clouds. Good reactions, girls.

  • @helpstopanimalabuse8153
    @helpstopanimalabuse81532 ай бұрын

    I have heard words like barbaric, monstors, pure evil to discribe this movie. What is absolutely chilling to me that this is not some fictional movie from 18th or 19th century or from the middle ages. Thiese atrocities were true & these barbaric events happened less than 80 years ago. Less than a lifetime.

  • @timallen41
    @timallen41 Жыл бұрын

    Thank you all for a beautiful review of this movie.....I cried along with you....

  • @stewmass3018
    @stewmass3018 Жыл бұрын

    If you guys are running out of movie ideas, do more comedy movies with Larry. He cracks me up when he cracks up.

  • @joshuagrover795
    @joshuagrover795 Жыл бұрын

    The SS motto: "Thy honour is my loyalty" or "My honour lies in loyalty" and most SS personnel followed the motto to the letter and to the grave. A lame excuse at war's end from most SS and German military personnel, most saying about the crimes they committed or saw and did nothing "We were following orders" yet they knew the massacre killings were criminal by them trying to destroy the evidence.

  • @dreadlordnitsuga2
    @dreadlordnitsuga210 ай бұрын

    The scene of the train, where people are on the verge of passing out from the heat while the officers are enjoying themselves, brings to mind the image of trucks filled with individuals crossing the border. The officers, acting as border patrol, treat these people as if they were vermin, despite their only intention being to improve their lives and those of their families. Such treatment is utterly inhumane.

  • @nelg55
    @nelg559 ай бұрын

    you've just witnessed ladies the greatest movie ever made

  • @mickey_287
    @mickey_287 Жыл бұрын

    The fact a woman who was on the set was shaking because the actor who played goeth was realistic makes the film more sadder

  • @hamburgfreak3571
    @hamburgfreak3571Ай бұрын

    It is the only film that can be seen on television in Germany without advertising.

  • @mikepopstar
    @mikepopstar3 ай бұрын

    IN sweden when I was in school every kid had to see this movie, very important film to see.

  • @petercunningham3469
    @petercunningham34693 ай бұрын

    This film is so heartbreaking to watch but so important to see The Horrors in this film can never fully account for all that was lost from humanity and the terrible scars it left . How an orginised civil society like Germany an educated people could ever perpetuate and accept such monstrous crimes i will never understand to do so is against all reason or logic. 😢

  • @zacharytaylor1681
    @zacharytaylor1681 Жыл бұрын

    "The hiding place" is another good one to watch.

  • @darajeeling
    @darajeeling3 ай бұрын

    this movie is more important then ever, if you regard the political situation in Germany. We have a political party - called AFD an their head uses the same phrases Hitler used in his book AND they coul win votes in some states with it. It's sort of scary - never thought something like that might ever come up here in Germany again. All we can do is vote and NOT for for this party. (and hope enough people understand what is going on)

  • @tanirsardbag8373
    @tanirsardbag83732 ай бұрын

    During the Second World War, in the fight against Nazi Germany, more than 20 million citizens of the USSR died. These are the greatest losses in the entire history of mankind. And it was the soldiers of the USSR who were the first to hoist the Victory Banner over the Reichstag.

  • @juansanchezrambo1590
    @juansanchezrambo15904 ай бұрын

    The man who put the two roses on the Stone was Liam Neeson

  • @devlinallistair5147
    @devlinallistair5147 Жыл бұрын

    There's very few directors who can capture the true horror of violence; Spielberg, Scorsese, the Coen Brothers

  • @davidclarke6304
    @davidclarke6304 Жыл бұрын

    I am always shocked at how limited these girls (who I love) are in knowledge of their own Bulgarian history. A reluctant German ally they resisted Hitler and saved their 48,000 Jews. They did allow deportations from newly acquired territories held with the Germans. Brave protests by politicians, the Bulgarian Orthodox church and the public spurred Tsar Boris III to thwart Nazi ambitions. Denmark courageously saved 90% of theirs but at wars end Bulgaria had 50,000 Jewish residents.

  • @kagemaru259
    @kagemaru259 Жыл бұрын

    Ralph Fiennes resembled the real Amon Goeth so much that when he appeared on set in character, some of the Schindler Jews present began trembling in fear.

  • @dennissheckleburg9775

    @dennissheckleburg9775

    Жыл бұрын

    Lmao

  • @morbiddiathesis4428

    @morbiddiathesis4428

    Жыл бұрын

    Jewish lies.

  • @bradley4808
    @bradley4808 Жыл бұрын

    Spielberg was racked with depression while making this movie. He would call Robin Williams to get cheered up.

  • @edwardkohv7337
    @edwardkohv73377 ай бұрын

    no matter how you would like it, the Soviet Union won the war against Nazism, it endured all the hardships of this war, and the Soviet soldier hoisted the red flag on the defeated Reich Stag, the names of these heroes are Sergeant Egorov and Sergeant Kantaria, and if it weren’t for the USSR, now the picture of history would look different to another .. remember this

  • @toddlevin

    @toddlevin

    7 ай бұрын

    no matter how you would like it, September 29-30th marks the 80th anniversary of the largest massacre during the Holocaust committed by mobile killing units in the Soviet Union Territories (Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Belarus, Ukraine, Bessarabia, North Bukovina, and Soviet Union), with over 33,771 Jews murdered in two days. The massacre at Babi Yar, outside of Kiev, Ukraine, is among the thousands of mass graves still being uncovered throughout these areas. The Holocaust in the Soviet Union is one of the most barbaric moments in history with the murder of at least 2 million Soviet Jews...remember this

  • @angelmoisesgerardopineda6132
    @angelmoisesgerardopineda6132 Жыл бұрын

    Esta película están realista qué hace llorar a cualquier persona

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