T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
403.1 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Dec 17 1993 10:41 | 8 |
| The critics are all raving about this movie. Newsweek ran a cover story
calling it the movie of the year. Siskel and Ebert were on Jay Leno and both
agreed it was the best film they'd seen this year and all the other critics
who have seen it seem to agree.
It appears to be filmed in black and white.
George
|
403.2 | | 5235::J_TOMAO | | Fri Dec 17 1993 11:04 | 10 |
| RE: filmed in black and white
I saw/heard Spielberg say it was becasue he couldn't "see" the movie in
color...when he said see, he kind of closed his eyes and held his hand
to his head like he was gesturing he couldn't "visualize" it in color
so he did it in black in white. I just found that to be an
interesting comment...
Jt
|
403.3 | | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Even when I was twelve | Fri Dec 17 1993 11:40 | 12 |
| SF WEEKLY's review under the title "Brimstone and treacle" says that
the first two-and-three-quarters hours "could well be the best
Holocaust filmmaking ever." But "in the film's final 20 minutes all of
the director's Hollywood schmaltz comes out of remission. Spielberg
cuts loose, in familiar territory at last and relapsing like a
junkie.... <many spoiler examples> I've seen divas die faster than
this movie ends. It's enraging to spend two hours and 45 minutes
frightened, challenged and otherwise torn apart by a film only to sit
through its penultimate minutes cold as stone in the face of cheesy
manufactured sentimentality."
Ray
|
403.4 | master of mass culture movie hype | 5436::DEBRIAE | Erik de Briae (Wein, Weisswurst, und Wien Waltzen) | Fri Dec 17 1993 12:36 | 23 |
|
ah, now THAT sounds like the Spielberg I know (and detest).... :-)
I always get dragged into seeing his movies because the reviews are
always so enthralled with him. Every time, I leave feeling 'taken',
swearing I'd never see another Spielberg film again. Last time I
caved in was "Jurassic Park" because everyone was saying what an
"excellent movie" it was. Ach, it happened _again_. Sitting there
through typical Spielberg schmaltz and poor characterization of
women, when I _knew_ better the whole time. Hooked in again.
Yet another $7 of mine into the Speilberg reward - wish there
was some way I could take it back upon feeling cheated
afterwards...
I hate his style!
And now he's ventured away from doing comic book storylines into
serious material - and again with the rave reviews - help! I'm being
hooked in again!! :-)
-Erik
|
403.5 | | 58776::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Dec 17 1993 13:40 | 4 |
| I left the theatre angry at the end of both "The Color Purple" and
"Empire of the Sun" -- 2 earlier "serious" Spielberg movies. I have
been dreading his treatment of the Holocaust. But I will probably go
to the film, anyway...
|
403.6 | | GODIVA::bence | Leave time for the unexpected. | Fri Dec 17 1993 15:04 | 8 |
|
One reason for the post-WWII generation for not seeing WWII and the
Holocuast in color - the vast majority of preserved images of the period
(newreel, photos) are black and white. Spielberg has referred to this
in his interviews - the images he grew up with were black and white.
I remember seeing some color WWII footage (filmed by George Stevens) and
thinking how artificial it looked.
|
403.7 | | 20932::ELKINS | Adam Elkins | Tue Jan 04 1994 15:09 | 13 |
|
Not only is it in black and white, the film also has the black
static that you often see on an old film. An interesting
effect I thought. I also enjoyed his sparing use of color.
I was impressed at the way the violence was filmed. Not dressed
up at all, no music, VERY graphic.
Leeham Neeson and Ben Kingsley were both great. I'm sure this
will sweep the Oscars this year.
Adam
|
403.8 | He'll colorize it! | 35186::BACH | They who know nothing, doubt nothing... | Tue Jan 04 1994 15:18 | 3 |
| Don't let Ted Turner get a hold of it! ;-)
|
403.9 | ***** | DECWET::JWHITE | this sucks! change it or kill me | Tue Jan 04 1994 16:22 | 6 |
|
much as it pains me to say so (since i, too, extremely distrust
spielberg), i thought 'schindler's list' was terrific. liam neeson
is incredible.
|
403.10 | | WECARE::LYNCH | Bill Lynch | Wed Jan 05 1994 12:30 | 5 |
| Anyone know when this film will go into wide distribution? So
far it is restricted to a couple theaters in the Boston area.
I'm looking forward to seeing it at a theater in southern NH.
-- Bill
|
403.11 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Sun Jan 09 1994 01:05 | 31 |
| I went to see Schindler's list tonight. While it's a pretty good movie it
just doesn't live up to the rave reviews it's been receiving.
Schindler's list is the story of a German capitalists named Schindler who
gives some aid to a number of Holocaust victims by giving them work in his
factory. Liam Neeson gives a good performance as Schindler and Ben Kingsley
gives an Oscar quality performance in a supporting role as Schindler's
accountant.
The movie has some truly dramatic moments and does a fair job of telling
Schindler's story but it does have some problems, most notably with the
development of Schindler's character. It was never clear if Schindler started
out as a ruthless capitalist and underwent a transformation or if his original
intention was to infiltrate the German command masquerading as a capitalist to
help those with whom he became involved. Also we never really understood what
motivated Schindler and why he took the course he did while so many other's
around him were so much more callous and ruthless.
By contrast, Ben Kingsley did a phenomenal job of bringing his character to
life. While I was never quite sure what Schindler was thinking or feeling,
Kingsley allowed us to understand the conflicts and emotions of his character
in depth.
All and all it's a pretty good movie with an important message but it would
have made it's point much clearer with some editing of some scenes that
seem to go on a bit too long and a bit more explanation of who Schindler was,
where he came from and what motivated him.
Hangs together well as a movie but has it's flaws.
***,
George
|
403.12 | | GODIVA::bence | Leave time for the unexpected. | Mon Jan 10 1994 09:37 | 14 |
|
I've not seen the movie yet, but a few comments based on the book.
The same problem with understanding Schindler's motivation occurs in
the book. Though "Schindler's List" is technically a novel, Keneally
seemed to bend over backwards not to invent motives or dialogue.
It seems to walk a fine line between novel and non-fiction.
One of the Boston Globe reviewer commented that some of Spielberg's
dramatic scenes seemed incomplete and unsatisfying. Again, I found
this to also be true in the book - key dramatic scenes that were not
witnessed are not reconstructed.
|
403.13 | Powerful | 16821::SODERSTROM | Bring on the Competition! | Mon Jan 10 1994 10:41 | 6 |
| My wife and I saw Schindler's List on Sunday. We both agreed that this
was one of the most powerful movies we have viewed. It brings tears to
think of the atrocities that happened during this era.
I would rate this ***** out of *****.
|
403.14 | more | DECWET::JWHITE | this sucks! change it or kill me | Mon Jan 10 1994 15:33 | 9 |
|
re:.11
to me the best thing about the movie was exactly the ambiguity you
mention. i don't think schindler, as brilliantly portrayed by neeson,
knew himself what he was doing. makes his final scene that much
more heart-rending.
|
403.15 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Mon Jan 10 1994 16:52 | 30 |
| That's fine, I don't mind a movie about a guy who's not sure what he wants
to do. However the movie is never clear that this is what's happening.
At the beginning it is not clear if Schindler is:
- A ruthless capitalist out to make a buck who undergoes a transformation
- An activist who's original intention was to infiltrate the German high
command to save the victims
- A confused guy who thinks he should do one thing then decides to do another
- Something else we haven't thought of
I don't mind any of those stories but it would have been a better story if
we had known where he was starting. Or if the producers didn't know from where
he was starting they could have told us that a number of ways. For example
they could have told the story from the view point of one of the characters
who would explain to us that Schindler started out as an enigma. But as it was
done, his character just ended up coming across as vague.
One other problem was that there was a bit too much violence. They could
have cut out half of the violent scenes and there would have still been more
than enough to make their point. Also that would have cut the movie down to
about 2.5 hours. At 3 hours it was a bit long. For example, "Sophie's Choice"
depends heavily on understanding the tragedy of the Holocaust but they get
the point across with far less violence then we saw here.
Still don't get me wrong, this is definitely a good movie. It's just not
the 5 star classic the critics claim that it is. It has some brilliant scenes
and a 1st rate performance by Ben Kingsley but it also has it's flaws.
George
|
403.16 | sorry | DECWET::JWHITE | this sucks! change it or kill me | Mon Jan 10 1994 17:46 | 8 |
|
re:.15
well, we'll just have to agree to disagree. everything you list
as a fault i see as a virtue, even the violence (how could a movie
about the holocaust be too violent?) and length (the length made
it that much more nerve-wracking).
|
403.17 | Maybe they don't know? | TLE::JBISHOP | | Tue Jan 11 1994 10:36 | 7 |
| I think the confusion about Schindler in the film merely mirrors
real life. Some of the articles I've read have mentioned that
no-one knows why Schindler did what he did, and it's still a bit
of a mystery. He died broke, by the way, supported to some extent
by the people he'd saved.
-John Bishop
|
403.18 | Lives up to its accolades | 65320::RIVERS | Stupid, STUPID rat creatures! | Tue Jan 18 1994 03:43 | 26 |
| I thought it was fairly evident that in the beginning, Schindler was
quite the self-centered opportunist who saw a chance to make a lot of
money and took it. It was the Kingsley character, Izthak, who
implemented the nobler aspects of the factory. Schindler did not want
to know (that's made clear in the scene with the old, one-armed man).
By the end of the movie, Schindler is a better man. Fictional
character development or not, the changes in the character were nicely
done throughout the film.
I cannot really find fault with this movie. If I had only one word to
describe it, I'd call it riveting. If Spielberg does not get his Oscar
for this (I'm not counting the concillatory Thalberg Oscar here), he's
not going to get one, period. I would not have thought this a
"Spielberg" film, really. Liam Neeson does a great job, as does the
versatile Ben Kingsley. The actor who protrayed Armon Goeth deserves
an Oscar as well -- a very, very chilling performance.
I've never seen a movie house so QUIET during and AFTER a movie.
This movie is NOT for the squeamish. This film deserved its R rating,
parents take heed.
**** out of ****
kim
|
403.19 | A movie classic. | 17576::PORTER | Mike Porter, 285-2125, NIO/A19 | Tue Jan 18 1994 08:11 | 27 |
| The terms harrowing, gut-wrenching, riveting, and heart-breaking
seem to fit this extraodinary film. I had tears dripping down my face
through most of the movie; I could hear people all around me, both men
and women, sniffling and crying. When the film ended, there was a
silence like I have never experienced at the end of any film.
I can understand, but disagree with, the criticism of the
ending of the movie. I think that if it had ended any differently, it
would have taken much too long for the audience to compose itself and
leave the theater.
To avoid spoiling it for anyone who has yet to see it, I can only
say that you will see some of the most memorable scenes ever in a
motion picture.
The film certainly deserves an R rating, but I think it appropriate
to take some younger children. I took my family, including my
10-year-old son and 14-year-old daughter. This is history, not fiction.
Children younger than my children lived, and died, through this
horrible time. The violence is certainly graphic but I am sure can't
begin to compare to what it was really like. The Holocaust is arguably
THE defining event of this bloody century.
***** out of ***** In my opinion, a movie classic.
Mike
|
403.20 | | 58776::S_BURRIDGE | | Thu Jan 20 1994 09:37 | 15 |
| As I mentioned in an earlier note, I had doubts about this. However, I
think Spielberg has indeed managed the difficult task of making a popular
Hollywood movie about the Holocaust that is direct enough about the
historical reality, and serious enough in its treatment of character, that
it doesn't trivialize its subject. It is true that in the last half hour
or so things become simpler, and the movie sort of collapses into a more
conventional production. However, I can accept that.
I found Schindler a credible character, and his story an interesting one,
right through to the end. I also was very impressed by the use of black
and white and colour and the dramatic quality of many of the scenes.
I agree with many others that this is a very good movie.
-Stephen
|
403.21 | Wife didn't know why, either | TLE::JBISHOP | | Thu Jan 20 1994 10:03 | 11 |
| re "why did he do it":
The New York Review of Books has a lengthy review of the movie.
Included is a reference to an interview by someone else with
Schindler's wife. Even she couldn't figure it out--apparently
she found out he was a jerk when she married him (his mistress
showed up for the wedding or something like that) and he continued
to be a jerk after WWII (example was that he was given $1000 by
some survivors to give to her and kept half).
-John Bishop
|
403.22 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | don't break the spell | Thu Jan 20 1994 11:34 | 6 |
| re .21, well, it's no surprise that people and their motives can be
complex, is it?
Lorna
|
403.23 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jan 20 1994 14:10 | 16 |
| I'm a little confused about the criticism of the ending. In general I felt
that the quality of the movie was very consistent through out. Since it's the
ending I'll put it behind a spoiler warning.
SPOILER
In particular are the people who are complaining about the ending complaining
about the fact that the people survived or are they talking about the very
end where the actors and real people are placing the rocks on Schindler's grave?
If it's the fact that the people survived, then it makes sense since that
really happened. As for that part at the end, I felt it was a very touching
part of the movie and was done really well. I was really moved.
George
|
403.24 | re .23 | 58776::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Jan 21 1994 08:28 | 37 |
| What I meant:
<spoiler>
About half an hour from the end, there is the scene in which the women from
Schindler's factory are sent by accident to Auschwitz after all. Their hair
is shaved, they are marched into a room with plumbing fixtures on the ceiling,
the lights go out, they begin to wail, the camera pulls back to look through
a small window into the room...and water comes out of the plumbing fixtures.
We have been led to believe they will be gassed; we are supposed to feel their
joy and relief.
After this escape, both the sense of overwhelming danger and the moral shades
of grey are gone from the film. We already know that Schindler is
whole-heartedly on the side of "his" Jews, and from this point to the end of
the movie, we know that no further harm will come to them. By now, Schindler
is no longer the amoral, unpredictably human capitalist exploiter, but the
protector of the Jews. The story becomes a matter of tying up loose ends, and
moving toward a "happy" ending. We see the end of the war announced, and
scenes of rejoicing, gratitude, etc. Most of the interest of this last
section is in the behaviour of Schindler; the surrounding horror of the
Holocaust, which dominated most of the film, has been banished. Finally, we
see the survivors as they are today, and the value and importance of
Schindler's actions is affirmed.
As I wrote, I don't really have a problem with this. As you say, the reality
was that this group survived, and naturally honoured Schindler for what he did.
However, the scene at Auschwitz signals a change of tone. The guards at the
camp in Schindler's home town are ineffectual; Schindler humiliates them
almost without effort. There are scenes of celebration, ceremonies of
gratitude and remembrance. We take satisfaction from the triumph (in this one
case) of good over evil. This is appropriate; but it might have been more
subtly done.
-Stephen
|
403.25 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Fri Jan 21 1994 10:08 | 30 |
| RE <<< Note 403.24 by 58776::S_BURRIDGE >>>
Well yes but:
ENDING SPOILER
>After this escape, both the sense of overwhelming danger and the moral shades
>of grey are gone from the film ...
I agree with all that you said but as you mentioned, that's what really
happened. Wouldn't it have been somewhat incomplete if they didn't show us what
happened once they crossed the boarder? After all, they were still in Nazi
territory and presumably their luck could have turned bad once again.
I believe that without that ending the story would have left the audience
dangling wondering weather or not they survived the war and if so how. Also
they brought out several important points, telling how they deliberately
built shells that wouldn't fire, Schindler's control of the guards, his
escape, the help he got from his workers, and even a hint as to what happened
to the people once the war ended.
In general I don't like stories that end abruptly when the main characters
walk out of danger. I like to see a bit of what happens to them afterward
and to see at least some of how they readjust to normal life, even if it's
only an epilogue.
I don't see how this story would have been complete without that information.
George
|
403.26 | ! | DECWET::JWHITE | decline to sign | Fri Jan 21 1994 12:33 | 8 |
|
furthermore, schindler's last scene is the emotional pivot of
the whole thing. sure, we know what he's done and how he's
changed, but *he* doesn't know. his beginning to realise the
magnitude of what has happened and what he's done is one of
the most poignant scenes i've ever seen.
|
403.27 | | 58776::S_BURRIDGE | | Fri Jan 21 1994 13:18 | 10 |
| It was indeed a poignant scene. For whatever reason, I didn't experience it
as the "emotional pivot of the film." Perhaps because the strongest emotions
I felt were evoked by plight of the Jews and the behaviour of their
persecutors. My attitude toward Schindler was more detached. His story was an
interesting one, but not to me the emotional centre of the movie.
-Stephen
|
403.28 | | 3694::BELFORTI | Come on SUMMER!!! I HATE SNOW!!!!!! | Mon Jan 24 1994 14:50 | 21 |
| Sarah, my 18 year old, and I saw Schindlers List on Saturday. It really
hit home with me. I grew up in a predominately Jewish neighborhood (about
85%). One of my friends from school had a father in a wheel chair, and I
didn't find out until many years after graduation, that Mr. Iskowitz had
been at a concentration camp, as an early teen, and had been experimented
on. They broke his legs so many times, just to see how long it would
be before his legs wouldn't heal any more. Mr. I always wore long
sleeves, when outside the house, so that his tattoo wouldn't show.. he
was very embarrassed by it. While a Senior in highschool on of my
teachers brought in a German/Nazi made film, "glorifying" what they were
doing to the Jews. It had been confiscated from one of the deathcamps.
I really feel this movie should be a *MUST* to everyone.... so that it
never happens again. (I know, I know, atrocities are happening right
now... but not at the same magnitude... 6,000,000 Jews and at least
that many non-Arians... heart breaking, just heart breaking)
If Speilberg doesn't get an award for this one, he never will!
M-L
|
403.29 | reply to 403.4 | 36058::TARDUGNOM | | Mon Jan 24 1994 20:30 | 4 |
| Repy to 403.4
Don't let your hard earned $7.00 be taken again!!!.....
GO to a matinee for a measley $4.00
Then you won't feel so bad when you walk out dis-illusioned
|
403.30 | also a matinee fan, but this one worth it | 5436::DEBRIAE | | Tue Jan 25 1994 17:24 | 84 |
| > Repy to 403.4
> Don't let your hard earned $7.00 be taken again!!!.....
> GO to a matinee for a measley $4.00
> Then you won't feel so bad when you walk out dis-illusioned
Well, I guess it's true that I give people too many chances but I paid $7 for
yet another Steven Spielberg event again...
..and I am SOOOO glad I did! This was an incredible motion picture experience.
It must be seen on the big screen. It was well worth the price of admission.
As much as I dislike most of Spielberg's past work, my hat is off to him here.
The film is amazing and he resisted so many opportunities to "be Spielberg"
with a scene. All the way until the end of the movie, yes even at the
gravestone scene, there were many moments where involuntary realizations would
spring to mind with a potential for him to do something Spielberg and 'cheesy'
with the moment, and he didn't. A first rate job and first rate film through
and through. He treated it with the respect it deserves, and proved so on
ample occasions. Spielberg further surprised me in that he also avoided the
common cheap anti-deutsch threads altogether where I felt and feared he would
thrive on them in a blurred focus frenzy for easy attachment with the American
audience so used to it (his Indiana Jones no exception). But his focus was
sharp, and again he avoided the easy cheesy icons, giving the film the
intellectual weight and honest respect it deserves.
The film was an incredibly emotional experience. I think it was for most of
the audience. It's hard to describe really. For me at least, it wasn't
emotional in a Hollywood way, where a scene was so geared and so crafted for
an _immediate_ formula emotional response (oh I dunno, something like "The
Champ" where a young boy is crying over something like a puppy and all
indicators in the scene make you superficially emotional in that moment and
then it's all over as soon as the next scene pans in), but "Shindler" is
emotional in the long term, and sinks deep. It builds up gradually, scene
after scene, building up, until your heart is so heavy toward the end that
tears come without you even realizing it. Not so much for the specific scene
in front of you at the moment, but for that scene combined with all the ones
before it. And that emotional state was slow-charged so deep into you over
the three and a half hours, that it lasted inside you all the way until the
next day and beyond. It was hard to speak or even get up after the film. A
good many people just sat there - unable to get up - in such a deep emotional
trance. Few films have ever done that to me. I needed an emotional cool-down
period like I need a cool-down walk after a run. After the lights came on,
you felt like you needed to catch your breath.
I too found the last half-hour a _tiny_ bit more Spielberg than the first
three, but it did not interfere with the movie for me. I felt a character
inconsistency in the movie at the end with Shindler, the exaggerated shift
felt unrealistic to me after getting to know the character during the first
three hours. During the scene I said to myself that he (the movie character
as I came to know him) would not have acted visibly in such a radically
different way, it was a break in the character and felt such during the scene.
Sort of a "now wait a minute..." reaction, it's over-done, it doesn't 'go'.
But somehow despite that, that reaction didn't interfere with the emotions and
statements in that scene (perhaps due to the slow-charge emotional state you
are in at that point). The scene was still powerful, still incredibly moving.
I _liked_ his colorization of the candle flame. Very powerful. Visually it
struck deep chords in me (similar to feelings I had growing up with real lit
candles on our Bavarian Christmas trees). The air seemed to change for me as
soon as the candles came to life on screen.
Conversely, I had an immediate and strong _dislike_ for his colorization of
the red dress. For me it screamed out in the very obtrusively forceful way
that "YOU ARE HERE!" red arrows do on maps. It bothered me, and as much as I
tried I couldn't get past it as long as the scene lasted (you are here you are
here you are here). When I saw the reason why he did the colorization (as if
you couldn't tell from the outset), I felt he took the easy way out via
technology rather than thinking of other inventive ways to accomplish the same
thing (using film angles, the camera focus to make the dress stand out in a
crowd, or even accompanying it with big unique hat). But that and the little
bit overdone character shift in Shindler to drive home the point were the only
Spielberg negatives. Even for me, someone who is extremely sensitive toward
Spielberg'ness and who lived in fear scene to scene half expecting them, I
found them _extremely_ minor and they quickly get lost in the enormity of this
film.
There were so many things done extraordinarily well in the movie that I won't
even begin to list them. It would go on for pages. All I can say is that it
is Extremely powerful and I recommend it. I don't think you will forget this
film-going experience.
-Erik
|
403.31 | thanks! | DECWET::JWHITE | decline to sign | Tue Jan 25 1994 18:30 | 5 |
|
re:.30
well put! i agree completely!
|
403.32 | I WILL see this this weekend.... | GODIVA::bence | Leave time for the unexpected. | Wed Jan 26 1994 10:02 | 17 |
|
possible spoiler
re .30
I still haven't gotten to see the movie, but based on your description
I'd guess that the scene that made you uncomfortable was Schindler's
speech to the SS in the factory. According to the book, this is the
only speech of Schindler's that is fully documented. Two workers in
the factory at the time transcribed the speech as he made it. It is
believed that his intent was to convince the SS guards that there was no
point in further action since the war was lost, hoping they'd walk
away. That may account for some of the "overdone" nature, as Schindler
was playing to an audience.
The child in the red dress is a very specific incident recounted in detail
by at least one survivor.
|
403.33 | | 3228::BELFORTI | I forgive you.... chilling | Wed Jan 26 1994 11:21 | 18 |
| re. .32 re: .30
spoiler alert
I think what he was talking about was not the speech, but when
Schindler and his wife actually left the factory and went outside to
leave in the car. I will NOT say any more, as you said you have not
seen it yet.... but suffice it to say, the totally unemotional man
became VERY emotional. And I personally thought that scene added to
the movie.... he finally, in my mind, became human, instead of money
monger.
MHO
M-L
|
403.34 | this is such a small nit though | 5436::DEBRIAE | | Wed Jan 26 1994 14:08 | 19 |
| -1
That was it. The speech I liked and was more in-line with the
movie character. It was his extreme emotional outburst that didn't
fit with the character. While _I_ was feeling that way at the time,
and while I could envision many men reacting that emotionally, I
could not imagine Shindler doing so to such a _visible_ extreme,
even _if_ he truly felt such a sudden extreme rush of emotion
for the first time internally. He was too polished, he had a
lifetime's practice of only showing calculated con-man faces and
presented images, in total control of his every facial movement. He
also, as I read the movie character, was never a man who
experienced things, anything, even his wife, emotionally. And his
groveling seemed a tad over-done imo, and went on for just a
little bit too long. (alright already)
But again the scene still worked for me as I said...
-Erik
|
403.35 | *excellent* 5 stars ( outta 5 ) | 36058::CARROLLJ | I've been laughing, fast + slow | Fri Jan 28 1994 16:51 | 14 |
|
My *god*, what a terrific movie.
I'm still in awe - if he doesn't get the Oscar for this, it'll be a
crime
'he' referring to both Mr. Spielberg and Mr. Neeson. Very powerful
film, very convincing and heartfel performance. Wow. The absolute
best I've seen.
Is it me, or is this a fantastic season for good, quality films? -
The Piano, Shadowlands and now this one.
- Jimbo
|
403.36 | A must for EVERYONE | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue Feb 01 1994 13:47 | 76 |
|
I saw Schindler's List over the weekend. I can't hink of enough
superlatives to call it. Somehow, powerful, gripping, gut-wrenching are
not enough.
The first three hours are perhaps the most well-done, horrifying bits
in movie-making history. I WAS there. I (embarrassed at crying so much)
looked around several times, and there were people with tears streaming
down their faces, apparently unaware they were crying.
At the very emotional end, I actually had to keep myself from sobbing
(how embarrasssing) but this was due to deliberate tear-jerking in the
part of Spielberg.
Like other noters have stated, after the movie, people moved from the
seats in utter silence, almost like automatons. To speak seemed somehow
blasphemous.
Much as has been discussed before, Sielberg did a magnificent job of
avoiding his usual ploy of going for the emotional cheap-shot. There
were many instances where I thought he could have exploited the
material, but her didn't. His use of color, during the balck-and-white
portion of the movie, at first bothered me, it was like "I get it,
alright?" But it worked at the end.
The performances of Liam Neeson, Ben Kingley and the actor who played
Amon Goetz, are nomination material. I especially liked Kingsley. He
only displayed a minimal amount of emotion in one scene, but it was
*real*.
BTW, has the actor who played Goetz been in anything as Lee Harvey
Oswald? He bears an uncanny resemblance to him.
***** out of ******
More follows in spoiler comments:
Spoiler:
I, like some previous noters did not like the ending scene of the
"real" movie. I felt the crying scene at the end, in which Schindler
regrets not saving more people was Spielberg being Spielberg. No doubt
something like that probably happened, but I have a hard time believing
the calculating Schindler would break to that point.
Conversely, the transformation of Schindler, from go-for-the-buck (or
Reichsmark) profiteer to humanist worked for me. I had not doubt he went
to make his fortune and use the Jews themselves to bankroll him, and then
he saw them as individuals he came to care about and felt he had to do
whatever he could to save them. I also felt he got a perverse pleasure
of getting the Nazi military to do as he wanted. It was he who had the
power, as he described in the scene with Amon Goetz.
|
403.37 | | 33593::PHYLLIS | in the shadow of the moon | Tue Feb 01 1994 15:20 | 7 |
|
Someone told me that the producers (or whoever makes these decisions)
of Schindler's List were approached about the possibility of reducing
the admission cost to $1 for all school age children. Has anyone else
heard anything about that?
|
403.38 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Feb 01 1994 16:14 | 8 |
| It's too long for school age children.
Also, I can't imagine in this time when everyone is bleating about the
effects of violence on children that this idea would work, this has to be one
of the most violent films I've seen in a good long while.
George
|
403.39 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | u don't know the shape i'm in | Tue Feb 01 1994 16:34 | 9 |
| re .38, yeah, but this would be teaching a lesson, from history, that is
important for everyone to know. It's not the same as some Friday the
13th type of thing.
Also, there's a wide range in age amongst school children. Are they
talking 7 yrs. old, or 15, for example?
Lorna
|
403.40 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Feb 01 1994 17:26 | 21 |
| Actually I think this movie is somewhat limited as a teaching tool for
children. The problem is that it's all effect and no cause. It tells you that
the Holocaust happened and that it was really tragic but not word one on why it
happened.
If I were going to teach the Holocaust to children I think that 15 minutes or
so if what happened would be plenty. From then I'd go into who the Nazi's were,
why they were inclined to do what they did, and then the big question, how
could people like that come to power in a civilized country.
Also the length of the film would go way beyond the typical kids attention
span. About an 30 minutes to an hour into the movie kids will start leaving to
go to the head and by 2 hours they would be horsing around, fighting over
popcorn and generally raising commotion, and by 3 hours if they were not gone
they'd be ready to hang who ever locked them into the theater.
No, this is not in any way a movie for kids. I don't think it would hurt
all that much but I doubt that it would make much of an impact, at least not
the one that you would want made.
George
|
403.41 | Not for Holocaust only | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue Feb 01 1994 19:39 | 17 |
| Re the last few,
Kids is a relative term. I think a movie like this is a must for all
teen age kids. I don't think 14/15 is too young to grasp the meaning
of this movie.
Also, I don't necessarily see it as a teaching tool for Nazi or even
strictly WWII atrocities, but for the things people do to other people
regardless of the cause. The effect is horrific enough. This (albeit
in a smaller scale) is what is happening in Bosnia today. Perhaps if
the people of that area would have had a Schindler's List in their
youth, they wouldn't be doing what they're doing to each other today.
OK, I'm off my soapbox now.....
Marilyn
|
403.42 | | 19007::FIELDS | Strange Brew | Wed Feb 02 1994 10:42 | 2 |
| I do know that in Worcester a woman paid for the whole Jr class in the
Worcester public school system to see the film, about 900 of them....
|
403.43 | One school trip that bombed | 57894::PALUSES | Bob Paluses @MSO | Thu Feb 03 1994 09:32 | 24 |
|
Last week's Boston Globe had a small article about a Calf. school group
that was kicked out of this movie. They went to see it for a fieldtrip
but many students laughed out lould during a part when some helpless
old lady was shot in the head. Many of the other patrons were upset at
the poor behavior shown by the students. Eventually the theater stopped
the film halfway through, asked the students to leave, and then
continued on with the film. The theater recieved many thanks afterwards
from other patrons who were being disturbed by the laughing and
giggling from the students.
The principal of the school claims that the kids laughter was their
way of dealing with the horrors shown on the screen. (Nervous laughing,
or something like that) Another teacher said that the students weren't
laughing at the plot of the film, but rather the funny/fake/phoney way
that an old lady fell and died after being shot.
The students were mostly minorites and the purpose of the fieldtrip
was to teach them about attrocities to other minorities in previous
times.
Bob
|
403.44 | weep for the future . . . | 36058::CARROLLJ | I've been laughing, fast + slow | Thu Feb 03 1994 09:48 | 1 |
|
|
403.45 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Feb 03 1994 10:18 | 28 |
| There is no need to weep for the future, it should have been obvious that
that was going to happen.
As I said, the problem with Schindler's list as a teaching tool for teaching
the Holocaust to children is that it is all effect and no cause. There is not
one word of why the holocaust happened and it's somewhat ambiguous as to who was
involved.
Those of us who are Baby Boomers or older grew up with Walter Cronkite's CBS
series about World War II and with 1st hand accounts from our parents as to
what had happened just a couple decades earlier. We went into the theater
understanding the scale and senselessness of the murder of those people and with
an understanding as to who was who.
By contrast, preadolescent children don't have the ability to comprehend the
magnitude of what happened and teenagers most likely have not been prepared to
understand what the Holocaust was. Going to Schindler's list won't help them
because it spends no time explaining the scope of what happened, who was
involved, or why it happened.
In defense of the movie, it is obviously not their goal to explain the
Holocaust, rather it's their goal to explain who Schindler and his workers were
and how they dealt with the horror of the Holocaust.
This is definitely not a film for children and it is only good for teenagers
who have been given substantial background on the Holocaust.
George
|
403.46 | don't they have history in school? | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | u don't know the shape i'm in | Thu Feb 03 1994 11:45 | 20 |
| Well, my daughter saw this movie and she was extremely moved by it.
She's a sophomore in college (19), and her reaction was much the same
as the people who replied here. She said she thought it was an
excellent movie, but that she could never bring herself to sit through
it again because it was so depressing and sad. She's not a baby boomer
and she can't remember Walter Cronkite's news reports or first hand
accounts. (To my knowledge even I have never actually met anyone who
was in a concentration camp.) But, guess what? My daughter has had
history in school (both high school and college) so she knew what the
movie was all about.
Don't they teach history to kids anymore in school? Or, maybe some of
these kids just don't pay attention.
I told my daughter I'd like to see the movie, and she said, "Oh, mum,
it was wonderful, but I could never sit through that again. It was
just too emotionally draining."
Lorna
|
403.47 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Feb 03 1994 11:47 | 16 |
| I dunno; if you spend enough time trying to convince people that "it's
only a movie," and that all those deaths and maimings are just special
effects, I'm not sure you can fault somebody for commenting on the
effects just because the movie is based on fact... And, of course,
there's the "adolescent desperate not to admit to any sensitivity"
reaction, and the nervous-laughter phenomenon - and, I'm sure, some
degree of lack of empathy.
What I find supremely ironic about all the reactions to this film is
that people seem much fonder of emoting about tragedies long past than
they do about dealing with current ones. Anyone who comes out of this
movie saying "This must never happen again!" and does not also take
some action to stop the ongoing atrocities around the world seems (IMO)
to have missed the point...
-b
|
403.48 | It's still a good idea | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Feb 03 1994 12:17 | 34 |
|
Re -1
I agree with Beth on the last point she made. It mirrors my previous
comment that that is what is happening in Bosnia today, and we are not
doing anything about it. Does it have to be 6 million+ before we step
in?
With regards to the students acting up during the movie. Kids will act
like this whatever the subject or activity if:
1) They are seated together with no immediate supervision
2) They really have lost all regard for loss of life in a movie, due
to the violence of today's movies
3) They feel their peers will think less of them if they seem moved by
a movie (or whatever)
I still think all teenagers should see a Schindler's List (or
equivalent) but perhaps mass showings is not the right avenue. It will
mean very little if afterwards there is no one to explain the things
that were going on if they had no previous knowledge. However, the
Holocaust (as other atrocities) are not as powerful in written form
as seeing them in stark realism on the screen.
I think it's probably a sadder commentary on today's public school
system, than anything. I can't see anyone doing that when I (or my
sister who is much younger) if it had been posed as a school
assignment.
Marilyn
|
403.49 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Feb 03 1994 12:43 | 27 |
| I think it's a bit questionable as to weather someone 19 years old is really
a teenager. Yes the sound "teen" is in nineteen, but by 18 most people are
considered to be adults. When people say "children" I usually think of kids
pre-13 and teenagers 13-17. This movie is not for the 1st group at all and it
is for the 2nd only if they have had a lot of preparation, far more than you
would get in a history class covering all of World History.
Regarding that preparation they get in school, it's was my experience that
during grade school we alternated World History and U.S. History each year. And
with U.S. history we generally finished the year with the events around WWI. If
they did get to WWII, it probably wouldn't be until May.
It was also my experience that about half the class, especially including the
half that was most likely to raise hell at a movie, didn't pay that much
attention to anything. I believe that it is almost a lock that if you took any
group of 13-17 year olds and showed them this film in mass that they would get
restless long before the 3 hours were up and that the bottom half, history
wise, would laugh and giggle at the violence since they would not understand
what was going on.
If you really wanted to teach these kids the Holocaust, a much shorter 15
minute version followed by about a half hour of discussion on how it all
happened would work much better. After that you are going to lose half the
teenagers in the 13-17 year old group no matter what you are trying to teach
them.
George
|
403.50 | Incredible Movie | 58379::STOODLEY | | Mon Feb 07 1994 18:33 | 21 |
| My first reaction after I watched this movie was one of shock.
In high school I learned of the holocaust and the impacts it had on
the Jewish people. However, these were just statistics from a history
book and had no real impact on me until I saw this movie.
My wife and I both looked at each other after we seen the movie
and I took a quick look around at the rest of the audience leaving the
theatre. Everyone looked as though they just left a funeral of close
relative. Personally, that's how I felt.
I realize how lucky I am to never have to witness or even
experience the brutal torture that these people have.
How dare people write trash to say that the holocaust never happened!
What kind of an idiot would stand up and claim him/herself as a
Neo-Nazi and raise their hand to "Heil Hitler". What kind of people
are we to sit back and allow this infectious evil to swell?
It happened once.....it could happen again.
Just my two cents worth.
Blair
the brutal torture these people have
|
403.51 | More info | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Mon Feb 07 1994 18:41 | 10 |
| -1
That's how I feel. BTW, it *is* happening again. Just read any book
dealing with the situation in Bosnia. To date, it's on a smaller scale
but I hope we don't let it get worse.
For those interested in dealing with this, Schindler
specifically, there is a new topic in the History notesfile. I don't
know how to do the bit where you add it to your notebook via a KP7, but
I can enter the data to add it if anyone's interested.
|
403.52 | | 9871::CLARK | Can you picture what will be? | Tue Feb 08 1994 09:10 | 9 |
| For the first time in a long while, I worked at home yesterday and (on my
break of course) watched a bit of Sally Jesse Raphael ... the theme being
teenage racists. One 17-year-old strongly and emotionally denied that the
Holocaust ever occurred ... she seemed quite upset that this hoax was being
taught to her and her fellow students.
People don't change, it doesn't matter what the date is. As someone else on
the show pointed out, it isn't a matter of black and white, it's a matter of
intelligence and ignorance.
|
403.53 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Tue Feb 08 1994 10:11 | 20 |
| RE <<< Note 403.51 by 16913::MILLS_MA "To Thine own self be True" >>>
> For those interested in dealing with this, Schindler
> specifically, there is a new topic in the History notesfile. I don't
> know how to do the bit where you add it to your notebook via a KP7, but
> I can enter the data to add it if anyone's interested.
While in notes type
SET NOTE 403.51/CONFERENCE=notefile-spec
where
notefile-spec is the name of the HISTORY notes file.
OR
while in NOTES type HELP SET NOTE /CONFERENCE and it will explain how it's
done.
George
|
403.54 | Fact or Fiction | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Tue Feb 08 1994 11:48 | 7 |
| Re -2
I've got a book at home, "A Pictorial Record of the Holocaust" kids like
that would be welcome to borrow, and determine for themselves whether it
really happened or not. I blame the parents, though. Swastika posters,
tattoos, etc. should be a warning sign that their kids are getting into
something ugly.
|
403.55 | | 35186::BACH | They who know nothing, doubt nothing... | Tue Feb 08 1994 14:29 | 14 |
| (SET SARCASM= ON)
And a fifteen year old drop-out (or student) is such a knowledgeable
source of things that have happened thousands of miles away, fifty
years ago.
(SET SARCASM= OFF)
It just goes to show that, if its whispered, regardless of any other
credible arguments, some people will believe it. Take "logic" out
of the equation, and it gets very frustrating.
Chip
|
403.56 | These people sure ain't Humanists | 11685::WOOD | Taz hate recession...... | Wed Feb 09 1994 10:01 | 10 |
|
I agree with reply-1. I was watching the E channel with Greg
Lamiere(sp) and they show a talk show with this great looking
young redheaded girl saying how the bible says all Jews should be
killed. Brilliant logic there (NOT!). They cut back to Greg and he says
"It just goes to show you the line is being blurred between rehead and
redneck".
-=-=-R~C~W-=-=-
|
403.57 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Feb 09 1994 10:33 | 23 |
| Keep in mind that for the most part this is not really ignorance. What you
are hearing are followers of the same group that caused the Holocaust in the 1st
place trying to figure out a way to do it again.
For the most part they are a fringe group and their violence is limited to a
small scale but they sill aspire to gain control so that they can continue to
carry out their white supreamist plan. Down playing the holocaust is their
attempt at making people believe they are main stream so that they have another
chance at power.
Movies that cover the holocaust go part way toward reminding people of what
actually happened but they could do that more effectively if they included some
material on how one of these fringe groups actually did get control of an
entire country back in the 30's. That would help explain why it happened
instead of just concentrating on what happened.
Here again, I don't mean to criticize Schindler's List because of this. It's
main goal was obviously to tell Schindler's story, not to save the world.
By the way, Oscar nominations are announced today. Schindler's List is
expected to be nominated for Best Picture, Best Actor, and Best Director.
George
|
403.58 | Re the movie | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Wed Feb 09 1994 11:46 | 39 |
| Schindler's List was nominated in 12 categories, Best Picture, Best
Actor (Liam Neeson), Best Director (Spielberg), and others.
Getting back to the movies for a moment, I've just finished the book
and have a comment on "the scene" (at the end).
Spoiler:
The last scene in the movie, where Schindler is given the ring and
breaks down bothered me, I just didn't see him doing that, and indeed,
per the book, it did not happen that way.
It seems that Schindler was very subdued and scared at the end. He only
wanted to make a quick getaway, lest he should be found by the
Russians. This was somehow hampered by the fact that someone cut a wire
in the engine of his Mercedes, delaying his and Emilie's departure for
a while. BTW, they were accompanied by 8 of his "people" who vouchsafed
for him till they were safe. The letter he was given was kept and filed
by the Americans, one of the three or four times they were stopped.
|
403.59 | | 9871::CLARK | Can you picture what will be? | Wed Feb 09 1994 15:16 | 7 |
| re .56 I wonder if it was the same girl that I saw on the SJR show. She
made quite a fool out of herself. At the end of the show a man asked her to
act like a Jew. She seemed totally confused and at a loss as to what to do,
and eventually refused. He asked her "if you can't show us how a Jew is
different from you, why do you hate them so much?" She looked incredibly angry
and confused, then just let loose with a stream of profanity and walked off the
stage.
|
403.60 | Good comment | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Wed Feb 09 1994 15:35 | 6 |
| Re-1
Great comeback! I wish I could have seen that.
MArilyn
|
403.61 | Coincindence? | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Wed Feb 09 1994 18:53 | 7 |
| Speaking of the Academy Award Nominations, Schindler's List was
nominated for best (Art Direction?) and one of the people nominated in
that category is Ewa Braun. Wasn't that the name of Hitler's long-time
girlfriend/companion?
Marilyn
|
403.62 | It was EVA not EWA. | 41174::PHAYDEN | � Ne�-Max�-Z��n-Dweeb�e | Thu Feb 10 1994 05:46 | 3 |
| I thought the exact same thng myself when I read the nominations.
Peter.
|
403.63 | Maybe it's the same | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Feb 10 1994 11:55 | 7 |
| If I remember correctly, in German the w is pronounced as our v so Ewa
is pronounced Eva.
Anyone speak German out there, who can rule of this?
Marilyn
|
403.64 | | CDROM::SHIPLEY | Smmeeeeegggg Heeeeeeeeead | Thu Feb 10 1994 15:16 | 9 |
|
> If I remember correctly, in German the w is pronounced as our v so Ewa
> is pronounced Eva.
> Anyone speak German out there, who can rule of this?
The German 'v' is pronounced more with a 'fe' sound so Eva
would be more 'Afa' rather than 'Ava'... so take it from there...8^)}..
|
403.65 | Yes, but | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Feb 10 1994 16:14 | 4 |
| But how do you pronounce Ewa?
Marilyn
|
403.66 | Then, of course, there's Uwa... | CDROM::SHIPLEY | Smmeeeeegggg Heeeeeeeeead | Thu Feb 10 1994 17:39 | 15 |
|
> But how do you pronounce Ewa?
As you had already said, 'Ava' as in Gardner...
Eva... Afa
Ewa... Ava
(except I don't think Ewa is Germanic but Scandewegian...)
(Hey, I'm no expert, just what I can remember from my German
teacher in Munich...8^)}...)
|
403.67 | Thanks, now.... | 16913::MILLS_MA | To Thine own self be True | Thu Feb 10 1994 17:52 | 8 |
| Thanks. Now does anyone remember how Hitler's "sweetie" spelled her
name?
BTW, I wish I'd been a fly on the wall when they interviewed her for
the job. Your name is WHAT??? :^)
Marilyn
|
403.68 | eva vs ewa | 49438::BARTAK | Andrea Bartak, Vienna, Austria | Fri Feb 11 1994 05:05 | 8 |
| Eva and Ewa surely have the same origin, Eva is the form used in the
german speaking countries, and Ewa is the form used in the eastern european
countries. So I know a polish woman whose name is Ewa.
In German you pronounce the "v" like an "f" in this case.
Andrea
|
403.69 | Incredible movie. | 18463::BERNARD | | Mon Feb 14 1994 15:54 | 20 |
| Recently I had the opportunity to visit Germany, took a 4 hour side
trip to see the memorial at the concentration camp at Dachau just
outside of Munich. Never Again, is the large sign at the museum. It is
a memorial to thousands of prisoners who were sent to the camp and died
there. The pictures and film were graphic. The walkways had plaques
that described how prisoners were summarily shot for stepping off the
stone path and on to the grass. A jewish life was worthless in the
camp, guards and officers shot or tortured people at random just to
instill fear in others.
I also saw Schindler's List this past weekend and walked out after
with my wife and friends feeling like I had just attended a wake.
Somehow I could not believe that anybody could see both Dachau and
Schindler's List and deny it ever happened. The movie was extraordinary
in that nothing was sugar-coated, it was graphic in detail and showed
how utterly brutal the Nazis were. Many scenes were sickening and I
can't imagine a jewish person sitting through it. My neighbor has given
lectures on her experiences in the Holocaust, what hell it must have
been.
Paul
|
403.70 | | 3270::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Mon Feb 14 1994 16:42 | 5 |
| I saw Kinnealy, the author, on the news the other night when the
nominations were announced. I realize he's the author of the book
Schepisi's 1976 movie "The Devil's Playground" was taken from, and in
which he has a cameo as the priest who comes and does the retreat.
|
403.71 | | 18031::GOULD_RYAN | | Mon Feb 21 1994 07:27 | 14 |
|
I saw Schinder's List this weekend. The theater was packed out. I
thought that the movie was excellent. Like another noter in here I
took note of the people leaving the theater when it was over. Some
were crying, others simply looked stunned.
World War II, the Nazis and the Holocaust are subjects which I have
studied for 25 years but never have I seen anything which brought the
brutal horror of this era to life for me....until now.
A definite "must see" **** out of ****
RG
|
403.72 | Must see | VMSDEV::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Mon Feb 21 1994 13:02 | 15 |
| My wife and I saw it but were disappointed by the acoustics of the
theater (Bedford NH), at least I assume it's the theater not the film.
I put my vote in with those who thought this was a great film,
deserving of several Oscars. But I also think Neeson's big scene
near the end wasn't "right", I can't see that sort of behavior in
Schindler's character. But I would fault Spielberg, not Neeson.
Regrettably I missed one key (?) part of the movie. My wife asked me
about something (I'm sure it had to do with the poor sound quality)
and while explaining it we missed the end of the scenes with the little
girl in the red dress. Can somebody explain what happened? Using a
spoiler alert, of course. Thanks,
John
|
403.73 | | 12027::HOLMES | | Mon Feb 21 1994 15:04 | 11 |
| About the little girl in the red dress...
I assume you mean the scenes during the liquidation of the ghetto when Schindler
first sees her wandering the streets... She enters a building and hides in a
cabinet. Later you see soldiers shooting up the ghetto buildings, including
shooting into cabinets, but you don't see her specifically.
Later, when Schindler is at the camp and the bodies are being burned, he sees
the little girl's body on a cart being pushed to the fire.
Tracy
|
403.74 | ??? | 7922::GUTIERREZ | Citizen of the Cosmos | Mon Feb 21 1994 15:08 | 7 |
|
I haven't seen the film yet, but I know it is in black and white,
so how is it possible to be talking about a little girl in a
red dress from a black and white film ?.
Curious.
|
403.75 | | 65320::RIVERS | Stupid, STUPID rat creatures! | Mon Feb 21 1994 16:01 | 7 |
| Because it was the only spot of color in the film. (and, I might add,
strangely done. It looked badly off).
You'll understand more when you see the film.
kim
|
403.76 | | 18031::GOULD_RYAN | | Tue Feb 22 1994 12:40 | 10 |
|
The "red" was her coat, at least I think it was (minor nit, I'll
admit).
The red was very faint. It almost looked "water color", I would
suppose to simulate the "color" photography of the time (some of it
anyway).
RG
|
403.77 | | 3228::BELFORTI | I forgive you.... chilling | Tue Feb 22 1994 12:57 | 12 |
| John,
The sound was fine when I was at Bedford... keep in mind that there are
several times that the sound is suppose to be off in the distance, so
only a few of the speakers were used. I read that Spielberg did this
to make it seem like you were there.... So, it might not have been bad
accoustics, you might not have been prepared for the sound not being
from all the speakers at all times!
M-L
PS tell Merge I said HI, Thanks
|
403.78 | | 3228::BELFORTI | I forgive you.... chilling | Tue Feb 22 1994 13:00 | 11 |
| PS.. another minor nit....
behind a spolier
the little girl in the red coat hid under a bed, and the soldiers shot
up through the floor. There were others hiding in cabinets, pianos and
in floors hide-aways..... but she was under a bed, where most little
kids would think it was safe.
|
403.79 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Wed Feb 23 1994 09:53 | 6 |
| I guess I feel differently about this (what else is new) but I thought the
scene with the red coat worked really well. It was kind of eerie and a very
effective way to draw attention to someone in a crowd in a black and white
film.
George
|
403.80 | | 3228::BELFORTI | I forgive you.... chilling | Wed Feb 23 1994 11:33 | 1 |
| I too thought it was very powerful... as were the colored candles.
|
403.81 | Should definitely get the Oscars! | TLE::JBISHOP | | Wed Feb 23 1994 11:35 | 16 |
| I can't add much, but will say that the parts people have objected
to worked for me (red dress, breakdown scene, color stuff at the
end), though the movie wouldn't have been weaker if the breakdown
scene were gone. I was very moved, I dreamed about the Holocaust
the night after I saw the movie, and am still thinking about it
now.
In an way this reminds me of "Amadeus". In that movie, the use of
lots of music by an authentic genius made you believe the rest of
the movie was greater than it was; in "Schindler's List", the use
of a real tragedy of huge scale makes you think the rest of the
movie greater than otherwise. But I'll agree that this is the movie
of the year, and far better than other Spielberg would have lead you
to expect, and that it is significant in a way that most movies are
not.
-John Bishop
|
403.82 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Fri Mar 25 1994 09:52 | 98 |
| Saw this last night. Neeson's performance blew me away - he personified
the amiable-amoral Schindler, and owned every scene he was in (well,
OK, so he co-owned the scenes with Kingsley and Fiennes, each of whom
played off him to *perfection*). Fiennes' performance, too, was as
impressive as I'd heard, and Kingsley's was outstanding. Indeed, the
only drawbacks I found were a few nits about detail (I've seen too much
of the real-life documentary footage, so during the camp scenes I'd be
thinking, "They're not gaunt enough/frail enough/dirty enough, etc.";
though it would be asking a lot of a cast of thousands to have _all_ of
them pull a Tom Hanks for a movie...) - and the Spielbergism of Oskar's
departure, which I'll discuss farther on.
Loved the colored candles fading to black. Found the little-girl-in-red
thing too heavy-handed; he could have made the connection by using a
distinctive hat or hair ribbon or braid on the coat. But what the heck.
*Loved* the black-market discussion in the cathedral; it was
delightfully perverse, and rather funny, yet conveyed very quickly the
walking-on-eggshells atmosphere of the times.
Then there was the "power of belief" theme: at every step, the Jews
believed that this was as bad as it could get, and that belief kept a
lot of them from taking any action to prevent the next step. When
Schindler's factory became known as a safe place, the people's belief
in him sustained them (and very likely lured him into his later
actions); and of course his belief in himself - his utter confidence
that he could woo, win, overwhelm, or buy anyone or anything that he
needed - made him stand out at a time when so few people could even
pretend to be certain about anything. [Hell, I think Neeson should have
gotten the damned Oscar just for standing there looking impressive;
talk about selling a character in a single scene!]
Folks have raved about Fiennes' demonic Goeth, so I'll just say, "Me,
too," and hope the guy gets some really juicy roles after this so we
can find out what else he can do. Schindler trying to convince
Goeth to try mercy was like trying to charm a cobra; he loomed and
smiled and exuded cameraderie, all the while knowing that the guy could
just as easily react by shooting the next person he saw. And then Goeth
giving it a try, tasting each "act of mercy" to see how he liked it,
and never for a moment thinking of the potential victims' part in it
all.
And I really enjoyed watching the Schindler/Stern scenes - the outgoing
vs. the reserved, both of them trying to convey information without
stating it outright, trying to determine how much they can trust each
other, and - yes - how much they can manipulate and/or use each
other... It was wonderful to see.
Now for the parts I wasn't that thrilled with:
[Spoiler warning...]
The now-infamous "breakdown" scene didn't work for me at *all*. Even if
that's what had happened in real life (I don't think it was), it would
have felt wrong; the character, as depicted to that point, always
played to the audience, and would have done any breaking down in
private. (I suppose it's possible that such a collapse could have been
staged - by another director, perhaps - in a way that didn't jar me out
of the story, but in this case, when it happened I just disconnected
and waited for it to be over.)
Indeed, the entire post-Auschwitz sequence seemed rushed (yes, even at
the end of such a long movie!), and didn't convey very much of the real
doubt and fear on everybody's part as to what would happen. The
prisoners didn't know what "liberation" would mean - the Russian army
had a pretty rough reputation; the soldiers had even more reason to
fear the Russians; the prisoners' experience of German soldiers left
them in considerable doubt as to whether their guards were going to
obey the orders to kill them all or not; and Schindler himself was
facing the knowledge that everything he'd built up, the contacts, the
money (what was left of it), the property, was gone now, and he was at
considerable risk of imprisonment. I didn't pick up very much of this
atmosphere from that final sequence - as somebody mentioned earlier, it
seemed a bit too pat, with Oskar never seriously challenged again,
whereas in reality there were a couple of very dicey moments near the
end when the balance could have tipped the other way. Perhaps the
purpose of playing all this down was to give the audience's presumably
harrowed feelings a chance to recover, but I found it unsatisfying.
The rocks-on-the-grave sequence bothered me at first; it was a pointed
reminder that this all happened to real people (which isn't a bad thing
to be reminded of), but its presentation felt like major-league hype:
"See how important this is! This is the guy's real grave! Be _moved_,
dammit!" But after my initial reaction to that, I found myself
impressed by seeing the real survivors side by side with the actors who
had portrayed them. It wasn't subtle; but it appears it was a needed
affirmation that "we are not making this up!".
But I think I'd have preferred that epilogue to be in the form of a
"Making of 'Schindler's List'" documentary or something, and to let the
story tell itself.
Despite the bits that I found flawed, I was very much impressed by the
movie. (Oddly enough, I don't think it's Spielberg's best job of
directing; but it's certainly his most powerful cast!)
-b
|
403.83 | Not quite the Original Version. | 52925::WHITE | They're the wrong salopetes Gromit ! | Mon Mar 28 1994 11:23 | 12 |
| Saw this at the weekend in Geneva. It was the Version Originale but the
problem was it also had German and French subtitles which is ok apart
from the fact that the sub-titles at the end explaining what happened
to Oskar Schindler after the war were also translated and between
wiping away tears and trying to translate the french, I missed what
happened to him.
Could someone explain what did happen to him after the war (behind a
spoiler of course)
Many thanks
Alan.
|
403.84 | | 12368::michaud | Oscar for Oskar | Mon Mar 28 1994 11:34 | 9 |
| I also saw this over the weekend and it was indeed quite moving
(except for the parts where artistic license was obviously used).
My major complaint is actually only a small nit, the WHITE
subtitles were heard to read, I wish they had been YELLOW.
I couldn't believe the Tynsboro-6 sold *out* of tickets for
a 8:20pm Sat. show for a movie that has been in release for
three months!!!
|
403.85 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Mon Mar 28 1994 11:42 | 17 |
| Re .83 (Schindler's fate after the war):
He tried his hand at a number of businesses, some in South America, but
never had much success. He kept in touch with many of the Jews he
rescued, and also asked them for money... They provided for him when he
needed assistance, but his nature didn't seem to change much, and he
was just as open-handed and profligate as ever, so he was nearly always
broke. His marriage didn't work any better after the war than during.
But, for all his faults, he did remain high in the regard of the people
he'd saved, and in his later years he asked to be buried in Jerusalem.
He died of - I forget, but whatever it was it's amazing, considering
his lifestyle, that he lasted as long as he did - and was buried in
Jerusalem as per his request.
-b
|
403.86 | I don't think so.... | 42110::KISIEL | Hooligan's Holiday | Tue May 10 1994 07:53 | 9 |
|
I don't know if this has already been answered but was Oscar Schindler
a Jew?
EWAN
|
403.87 | Not likely.... | GALVIA::HELSOM | Don't mind that, sir. It's only a slowworm. | Tue May 10 1994 09:27 | 2 |
| No. He wouldn't have been allowed in the Nazi party if he had been....and he's
honoured in Israel as a righteous gentile.
|
403.88 | | GODIVA::bence | Windmill's End | Wed May 11 1994 10:25 | 2 |
|
I think Schindler's family was Catholic.
|
403.89 | That is what I read. | 58379::MCNALLY | | Fri Jun 17 1994 18:47 | 2 |
| Schindler was a czech.
|
403.90 | | 3270::AHERN | Dennis the Menace | Thu Jun 23 1994 10:54 | 3 |
| This is the first movie I can remember seeing where the audience sat
through the credits.
|
403.91 | | FUTURS::CROSSLEY | For internal use only | Thu Jun 30 1994 07:51 | 6 |
|
R.e. -1
I never thought of that at the time, but you're absolutely correct !!
Ian.
|
403.92 | | 7361::MAIEWSKI | | Thu Jun 30 1994 11:05 | 4 |
| ... happens all the time in Star Trek films. Trekies often watch the
credits to pick up trivia.
George
|
403.93 | | ODIXIE::MOREAU | Ken Moreau;Sales Support;South FL | Thu Jun 30 1994 12:10 | 8 |
| One other movie that had a similar effect on the audience is "Amadeus".
The final sequence is riveting (no spoilers) and the entire audience was
sitting, quiet, absorbed, almost in shock, all the way through the credits
until the house lights came up. Then we all kind of shook ourselves loose
from the effect, and left the theater subdued.
-- Ken Moreau
|
403.94 | Good to the last drop | 37811::BUCHMAN | UNIX refugee in a VMS world | Fri Jul 01 1994 18:25 | 6 |
| "Apocolypse Now" had the same affect. I saw this at our university
theatre. They started bringing up the house lights during the ending
credits, and everyone yelled "TURN THEM OFF!!!". They quickly darkened
the room again, and everyone sat fascinated and watched as the napalm
exploded throughout the credits.
Jim
|
403.96 | Yes, it's been commented on | 30411::COULTER | If this typewriter can't do it, ... | Sun Sep 11 1994 16:19 | 3 |
| See 403.73.
|
403.97 | remember | HOTLNE::S_COLLINS | | Sun Jun 30 1996 05:10 | 3 |
|
we must never forget
|
403.98 | "Schindler's List", Sunday Feb. 23 at 7:30pm | DECC::SULLIVAN | Jeff Sullivan | Wed Feb 19 1997 19:04 | 8 |
| "Schindler's List" will be broadcast on your local NBC station, Sunday Feb.
23 at 7:30pm, commercial-free, with two intermissions sponsored by Ford.
See http://www.nbc.com/entertainment/specials/SchindlersList/
That's this Sunday!
-Jeff
|
403.99 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Henry Kissinger | Thu Feb 20 1997 02:08 | 19 |
| > "Schindler's List" will be broadcast on your local NBC station, Sunday Feb.
> 23 at 7:30pm, commercial-free, with two intermissions sponsored by Ford.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
agagagagagagagag, those network bozos really must believe
what they say about TV rotting our brains...
David Letterman last year aired one night a highly publicized
show that was also touted to be commercial-free. While they
never cut to a traditional "commercial", it probably contained
more advertising for the sponsers during that show than with
traditional commercials.
Even PBS isn't commercial-free, the commercial's are just
aired near the beginning and at the end of the show instead
or in intermission form.
I hope they at least broadcast this film un-cut and in
letter-box (ie. wide screen) format?
|
403.100 | At lkeast half not getting your wish... | RNDHSE::WALL | Show me, don't tell me | Thu Feb 20 1997 09:05 | 8 |
|
>I hope they at least broadcast this film un-cut and in
>letter-box (ie. wide screen) format?
I know there are destined to be some edits, but I don't know about the
letterbox....
DFW
|
403.101 | "commercial-free, with two intermissions sponsored by Ford" | DECC::SULLIVAN | Jeff Sullivan | Thu Feb 20 1997 18:43 | 9 |
| Actually, with the length of the movie, two intermissions will probably be a
good thing. The above statement came verbatim from the NBC web page, so we'll
see how it plays out in real life.
I think that the commercial-free thing must be costing Ford a good deal of money
and I applaud them for the gesture. Of course, if they get George Lucas to add
some new scenes with Oskar Schindler driving a Taurus, I may change my mind...
-Jeff
|
403.102 | Glad to see it! | NEWVAX::BUCHMAN | Rosalie's Uncle | Fri Feb 21 1997 14:14 | 20 |
| As I understand it, the intermissions will be ninety seconds long, with
nothing on screen but the Ford logo.
I think this is a wonderful thing for both the viewer and the company.
NPR said yesterday that Ford is paying about $6 million for the
privilege of showing this movie. In exchange, they get their name
mentioned in ninety-nine promotional spots advertising the movie
beforehand, and they get their name associated with a quality
production. It makes me nostalgic, actually. IBM and Hallmark used to
do the same sort of thing -- put on a production of The Nutcracker or
some other special feature, with only one long commercial in the
middle. I hope other companies pick up on this strategy.
btw, the company says that the selection of Schindler's List had
nothing to do with the fact that Henry Ford himself was a rabid
anti-Semite, who regularly published articles about Jewish conspiracies
in newspapers in the 1920's. They basically feel that this regrettable
foible on the part of the founder is ancient history.
Jim
|
403.103 | bright blue emblem seemed almost disrespectfully out of place... | APLVEW::DEBRIAE | searching for the language that is _also_ yours | Fri Feb 21 1997 17:00 | 13 |
|
I applaud Ford, and am glad that this film will reach a broader
home audience now because of them.
However I have to admit that the promos which showed the black and
white title shot but with the colourized blue "Ford" symbol stamped
upon it, made me chuckle, suggesting that we could see more Spielberg
colourization 'cheesy-ness' than just the red coat, perhaps a red
Taurus would be seen in a pan shot by someone's garage. It just reminded
me how much that use of colour bothered me. Seeing the bright blue
against the black and white image brought it right back to mind again,
I had forgotten about it. Funny how memory recall works...
|
403.103 | | EDSCLU::JAYAKUMAR | | Wed Feb 26 1997 13:28 | 1 |
| NPR reported that 1/3 of America watched last Sunday's telecast.
|
403.104 | | BUSY::SLAB | Black No. 1 | Wed Feb 26 1997 13:37 | 3 |
|
How many is that ... 90M or so, give or take?
|
403.105 | | VAXCPU::michaud | Medicine Man | Wed Feb 26 1997 16:26 | 17 |
| > How many is that ... 90M or so, give or take?
CNN HN reported 60M, and said it was twice the number that saw
the film in it's theatrical release.
I wasn't one of those who watched it. I turn the tube on for
a few minutes to see if it would be letterboxed (thus preserving
it's artistic integrety) or edited (thus losing 1/3 or more of the
visual image) to fit TV screens. Sadly it was edited to fit the
TV screen.
I was happy to hear that at least the film was left mostly unedited
for content (nudity, language, adult situtations, etc), and was in
fact the first show/film/etc to be broadcast on national TV with
the "M" rating of the new TV rating system. This apparently has
upset some conservative Washington politition because the film
was broadcast in prime time.
|
403.106 | A masterpiece | DECC::SULLIVAN | Jeff Sullivan | Wed Feb 26 1997 18:28 | 6 |
| I watched it for the first time on Sunday, including the interesting commentary
by Speilberg before and after the movie. There are few films I would use the
term masterpiece to describe. This would be one of them.
-Jeff
|