Schindler's List Essay

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The movie Schindler’s List is a 1993 American epic historical film directed and co-produced by Steven Spielberg and scripted by Steven Zaillian. This great film went on to win Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay as well as many more academy awards. It is based on the novel Schindler's Ark by Australian novelist Thomas Keneally. The film recounts a period in the life of Oskar Schindler, a German businessman, during a time when he saves the lives of more than a thousand mostly Polish-Jewish refugees from the Holocaust by employing them in his factories during World War II. This brings a popular mastermind together with a story that demands the sincere reserves of courage and passion. Rising vividly to the challenge of this material and displaying an electrifying creative intelligence, Mr. Spielberg has made sure that neither he nor the Holocaust will ever be thought of in the same way again. …show more content…

The horrors of the Holocaust are often viewed from a similar distance, filtered through memory or insulated by grief and recrimination. Recognized exhaustively or dramatized in terms by now dangerously familiar, the Holocaust threatens to become unimaginable precisely because it has been imagined so fully. But the film Schindler's List, directed with fury and immediacy by a profoundly surprising Steven Spielberg, presents the subject as if discovering it anew. One scene with a deserted street littered with the suitcases of those who had just been rounded up and taken away. This really showed how bad the S.S. Officers were to the Jews and many others during World War II. Or the panic of a prisoner who was unable to find his identity papers while he is being screamed at by an armed soldier, a man with an obviously hostile temper. These visual scenes, and countless others like them, invite empathy as surely as Mr. Spielberg wanted to viewer to

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