MOVIE REVIEW
Schindler's List
MPA Rating:
for language, some sexuality and actuality violence.
Reviewed by: W.J. Kimble
CONTRIBUTOR
Moral Rating: |
Very Offensive
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Moviemaking Quality: |
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Primary Audience: |
Adults
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Genre: |
History Drama Adaptation
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Length: |
3 hr. 15 min.
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Year of Release: |
1993
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USA Release: |
December 15, 1993
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Relevant Issues
sin, depravity and the fall of man
death
holocaust / mass murderer
RACISM—What are the consequences of racial prejudice and false beliefs about the origin of races? Answer
Get biblical answers to racial hot-topics. Where did the races come from? Why is it important to have a biblical foundation for such issues?
concentration camps
good versus evil
sadistic cruelty / ruthlessness / psychopath
forgiveness
Christ allegory
Why does God allow innocent people to suffer? Answer
What about the issue of suffering? Doesn’t this prove that there is no God and that we are on our own? Answer
Does God feel our pain? Answer
ORIGIN OF BAD—How did bad things come about? Answer
Did God make the world the way it is now? What kind of world would you create? Answer
hope
Discover God’s promise for all people—told beautifully and clearly from the beginning. Discover The HOPE!
Watch it on Christian Answers—full-length motion picture.
honor
self transcendence
heroism, courage, self-sacrifice
compassion, mercy
starvation
husband wife relationship
Featuring |
Liam Neeson … Oskar Schindler
Ben Kingsley … Itzhak Stern
Ralph Fiennes … Amon Goeth
Caroline Goodall … Emilie Schindler
See all »Jonathan Sagalle … Poldek Pfefferberg
Embeth Davidtz … Helen Hirsch
Malgoscha Gebel … Wiktoria Klonowska
Shmulik Levy … Wilek Chilowicz
Mark Ivanir … Marcel Goldberg
Beatrice Macola … Ingrid
Andrzej Seweryn … Julian Scherner
Friedrich Von Thun … Rolf Czurda
Krzysztof Luft … Herman Toffel
Harry Nehring … Leo John
Norbert Weisser … Albert Hujar
Adi Nitzan … Mila Pfefferberg
Michael Schneider … Juda Dresner
Miri Fabian … Chaja Dresner
Anna Mucha … Danka Dresner
Albert Misak … Mordecai Wulkan
Michael Gordon … Mr. Nussbaum
Aldona Grochal … Mrs. Nussbaum
Jacek Wójcicki … Henry Rosner
Beata Paluch … Manci Rosner
Piotr Polk … Leo Rosner
Ezra Dagan … Rabbi Menasha Levartov
Beata Nowak … Rebecca Tannenbaum
Rami Hauberger … Josef Bau
Leopold Kozlowski … Investor
Jerzy Nowak … Investor
Uri Avrahami … Chaim Nowak
Adam Siemion … O.D./Chicken Boy
Magdalena Dandourian … Nuisa Horowitz
Pawel Delag … Dolek Horowitz
Shabtai Konorti … Garage Mechanic
Oliwia Dabrowska … Red Genia
Henryk Bista … Mr. Löwenstein
Tadeusz Bradecki … DEF Foreman
Wojciech Klata … Lisiek
Elina Löwensohn … Diana Reiter
Ewa Kolasinska … Irrational Woman
Bettina Kupfer … Regina Perlman
Grzegorz Kwas … Mietek Pemper
Vili Matula … Investigator
Stanislaw Koczanowicz … Doorman
Hans Jorg Assmann … Julius Madritsch
Geno Lechner … Majola
August Schmolzer … Dieter Reeder
Ludger Pistor … Josef Liepold
Beata Rybotycka … Club Singer
Branko Lustig … Nightclub Maitre d’
Artus Maria Matthiessen … Treblinka Commandant
Hans Michael Rehberg … Rudolph Hoss
Eugeniusz Priwiezencew … Waiter
Michael Z. Hoffmann … Montelupich Colonel
Erwin Leder … SS Waffen Officer
Jochen Nickel … Wilhelm Kunde
Andrzej Welminski … Dr. Blancke
Daniel Del Ponte … Dr. Josef Mengele
Marian Glinka … DEF SS Officer
Grzegorz Damiecki … SS Sgt. Kunder
Stanislaw Brejdygant … DEF Guard
Olaf Linde Lubaszenko … Auschwitz Guard
Haymon Maria Buttinger … Auschwitz Guard
Peter Appiano … Auschwitz Guard
Jacek Pulanecki … Brinnlitz Guard
Tomasz Dedek … Gestapo Agent
Slawomir Holland … Gestapo Agent
Martin Semmelrogge … SS Waffen Man
Tadeusz Huk … Gestapo Brinnlitz
Gerald Alexander Held … SS Bureaucrat
Piotr Cyrwus … Ukrainian Guard
Joachim Paul Assböck … Gestapo Clerk Klaus Tauber
Osman Ragheb … Border Guard
Maciej Orlos … German Clerk
Marek Wrona … Toffel’s Secretary
Zbigniew Kozlowski … Scherner’s Secretary
Marcin Grzymowicz … Czurda’s Secretary
Dieter Witting … Bosch
Magdalena Komornicka … Goeth’s Girl
Agnieszka Kruk … Czurda’s Girl
Anemona Knut … Polish Girl
Jeremy Flynn … Brinnlitz Man
Agnieszka Wagner … Brinnlitz Girl
Jan Jurewicz … Russian Officer
Wieslaw Komasa … Plaszow Depot SS Guard
Maciej Kozlowski … SS Guard Zablocie
Martin Bergmann … SS NCO Zablocie
Wilhelm Manske … SS NCO—Ghetto
Peter Flechtner … SS NCO—Ghetto
Sigurd Bemme … SS NCO—Ghetto
Etl Szyc … Ghetto Woman
Lucyna Zabawa … Ghetto Woman
Ruth Farhi … Old Jewish Woman
Jerzy Sagan … Ghetto Old Man
Dariusz Szymaniak … Prisoner at Depot
Dirk Bender … Clerk at Depot
Maciej Winkler … Black Marketeer
Radoslaw Krzyzowski … Black Marketeer
Jacek Lenczowski … Black Marketeer
Hanna Kossowska … Ghetto Doctor
Maja Ostaszewska … Frantic Woman
Sebastian Skalski … Stable Boy
Ryszard Radwanski … Pankiewicz
Piotr Kadlcik … Man in Pharmacy
Bartek Niebielski … NCO Plaszow
Thomas Morris … Grun
Sebastian Konrad … Engineer Man
Lidia Wyrobiec-Bank … Clara Sternberg
Ravit Ferera … Maria Mischel
Agnieszka Korzeniowska … Ghetto Girl
Dominika Bednarczyk … Ghetto Girl
Alicja Kubaszewska … Ghetto Girl
Danny Marcu … Ghetto Man
Hans Rosner … Ghetto Man
Edward Linde Lubaszenko … Brinnlitz Priest
Alexander Strobele … Montelupich Prisoner
Goerges Kern … Depot Master
Alexander Buczolich … Plaszow SS Guard
Michael Schiller … Plaszow SS Guard
Goetz Otto … Plaszow SS Guard
Wolfgang Seidenberg … Plaszow SS Guard
Hubert Kramar … Plaszow SS Guard
Razia Israeli … Plaszow Jewish Girl
Dorit Ady Seadia … Plaszow Jewish Girl
Esti Yerushalmi … Plaszow Jewish Girl
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Director |
Steven Spielberg
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Producer |
Universal Pictures
Amblin Entertainment
Gerald R. Molen … producer
See all »
Irving Glovin … associate producer
Kathleen Kennedy … executive producer
Branko Lustig … producer
Robert Raymond … associate producer
Lew Rywin … co-producer
Steven Spielberg … producer
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Distributor |
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“Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire.”
While “Schindler’s List” won 7 Academy Awards (including Best Picture, Best Director and Best {adapted} screenplay), and 11 Academy Award Nominations (including Best Actor-Liam Neeson), it is a movie that left this reviewer a little uneasy. Steven Spielberg takes the grim reality of the Holocaust and portrays it as ghastly and realistic as anyone could expect. There are savage scenes of random, cruel slaughter that would make the young very squeamish (or most anyone). The very nature of the Holocaust requires that such graphic violence be portrayed and I was not offended by it. I do believe, however, that as godly parents we need to be careful that we do not expose our children to issues they are not ready to handle. The Holocaust and its violence can be too much for young minds. What really disturbs me about this movie is the unnecessary and flagrant nude scenes, which Spielberg seems to throw in at the most inappropriate times. One such scene has Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson, “Rob Roy”) in bed, with his wife (Caroline Goodall, “White Squall”), in the act of sex. Leaving little to the imagination, this scene is so offensive that one could easily consider it soft porn. There are scenes, which contain relative nudity and are essential to the content of the film; but this scene, and two others, have no bearing on the movie at all! There is full frontal male and female nudity and the vulgarity is prolific.
“Schindler’s List” is based on the 1982 biographical novel by Thomas Keneally. It is structured around the imposing, Nazi-Catholic industrialist, Oskar Schindler, whose suave, sophisticated lifestyle wins over the Nazi elite; which, subsequently, enables him to acquire tremendous wealth by using Polish Jews as unpaid laborers. While he is motivated by greed and lust for high living, Oskar, after having seen the slow methodical extermination of the Jews in Krakow, becomes sympathetic to their cause and begins to systematically buy everyone he can to work in his factory. Along with the help of Itzhak Stern (Ben Kingsley, “The Assignment”), Oskar is able to teach the Jews a trade that eventually saves their lives.
In one of the film’s most touching scenes, Oskar goes to Auschwitz and fights for the freedom of his employees. Determined to save all that he can, he risks his life by valiantly talking the authorities out of exterminating them. Triumphantly, they march back to the factory, knowing that their lives have been spared. By 1945, Oskar Schindler was able to save over 1,000 men, women and children. In his honor, Spielberg films the actual people, who were saved by Schindler, as they pass by the grave of their hero. We are then told that the descendants of these Jews total 6,000.
Many of the scenes were actually filmed on location, including Schindler’s original factory and the gates of Auschwitz. Cinematographer Janusz Kaminski does a superb job of filming and Steven Zaillian skillfully constructed the screenplay. Even so, be forewarned, this is not a family film!
See list of Relevant Issues—questions-and-answers.
Positive
Comments from young people
By far Spielberg’s best movie and one of the best films ever made. While it may be a stretch I would give this a Christian rating of 3—only because it’s accurate and not a glorification of perversion. To many Holocaust films shy from the truth. That’s sad, because it is one of the most significant events in the 20th century. Watch this movie, watch it carefully, and see what you learn from it—the nudity has a part in this film.