Schindler's List (1993) USA
Schindler's List Image Cover
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Director:Steven Spielberg
Studio:Mca Home Video
Producer:Branko Lustig, Gerald R. Molen, Irving Glovin, Kathleen Kennedy, Lew Rywin
Writer:Thomas Keneally, Steven Zaillian
Rating:4.5
Rated:R
Date Added:2006-03-27
ASIN:B00012QM8G
UPC:0025192386626
Price:$26.98
Awards:Won 7 Oscars. Another 62 wins & 21 nominations
Genre:Biography
Release:2004-09-03
IMDb:0108052
Duration:196
Picture Format:Widescreen
Aspect Ratio:1.85:1
Sound:AC-3
Languages:English, Dolby Digital 5.1, English, DTS 5.1 ES, French, Dolby Digital 5.1, Spanish, Dolby Digital 5.1
Subtitles:Spanish, French
Features:Anamorphic
Dubbed
Subtitled
Steven Spielberg  ...  (Director)
Thomas Keneally, Steven Zaillian  ...  (Writer)
 
Liam Neeson  ...  Oskar Schindler
Ben Kingsley  ...  Itzhak Stern
Ralph Fiennes  ...  Amon Goeth
Caroline Goodall  ...  Emilie Schindler
Jonathan Sagall  ...  Poldek Pfefferberg (as Jonathan Sagalle)
Embeth Davidtz  ...  Helen Hirsch
Malgoscha Gebel  ...  Victoria Klonowska
Shmuel Levy  ...  Wilek Chilowicz (as Shmulik Levy)
Mark Ivanir  ...  Marcel Goldberg
Béatrice Macola  ...  Ingrid
Andrzej Seweryn  ...  Julian Scherner
Friedrich von Thun  ...  Rolf Czurda
Krzysztof Luft  ...  Herman Toffel
Harry Nehring  ...  Leo John
Norbert Weisser  ...  Albert Hujar
Malgorzata Gebel  ...  Wiktoria Klonowska
Comments: Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire.

Summary: Steven Spielberg had a banner year in 1993. He scored one of his biggest commercial hits that summer with the mega-hit Jurassic Park, but it was the artistic and critical triumph of Schindler's List that Spielberg called "the most satisfying experience of my career." Adapted from the best-selling book by Thomas Keneally and filmed in Poland with an emphasis on absolute authenticity, Spielberg's masterpiece ranks among the greatest films ever made about the Holocaust during World War II. It's a film about heroism with an unlikely hero at its center--Catholic war profiteer Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson), who risked his life and went bankrupt to save more than 1,000 Jews from certain death in concentration camps.
By employing Jews in his crockery factory manufacturing goods for the German army, Schindler ensures their survival against terrifying odds. At the same time, he must remain solvent with the help of a Jewish accountant (Ben Kingsley) and negotiate business with a vicious, obstinate Nazi commandant (Ralph Fiennes) who enjoys shooting Jews as target practice from the balcony of his villa overlooking a prison camp. Schindler's List gains much of its power not by trying to explain Schindler's motivations, but by dramatizing the delicate diplomacy and determination with which he carried out his generous deeds.
As a drinker and womanizer who thought nothing of associating with Nazis, Schindler was hardly a model of decency; the film is largely about his transformation in response to the horror around him. Spielberg doesn't flinch from that horror, and the result is a film that combines remarkable humanity with abhorrent inhumanity--a film that functions as a powerful history lesson and a testament to the resilience of the human spirit in the context of a living nightmare. --Jeff Shannon