A Jewish Woman's First Time Ever Watching Schindler's List | Movie Reaction

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MovieJoob

MovieJoob

Жыл бұрын

A Jewish Woman's First Time Ever Watching Schindler's List | Movie Reaction . We hope you enjoy, as always remember to like, comment and subscribe and ring the bell so you don't miss a thing!
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I'm watching Schindler's List for the first time ever!
Schindler's List is such iconic film and I can't wait to for you all to watch along with me
Oskar Schindler, a German industrialist and member of the Nazi party, tries to save his Jewish employees after witnessing the persecution of Jews in Poland
Businessman Oskar Schindler (Liam Neeson) arrives in Krakow in 1939, ready to make his fortune from World War II, which has just started. After joining the Nazi party primarily for political expediency, he staffs his factory with Jewish workers for similarly pragmatic reasons. When the SS begins exterminating Jews in the Krakow ghetto, Schindler arranges to have his workers protected to keep his factory in operation, but soon realizes that in so doing, he is also saving innocent lives.
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Release date: 10 February 1994 (Australia)
Director: Steven Spielberg
Adapted from: Schindler's Ark
Music composed by: John Williams
Box office: 322.2 million USD
*Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favour of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.

Пікірлер: 1 300
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
FULL AND LONGER REACTION: www.patreon.com/MovieJoob Jade is here to watch Schindler’s List. 📝 P.S. There can be many YT issues so we apologise if there are any scenes cut that are important! Join along in watching Jades reaction to this movie and as always leave a like, subscribe and click the notification bell to keep up with all our content! ❤🔴
@juneskywalker5847
@juneskywalker5847 Жыл бұрын
Thats why the 2nd Amendment in our Constitution is thee most essential and important part of all time. If we fall...so will the rest of the world.
@aaronburdon221
@aaronburdon221 Жыл бұрын
@@juneskywalker5847 What she said. If the first amendment fails, the 2nd needs to be implemented. It's something we don't WANT to do, but will if we have to.
@davidbarton1806
@davidbarton1806 Жыл бұрын
You do know that this is all made up right??? The moive is fake and the book won best FICTION! Just like Ann frank and the book night they are fictional books with zero truth to them
@personwithoutabody3236
@personwithoutabody3236 Жыл бұрын
@@davidbarton1806 Firstly not entirely made up, Oskar Schindler did exist and some events and people were real. And secondly, Ann Frank being fiction, what are you smoking?
@personwithoutabody3236
@personwithoutabody3236 Жыл бұрын
@@juneskywalker5847 Yes June, that's totally related to the video and is indeed true. The world will fall in agony and darkness when the US no longer has its trigger happy militias, armed secessionist groups, mass shootings and shooters or less of a savior/action hero good guy with a gun fantasy.
@rob0bp0
@rob0bp0 Жыл бұрын
Last weekend I talked with my mother. She´s 91. And she still remembers the day the SS came to their house and dragged their neighbor out. He was a very gentle, quiet man in his 50´s. A Jew. She never saw him again. He just vanished. To my knowledge my mother and I are the only persons on this globe who remember him,. If the Nazis tried to eradicate all proof and memories that he existed - they failed. Because he is remembered by us. And I will pass his name and the little we know about him to my children.
@luketimewalker
@luketimewalker Жыл бұрын
Please tell his name
@Andy_U
@Andy_U Жыл бұрын
Hiya. Just a thought - it might be worthwhile passing his name and details to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. It has a database of survivors and victims. Stay safe. All the best to you.
@CalvinandJed
@CalvinandJed Жыл бұрын
If you could, please share his story. There's not many people who are left that were in that time of history and our German class want to hear from a survivor about what happened. I understand if you don't want to however. It's a pretty heavy subject.
@stephenle-surf9893
@stephenle-surf9893 Жыл бұрын
I have been to yad vasheem. There are Christians who saw the death camp.they were scarred by the sight for the rest of their life, and that's after fighting through a war zone. Pray for them.
@ryanslayton5694
@ryanslayton5694 Жыл бұрын
If you would, I would like to at least know his name
@reddevil3387
@reddevil3387 Жыл бұрын
My wife was born in France. During the war she was in a Catholic girls school. One day the nuns brought in several new girls. The nuns told the students that the girls were Jewish, but that they could not tell anyone that, not even their parents. The nuns then said that their job was to teach the new students how to be Catholic, so if they were ever questioned by Germans they could act Catholic. All the new students survived the war and I am aware of one who still lives in Paris. I am very proud of the small part my wife played in saving those girls from the holocaust.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
All the Catholic and Christian people who saved others are so amazing and literally changed lives of millions of people! ❤️
@Kaylaw9
@Kaylaw9 Жыл бұрын
Your wife sounds beautiful to know and very brave. People like her are the true heroes that the world needs to hold dearly.
@reddevil3387
@reddevil3387 Жыл бұрын
@@Kaylaw9 Thank you. Unfortunately, she died a couple of months ago, but she left me with 39 years of wonderful memories. We'll meet again.
@Kaylaw9
@Kaylaw9 Жыл бұрын
@@reddevil3387 I'm very sorry for your loss.
@ffd6641
@ffd6641 10 ай бұрын
​@@reddevil3387all my condolences, I am sure your wife was fantastic. I am French too ! Oui, un jour vous la retrouverez ❤. Yes, you will meet again someday 🪽🪽🪽
@jacobpatton7587
@jacobpatton7587 Жыл бұрын
The line, "There will he generations because what you have done," combined with seeing those generations at the end, destroys me. That is beautiful.
@zziggsofficial1930
@zziggsofficial1930 Жыл бұрын
As a native german this movie hits different. It shows in a very raw and realistic way what my ancestors did and it terrifies me. Watching your reaction to this movie also made me cry. This is not a movie to entertain but to educate. Never again!
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Aww, well please don't ever think that this is how modern Jews see Germans, your country has been so astute with education about this subject rather than sweeping it under the rug so I am very grateful to Germany for that fact!! Thank you for joining me on this tough watch! ❤️
@korjaner
@korjaner Жыл бұрын
The Russians and Japanese were even worse. Don't act like any war was less gruesome.
@rickiedeesnutz7318
@rickiedeesnutz7318 Жыл бұрын
You owe no one an apology.....you didn't do it.
@frontgamet.v1892
@frontgamet.v1892 Жыл бұрын
Bist du komplett bescheuert? are you completely insane ... This is a completely wrong historical view ... Almost no German was a Nazi during the Nazi era. And it's a tragedy on both sides. Everyone talks about how the Jewish people were murdered, but nobody talks about why and how it happened. After WWI, the German people were hated and treated like shit all over the world. And as you should know, there were no good guys and bad guys in WW1. But the Allied propaganda was so strong that everyone hated the Germans. Everyone always sees it from a single perspective. Shut out from the world for decades, the Germans were left absolutely dead after World War I. The Germans were blamed for everything. They were hated everywhere. The crisis and depression in Germany at the time was three times what it is today. Yes, you heard me right. We can no longer imagine how bad it was for Germans. Proud, strong German soldiers who fought against the whole world in World War I were seen as demons. And World War I broke not the body but the spirit. Of course the hate grew. At the same time, the military was being crushed and reduced to the minimum. Everything you sacrificed yourself and your psyche for was now gone. After the French took over a few factories in Germany and killed 120 Germans in the process, after the war because Germany couldn't pay the trillions in the crisis, it was finally over. Rightly so. And when you have three kids at home, no food, no drink, no job then you'll turn to anyone who promises to undo it. No German knew what Hitler was planning in the background. The Nazis gave them their lives back. And only when it was too late.. did the Germans see the real face. But it was too late. The youth were already being manipulated and if you don't follow Hitler you will be shot. There is a big difference between Nazi, German and Wehrmacht at the time. And people don't understand that. Many high wehrmacht generals hated nazi ideology and brutal ss who didn't listen to them. The Germans followed Hitler because he gave them their lives back and also partly told the truth. And not because they liked the ideology. Of course some people but not all. They even felt sympathy for the jews at the beginning. The Allies created Nazi Germany. With the Versailles "treaty" and do you think it's a good idea to put down such a proud and overly powerful country as Germany a country that fought against 80% of the world, a country with the best thinkers and engineers? And then let it lie...? No hatred will grow. Hitler gave the Germans one victim they could blame for their suffering - the Jews... Many forget that the first country the Nazis conquered was their own. Your ancestors were probably not Nazis. As I said, almost no German was a Nazi. Nazis were Nazis. Do you even know what that stands for? It stands for Hitler's party. That's just like saying every American is a Democrat. My grandma lived in East Prussia and wasn't a Nazi. Like most Germans. They wanted to eat, drink, work and were hated everywhere. They all suffered greatly and it is easy to throw your suffering on someone else. Mainly because hatred of the Jews didn't come out of nowhere. Jews have unfortunately been hated in Europe for hundreds of years because the Jews were often fine, you know ego and it's a different religion. It was not right. But as I said. The Germans also keep the sacrifice. Even very. And the hate would strike back. All because of the Allies. Evil is not born. It is created. And as I said, even many of Hitler's own generals wanted to kill him because they knew he was crazy. The general German soldier had nothing to do with the crimes. These were tough soldiers who ended up fighting for their country. They had to fight. And how they fought.. Against a whole world. In any case, the NAZIS are evil. I'm only concerned that you have presented it as if all Germans were evil. That's wrong. Even the soldiers, at least many of them, were just soldiers. Many forget this in today's world due to the propaganda still going on. Be proud of the Germans who stood up to it. On high Wehrmacht generals like Rommel or Stauffenberg who wanted to kill Hitler. It was a tragedy on both sides. You can think of the Nazis as a natural evil parasite that emerged from the suffering and hatred of the Germans.
@zziggsofficial1930
@zziggsofficial1930 Жыл бұрын
@@frontgamet.v1892 Ok ich gehe davon aus, dass ich dir auch auf Deutsch antworten kann. Ja mir ist durchaus bewusst, was nach dem ersten Weltkrieg passiert ist. Das lernt man bereits im Geschichtsunterricht. Ich habe nichts gesagt was falsch ist. Vielleicht waren nicht alle deutschen Bürger zu der Zeit Nazis aber jeder Nazi war damals Deutscher. Das zu leugnen ist ekelhaft auf einem anderen Level, weil man versucht sich als Nachfahre aus der Verantwortung zu ziehen. Und das als Nachfahrer derer, die 6 Mio Juden auf dem Gewissen haben. Ja es ist nicht die Schuld der heutigen Deutschen, was damals passiert ist. Sagt ja auch keiner. Ich muss mich als deutscher Bürger und Nachfahre derer, die diese Gräueltaten begangen haben, allerdings der Verantwortung bewusst werden und dafür sorgen, dass so etwas nie wieder passiert. Auch wenn man den Alliierten eine Teilschuld daran geben kann, wie die Bedingungen in Deutschland zur damaligen Zeit zustande gekommen sind, waren es trotzdem die Deutschen die den Holocaust begangen haben und die Alliierten die Nazideutschland gestoppt haben. Die Tatsache, dass du so verteidigend wirst, wenn ich als Deutscher mir bewusst bin, was für eine Verantwortung ich in diesem Kontext habe und wenn ich Mitleid mit Nachfahren der Opfer zeige sagt vieles über dich aus.
@KngOfTheBlind
@KngOfTheBlind Жыл бұрын
Schindler's speech, and how he breaks down at the end about how he could have saved more people if he didn't have such a fancy car or if he sold his jewelry always gets me.
@robertmckenna3994
@robertmckenna3994 Жыл бұрын
My grandfather was part of the Third Army under General Patton when Buchenwald concentration camp was liberated. He never spoke of what he saw there to anyone in the family except to say,”I didn’t know people could do that to other people.”
@Alexalevins
@Alexalevins 10 ай бұрын
my grandfather say the same, my granpa was young in that time like 15years old, and he always told me that, he left with his sister, to south america chile, his father can only buy 2 tickets, and my grandpa and his sister was the only who survive in the entire family, in 1950 his sister comeback to france looking for his family, and she dont found anyone, my granfather promise in that time he will never come back to that place, and never did, he die in 2010 with 90 years old
@bibliotecaeternayvoladora
@bibliotecaeternayvoladora 10 ай бұрын
@robertmckenna3994 the mayority of veterans didnt want to speak, because they are were criminals. We know what happen, and the history you believe is fake, that is why today xionists are destroying countries today, while you still in the piyama kid propaganda
@bibliotecaeternayvoladora
@bibliotecaeternayvoladora 10 ай бұрын
@@Alexalevins You guys grandpas never spoke about what israel is doing in plstine?. Or why anybody wants to talk, or maybe that hollywood is ruled by those who create this movies while make wars everywhere
@donl1846
@donl1846 3 ай бұрын
My dad also served under Patton right after Normandy. He was in the 3rd Army, 3rd Armored Division as a tank driver.
@michaelb1761
@michaelb1761 2 ай бұрын
I had a great uncle that served in the 3rd army never talked about it other than to say it was worse than anything you could imagine. At the same time he also had an interesting story from the occupation of how kind an older German woman was to him. She had lost all of her children in the war.
@GaboTheGrey
@GaboTheGrey Жыл бұрын
I was in tears when I watched this film, and you made me cry again. The child in red is to show the catalyst that made Schindler realize the horrors from the n4z1s. God bless your grandfather, all those who perished, survived and their descendants. It's so hard to watch this film when you know this actually happened 81 years ago.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your beautiful comment! And yes omg it truly is not that long ago. Whenever I talk to my grandma I realise that it was all within her lifetime it’s truly so recent in human history!
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet Жыл бұрын
Imagine falling for this antigerman propagandafilm. Svara
@GaboTheGrey
@GaboTheGrey Жыл бұрын
@@GratDuForloradeArgumentet I was waiting for a comment like this. Imagine being still brainwashed with n3on4z1 propaganda as "pro german/german nationalist pride". I was a negationist before and thought like you, and you know what? They manipulate very well, and that's awful. This is not anti german propaganda, this is a film about horrors perpetrated by nationalsocialists. See the diference. In fact the Führer wasn't german, so he is to blame for what did to german people, and thus jews and many more people. Blame him, not the "anti german propaganda". He was anti-german because he believed the people were "arians", and if they weren't arians they deserved death, even though being germans... Those germans who believed in him became monsters. That's the "arian race" then, a bunch of filthy monsters, not german people. You need to touch grass and meet people in real life and empathize. Jesus, and I was like you at some point in my life... Pathetic and shame. Get out of there while you can.
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet Жыл бұрын
@@GaboTheGrey Divide your sentences and learn to write like a normal person, then I can read. Until then I cannot be bothered. I bet it's just a bunch of liberal whining anyway.
@billyturner1784
@billyturner1784 Жыл бұрын
​@@GratDuForloradeArgumentetYou mean this film with a German hero which actually downplays the horrors of the Holocaust?
@David_C_83
@David_C_83 Жыл бұрын
I've watched many reactions to this movie but I rarely felt so sad as hearing your story and all I can say is that I'm so sorry your family had to go through such a horrible time in history. I'm glad you're at least capable to have some memories of your grandfather and know what he went through. Thanks so much for taking the time to watch this and share your experience with us.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for joining me on this journey! I’m so grateful it was impactful! I’m very lucky my immediate family survived!
@humansareevil-el7yz
@humansareevil-el7yz Жыл бұрын
Crazy how the 🔯 decided to genocide all Europeans as revenge for Germany trying to become autonomous.
@OmarLivesUnderSpace
@OmarLivesUnderSpace Жыл бұрын
Why are you sorry?
@mix6809
@mix6809 Жыл бұрын
​@@OmarLivesUnderSpaceWhy are you not?
@OmarLivesUnderSpace
@OmarLivesUnderSpace Жыл бұрын
@@mix6809 It's a nasty habit to answer a question with a question. But now that you did, why should I?
@jeromeburoker1770
@jeromeburoker1770 Жыл бұрын
One of the most moving films I've ever seen, easily Spielberg's crowning achievement. Hopefully humankind never forgets.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
So beautifully said! I couldn’t agree more! ❤️💔
@gk5891
@gk5891 Жыл бұрын
He chose this film to submit for his student film requirement when he finally went back to college to finish his film degree. It appears he agrees with you.
@lepersonnage371
@lepersonnage371 Жыл бұрын
it's Spielberg's crowning achievement in propaganda and in altering of history. This movie is based on a book that won the award for fiction. Germans were not even remotely these sadistic devils who crawled from hell. They were never like it not, before 1930-1940s, not after, so why would they be like that in that time. Learn actual history
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet Жыл бұрын
Imagine falling for this antigerman propagandafilm.
@davidward9737
@davidward9737 Жыл бұрын
​@@GratDuForloradeArgumentet excuse you. You believe the Holocaust did not happen?
@laurajaynenolan2149
@laurajaynenolan2149 Жыл бұрын
This film is so important. Liam did an amazing job on this as well, definitely not an easy role to play.
@phj223
@phj223 Жыл бұрын
22:35 That shot with Amon and Helen is just gut-wrenching. It reminds me of those nature shots where for whatever reason a lion is just sniffing around a fear frozen baby antilope, pondering what to do. Instinctively, the antilope knows that to run at this point would trigger the lion's predatory behavior and it would be certain death, so all it can do is wait. Wait, and hope.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
That is actually such an accurate metaphor! You're so right that they wait and stay still as to not provoke the predator!
@mosovanhe
@mosovanhe Жыл бұрын
I felt the same thing, and you worded it so well.
@phj223
@phj223 Жыл бұрын
@@mosovanhe thank you
@Sir_Alex
@Sir_Alex Жыл бұрын
Brutal movie, with a fantastic Neeson, and Ralph Fiennes is out of this world in this movie .. not an easy part to play. The final with actual footage killed me
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
I cannot imagine how they must have felt during filming! Especially those playing the crueler characters!
@sjholmesbrown
@sjholmesbrown Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob Some of the Schindler Jews were on set as advisors for Spielberg. One said in interviews she almost had a panic attack the first time she saw Fiennes in character as he so embodied Goeth.
@PosisDas
@PosisDas Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob From what I’ve heard, Robin Williams actually called Steven Spielberg weekly during filming the movie and basically put on a personalized comedy routine just to keep his spirits up.
@firedoc5
@firedoc5 Жыл бұрын
I've seen this movie 20+ times and each time I learn something new, and still get emotional. It should be required viewing for all age-appropriate history classes. Even though it was one of the darkest eras in human history, it must still be taught so it can never be forgotten. Without the knowledge of history, we are doomed to repeat it.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Couldn't agree more!! So beautifully put!
@firedoc5
@firedoc5 Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob Thank you. Keep up the good work.
@thomasmacdiarmid8251
@thomasmacdiarmid8251 Жыл бұрын
I have watched it through once. I don't think I could watch it again. I am just now able to watch reactors, with the selected snippets of the movie. It is so affecting to me at the end when all those people are placing stones on Schilndler's grave, both honoring him and saying 'this happened.'
@richardedenfield5167
@richardedenfield5167 Жыл бұрын
It is shown in German schools.
@anavilhanas
@anavilhanas Жыл бұрын
Eu também já vi muitas vezes. Inclusive vi essa semana de novo. Está tendo uma mostra sobre o Steven Spielberg aqui no Brasil essa semana e passou novamente no cinema. Foi muito bom rever na tela grande. Eu assisti a primeira vez na estreia em 1993. É o meu filme preferido.
@kschneyer
@kschneyer Жыл бұрын
As always, your emotional honesty is wonderful. My extended family was wiped out in Auschwitz, as yours was.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! and I am so sorry to hear that 💔
@kschneyer
@kschneyer Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob The point of the book, which I didn't think really came through in the film, is that you don't have to be a saintly person to do a really good thing. Oskar Schindler seems to have been a dishonest, womanizing screw-up during most of his life, but during this one brief period, he did something incandescently wonderful. (Just as Hannah Arendt pointed out, 60 years ago, that you didn't have to be a monster to participate in the unspeakably monstrous things that were done during the Holocaust. Ordinary, unremarkable people all over Germany took part in it. The capacity for good acts and evil acts is in each of us, and our "natures" won't save us from them.)
@Sicarii86
@Sicarii86 Жыл бұрын
Hey, I heard you said "human to human" one or two times, I'm a Turkish Jew myself and one thing I've learned all these years and I had visited the camps, they are monsters. They had no logic, most of all complete lack of empathy. Our guide asked us in Auschwitz "What do you expect to feel here? There is nothing left, it is a museum." As soon as she said that 50 people were frozen with dead silence, we couldn't say anything. We also saw Schindler's factory and the ghetto although most of it were destroyed during the Jewish Uprising. I think every human being should see and learn about the holocaust even a significant amount of Jewish people doesn't now about the level of atrocities perpetrated by the nazis. I also want to point out, the hypocrisy of the countries who refused to accept the Jewish people before, during or after the war like the US, and most of the civilized countries except Dominican Republic, UK, Cuba, Sweden, China etc. Ralph Fiennes who played Amon Goeth, attended a meeting with survivors wearing his ss uniform, a survivor saw him and got shocked, burst into tears with fear and said he looks exactly like him. Through a filming and acting perspective, this film was impeccable. The nazis tried to took all the Turkish Jews but our brave ambassadors rescued them from the trains arguing with ss officers that they are Turkish citizens and Turkey is a neutral country. And also they rescued a lot of French Jews with issuing them Turkish passports. There is so much more i can say, whoever's reading this, thank you for your time.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
I think it can be dangerous to see those people as monsters. Any human is capable of great cruelty as we have seen all throughout history. Humans can be horrendous to each other and this is just an example of such cruelty.
@Sicarii86
@Sicarii86 Жыл бұрын
You are right every human is capable, i agree. But the holocaust was an industrial level of cruelty, they built killing factories, they murdered children, newborns and pregnant women. So that's why i see them as monsters not human. But of course i deeply respect your opinion. Love and hugs.
@pianoman1857
@pianoman1857 Жыл бұрын
@@Sicarii86 (sorry for english) i think she’s right, monsters is a just mental creation that we invoke when we just can’t understand anymore or don’t want to admit what human nature really is. It’s reassuring to distinguish them from other humans, to think that we aren’t like them. The thing is, one has to realize is that every human is capable of the worst and of the best, whether it’s them, me or you. The main problem is when you’re taught to see other human beings not as humans anymore. This allows you to do horrible things without feeling guilty. The question of responsibility is also very complex, obviously there are the ones directly working in the camps (yes cruel people etc…) but they are also thousands op people especially in the administration who had a decisive impact on the logistical feasibility of the genocide. Whiteout them it wouldn’t have been possible, so they played a role a in the mass extermination of millions of people… yet these people were just common people doing their jobs as usual… You see it’s really hard to really sort out everything. About your first comment, thank you for pointed out the hypocrisy of most developed countries especially the US who now especially in Hollywood movies play the role of the “Jew liberators” when they refused to let them come first, while they were fleeing Nazism (see Evian Conference of 1938). It’s without mentioning the antisemitism which was widespread in allied countries. That’s also partly why at first GB and the US didn’t want to go into war against Hitler, one reason was not to give credit to german propaganda of « the war of/for the Jews » which had a significant impact on public opinions in allied countries.
@knuthenriksommer4982
@knuthenriksommer4982 Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob Journalist and philosopher Hannah Arendt reported from the last trial of one of the main «architects» of the Holocaust, Adolph Eichmann. I think her conclusion perfectly supports what you say. It is reflected in the title of her book: «Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil». Holocaust was not performed by monsters but by conscientious functionaries.
@Sicarii86
@Sicarii86 Жыл бұрын
@@pianoman1857 I think I have to agree with your opinion. Well said, thank you!
@NBLP7001
@NBLP7001 Жыл бұрын
Mrs. Dresner was a hero in this movie as well. Even when she was scared she always thought of the others around her. She wanted Danka to be able to hide even if she couldn't. When the children were rounded up it was Mrs. Dresner that was whispering words of comfort and assurance to Mrs. Rosner. At the end when everyone is so emotional, Mrs. Dresner stoically picks up some camp uniforms with a plan in mind. She was a rock for everyone around her.
@merchillio
@merchillio Жыл бұрын
Ive seen this movie I don’t know how many times, either with friends and family or through reaction channels like yours. That scene at the end, where he’s counting how many more people he could have saved, looking through the crowd as if to see who’s missing, it breaks me every time. What a masterful performance by Liam Neeson
@DigitalPegasus
@DigitalPegasus 10 ай бұрын
I think I heard somewhere that at that point he's thinking about the little girl in the red coat, and that if he'd got one more person he might have been able to save her. If I'm remembering right, that sentiment might come from details in the book, Schindler's Ark, which I understand was a precursor to this film being made.
@JackT9595
@JackT9595 Жыл бұрын
A dark and horrific time in our history. Just absolutely incomprehensible to think a human could do such things to another regardless of belief or race ☹️. Thank you for your reaction Jade, no doubt your grandfather would be so proud of you 🤍
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Couldn’t agree more and Omg thank you very much that made me tear up to read! ❤️
@tg8285
@tg8285 Жыл бұрын
It’s holocaust day eve tonight in Israel and holocaust day tomorrow. As a Jewish woman I watch this movie every single year on this day since I was fifteen , I am thirty seven now. I still cry, it still moves me, it’s still as important as it was the first time I saw it. 😢 thank you for your reaction , it was very special to watch.❤❤
@MsStaroch
@MsStaroch Жыл бұрын
Same with Sir Nicolas Winton story, which save our czech jewish children
@ComradeHB
@ComradeHB Жыл бұрын
How can you, considering the history of your people, live in an apartheid state waging genocide against the Palestinians?
@richinagy1975
@richinagy1975 Жыл бұрын
@@ComradeHB Simple, cuz the israelis are hypocrites
@danny1st
@danny1st 9 ай бұрын
@@ComradeHB "Palestinians" are the new Nazis. They have the desire but they lack of the capabilities to mass murder Jews.
@MysterClark
@MysterClark Жыл бұрын
This is the exact reaction that is to be expected. Honestly, I start to worry if someone can just watch this and not really react to it much. This breaks my heart even just watching someone else react to it.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for watching along with me and sticking through it despite how heart breaking it is! 💔
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet Жыл бұрын
Imagine falling for this antigerman propagandafilm.
@abstractreality5063
@abstractreality5063 Жыл бұрын
My reaction was that speilberg reopened the camp with this film, nothing more. The rest is about a man success saving few life when the holocaust is not about some heroic but people just disapearing, trully awful movie.
@humansareevil-el7yz
@humansareevil-el7yz Жыл бұрын
Crazy how the 🔯 decided to genocide all Europeans as revenge for Germany trying to become autonomous......
@FarrisG
@FarrisG Жыл бұрын
This film i would argue is one of the most important films. It is not something that is plesent but something that does not shy away from the cruelty and brutality that happened to the Jewish people in world war 2. It has to be something that is remembered. The horrors and the worst of mankind must be remembered and reminded so that we don't fall back to this and learn to be better people and better to eachother and learn from the dark past. Love your reactions as always. Bless you Jade 🙏💙
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
So beautifully said!! I adore this comment! Thank you so much for your kind words! ❤️❤️❤️
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet
@GratDuForloradeArgumentet Жыл бұрын
It's one of the most disgusting antiGerman propaganda pieces if anything. Ohhh pooor jews. Never mind the 65 million Europeans who died. But oohh poor jews 200k of them died..
@gordonduke8812
@gordonduke8812 Жыл бұрын
Your reaction was heart wrenching. You say it is incredible what one good person could do and how it can effect so many lives. Let that be a wake up call to everyone. Be the example you wish existed, stop hoping for someone else to do it.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Such a beautiful message!!! Yes I completely agree! I hope this makes everyone feel that their impact can be bigger than they ever expected!
@gordonduke8812
@gordonduke8812 Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob I'm kind of an old man now. While raising my children, I took every opportunity I could to let them see me doing good for others, then not expecting anything in return and never mentioning again (wanted them to know I didn't do it for recognition). Now I get to enjoy watching them doing good for others, I hope my examples formed those feelings of service in them. Now I have two grandsons, and they will see Pawpaw trying to be a good person to others. The cycle continues. You have a large platform, and I see you being the example, my hat's off to you. Peace.
@paulobrien9572
@paulobrien9572 Жыл бұрын
When Steven Spielberg asked John Williams to compose the music for this movie he showed him a rough cut and Williams was so overwhelmed he told Spielberg that he couldn't because he wasn't a good enough to do this movie justice. Spielberg replied to Williams "I know but all the others are dead"
@1MahaDas
@1MahaDas Жыл бұрын
I've watched several reaction videos regarding 'Schindler's List,' but I have to say that your reaction was by far the most empathetic of them all! Thank you for this look into your soul!
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
That is so kind of you omg thank you very much! ❤️
@emmad.176
@emmad.176 Жыл бұрын
This made me boil with rage at times, feel sorry for people at others.... The worst bit for me was seeing the group of children walking together happily thinking everything was going to be alright. Your reactions were painful but thank you for sharing :)
@BobBlumenfeld
@BobBlumenfeld Жыл бұрын
"The man with the glass looked a lot like my grandpa." And Yitzhak Stern reminds me of my father.
@dp3154
@dp3154 Жыл бұрын
I know this was very hard, but thank you for watching this. As terrible as it is, humanity owes a duty to remember, so that we can be better people. Twelve Years A Slave is another 'must see, but terrible to watch' movie, as is the film Hotel Rwanda, and The Act of Killing. Just understand that you are better person for keeping this story within your heart.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
So beautifully said thank you!! And yes I have watched 12 years a slave (I was crying so hard I had to pause the film cause I couldn’t hear anything over my crying) and hotel Rwanda my mum showed me that!
@lukeball4937
@lukeball4937 Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob Always good to know history. Plenty of blame to go around. Without the African tribal leaders willingness to hunt down, enslave and sell their neighbors, the African slave trade would've never existed. Seems people always overlook that part of the blame for that terrible time in history.
@JD.78
@JD.78 Жыл бұрын
Hotel Rwanda is another stellar movie depicting real terrible historical events, as is this movie too.
@alana8863
@alana8863 Жыл бұрын
@@lukeball4937 Yes, there will always be criminal individuals, but when these hate crimes become incorporated into a country's values then it becomes something far worse. In the case of WW2 while any murder is appalling genocide is on another level. Many white nationalists cite the same point as you make, in the hope that this will offset the criticism that is justified of their countries for their crimes but it doesn't make such crimes any more acceptable.
@lukeball4937
@lukeball4937 Жыл бұрын
@@alana8863 both of them? The bogeyman of the “white nationalist“? Do you know who else speaks like I do? Freedom loving Americans that believe in our Constitution and its amendments. Here’s a little tip for you, if you don’t have the ideological strength to win an argument against a white nationalist over their ideas, whatever your beliefs may be, obviously aren’t worth defending. You get what you deserve. A dead body killed by censorship smells exactly the same as one killed by genocide. Look around today, tens of thousands were murdered in nursing homes through the use of censorship. Open your eyes.
@ironrocker100
@ironrocker100 Жыл бұрын
Probably the most moving movie I've ever watched and one of my favourite movies of all time. Definitely my favourite Spielberg even though I love Indiana Jones as well. Liam Neeson is fantastic as Schindler.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
It’s so incredibly moving and hard hitting!! I’ve never seen the Indiana movies sadly but I’ll make sure to watch it with you all I promise!
@Ti2tu
@Ti2tu Жыл бұрын
during the war of 1971 Pakistanis massacred 3 Million Bangladeshis in a period of just 9 months (25th March-16th December)....so I can relate to the massacre of millions of people in WW2 n others...Winston Churchill consciously formed a famine in Bengal of 1943 by holding the food stock n let millions of Bengalis perish, Roosevelt ordered nukes on Japanese civilian populous, Stalin n Mao killed millions in so called cultural reforms n revolutions...n many more examples. its not about German-French-Russian-British-American or Jews-Christian-Hindu-Muslim, politics is politics, and people do this to achieve earthly gains....one death for a murderer of millions doesnt make it justice, hope the Creator burns those in hell for eternity.
@obenohnebohne
@obenohnebohne Жыл бұрын
This is one of the most important films ever made. I saw this in school and it has changed me as a person. Like you, I have asked myself the question, how this was possible? Dehumanization is the cause of actions like we saw in this film. Hate in any form against any human being is a step in the wrong direction.Thank you, for sharing your reaction with us.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for joining me on this journey!! Yes I couldn’t agree more- if I could have one wish come true it would be that there was no such thing as hate !
@ForgottenHonor0
@ForgottenHonor0 Жыл бұрын
Steven Spielberg was under so much stress making this movie he would go back to his hotel room at the end of the day and call Robin Williams on the phone just so Robin could cheer him up and make him laugh.
@danielmorency2242
@danielmorency2242 Жыл бұрын
Yeah... This movie is a tough pill to swallow. But I think everyone should swallow this pill at least once. It's a must. You broke my heart today. Hugs.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
It is absolutely a must you are correct! It was hard but I’m so glad I watched it!!
@nickthepeasant
@nickthepeasant Жыл бұрын
Remains my all time favourite movie. Near-perfect filmmaking combined with vital history. Never forget. I don't have any familial ties to these stories and it still floors me every time. I can't imagine how it feels for you, thank you for sharing this experience.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your lovely comment and for joining me on this experience!! ❤️
@joedirt688
@joedirt688 Жыл бұрын
A MOVIE THAT SHOULD NOT EVER BE FORGOTTON, IN THIS LIFETIME , OR ANY FUTURE LIFETIME!
@uv77mc85
@uv77mc85 10 ай бұрын
It will happen again if the maga nuts get their way
@amtrak7394
@amtrak7394 Жыл бұрын
My father has told me many times in my life that his father’s parents (my great grandparents) fled Austria in the very early 1900s, before the First World War. Had it not been for them, I would not exist and neither would my 3 cousins. They were Hungarian Jews. That entire branch of my family either died in the trenches of WWI or the death camps of WWII. 25% of my family… gone forever. 😢 Thank you for watching this. It’s difficult to see, but so important that it is seen lest we as a people repeat the mistakes of the past.
@doughukill9595
@doughukill9595 Жыл бұрын
my family was German Jew that got away........but i know that relation went to the camps
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Oh wow! I’m so grateful your great grandparents made it out beforehand! My grandma on my dads side just left before the war thankfully and my great grandparents on my mums side left a fair bit before the war too! ❤
@amtrak7394
@amtrak7394 Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob Glad your great grandparents made it out too.
@wilsonserv
@wilsonserv Жыл бұрын
In my youth I loved to go during the day to watch movies in a nearly empty theater. In 1993 Spielberg gave my two once in a lifetime experiences (emotionally completely different) with Jurassic Park and Schindler's List. Then in 1998 he did it again with Saving Private Ryan.
@Augustus_Imperator
@Augustus_Imperator Жыл бұрын
Be good, be decent, be compassionate, it may seem like a small drop into the ocean, but every little drop really matters
@uekvowzkaebbzuvrgipqxhemmwbhe
@uekvowzkaebbzuvrgipqxhemmwbhe Жыл бұрын
😂
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
This might be my favourite comment! Nothing in the world is more beautiful than compassion and empathy in my opinion!
@TWANDTW
@TWANDTW Жыл бұрын
"What is an ocean, but a multitude of drops" - Cloud Atlas
@theConquerersMama
@theConquerersMama Жыл бұрын
Only minutes in. I really appreciate your personal story of your family. How it touched your life. My grandad was a doctor in the DP camps (Displaced Person's camps) after the liberation. Nursing people to health. He helped many immigrate to the states. Every year growing up, people he had helped brought their new families to see him. We were invited to many Seders, bat mitzvahs & weddings. He was always so honored. As am I to this day. A fact that many cannot grasp are all the dehumanizing and demoralizing laws. People think they had a hard time with lockdown in 2020? Oh my. The daily calorie rations for a worker in the Krakow ghetto was 860 calories, I believe. Imagine how you would feel and how effective you would be on 860 calories a day. It's all so awful.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
WOWW! that is so beautiful!! You grandad did amazing things! On 860 calories a day all I could probably do well is sleep.
@samanthasays3603
@samanthasays3603 Жыл бұрын
What an unbelievable movie. I saw it in theaters, when it first came out, and the emotions in the crowd went from numb to sobbing to anger. Amazing movie, soul-crushing. May God bless all the victims and their families.
@stonesour349
@stonesour349 Жыл бұрын
This is one of my all time favorite movies!!! I haven't seen it in a while and wanted to watch it again while seeing your reaction as well. So, needless to say, I cried all over again and felt even more pain as I listened to your stories and it absolutely broke my heart for what your family has had to endure!!!!!! I'm so sorry for your family's losses. Thank you so much for sharing your stories and for sharing your reaction too!!!!!!
@domingorubies656
@domingorubies656 Жыл бұрын
It must have been absolutely heartbreaking watching this knowing that your family was directly involved in this horrible situation, really felt for you. Thanks for sharing their story and hope you’re feeling ok!
@frisky-tart
@frisky-tart Жыл бұрын
At the end, the actors were accompanying the real person they played in the film as they placed the rocks on his grave.
@JamesSmith-hw6tl
@JamesSmith-hw6tl Жыл бұрын
Great courage by you. My wife's family left Minsk after the turn of the century. We know two people here are survivors. You are a true daughter of Zion. Great reaction.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
I’m so glad your wife’s family made it out safe!! ❤❤ thank you for your comment
@JBat-Gaming
@JBat-Gaming Жыл бұрын
I remember this one. It was a pretty sad story. Glad to see you learning more about it. There’s another movie called The Boy in the Striped Pajamas which is about a boy who becomes friends with a boy who is at the time in a Concentration Camp. While it’s not a true story, it’s based on a book
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
I have actually seen that film before! It was great!!
@donaldkepple4927
@donaldkepple4927 Жыл бұрын
That movie is also a tear jerker
@TenTonNuke
@TenTonNuke Жыл бұрын
My ancestors came to America from Poland in 1905. I wonder what would have happened if they had waited a few more years or decided not to risk the journey.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
I am so glad they went to America back then! ❤
@gravedigger8414
@gravedigger8414 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this wholesome reaction and for sharing the story of your grandfather. Really nice to hear how he survived. As a German all I can say is that I am happy that I grew up with this movie. It shaped and also scarred me for life and it is and will always be a top 5 movie of all time for me. :)
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Aww this is such a beautiful comment thank you so much!! So grateful that you joined me on this journey too! ❤️
@kodi1969
@kodi1969 Жыл бұрын
I love this movie, it always brings me to tears. It can be difficult to watch at times, but that i feel is the reason the movie is so impactful, it just doesn't pull any punches. Schindler's Factory a little island of safety surrounded by such horrific destruction. This should be compulsory viewing to the youth of today. Thankyou for your reaction, and the telling of your grandfathers story.
@MrDevintcoleman
@MrDevintcoleman Жыл бұрын
Thank you for doing this. I’ve been trying to write a well thought out comment but I can’t. This is just important. It needs to be seen, and it’s such a brave thing to watch for an audience your first time watching. So, thank you.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
That is so beautiful of you! Thank you so much! This is a perfect comment I thank you so deeply!
@da90sReAlvloc
@da90sReAlvloc Жыл бұрын
One of the most heart wrenching movies i ever seen, I'm so sorry to hear about what became of your family, My grandfather lost his brother too in the blitz of London. Not the same thing i know, Great review very touching 🇬🇧👍 Just subscribed
@texasps91
@texasps91 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in a Christian home, my mother strongly always told us the Jews were Gods Chosen people. I'm so glad she emphasized that in us from the time we were young. I would like to hear the story of your family sometime if you feel you could tell it. God has blessed this country with the Jewish people, we are so Privileged to have The Apple of Gods Eye with us here in the United States. Blessings Always!
@Shawn-st2lx
@Shawn-st2lx Жыл бұрын
Ironic, because the Jewish hate Christians.
@ShreveportJoe
@ShreveportJoe Жыл бұрын
The best reactions are the ones where the honesty shines through, though I’m sorry you went through this painful experience. You’re so right about how horrific people are capable of treating other people. You never need to apologize for responding to that in the only way a normal person can. I look forward to you reacting to a comedy now. 😬
@codycavanaugh3435
@codycavanaugh3435 Жыл бұрын
I just feel like you need a hug after watching this, and I'm so sorry for what your grandfather and his family had to experience at the hands of those disgusting people, I've never been one to bat an eye at the cruelty of humanity, but this helped me understand exactly what's it like living as a descendent of the people victimized by said cruelty, and how the history of their family shapes their lives
@valentinogal781
@valentinogal781 9 ай бұрын
It absolutely breaks my heart watching this movie. 💔 😢 All those people even the architect that got shot was based on a true person her name was Elina Löwensohn. She deserves to be mentioned. That lil girl in red symbolizes the innocence that died along with all those people. My heart and prayers 🙏 goes out to the victims of the October 7th attack.
@Merseyrock
@Merseyrock 6 ай бұрын
Diana Reiter, was the architect's name. Elina L, the actress who portrayed her.
@rbloomquist69
@rbloomquist69 Жыл бұрын
My dad fought in WWII. He never told me much. After I ender my enlistment he talked about his experiences. He went thru Buchenwald, told me of what he had seen. He said after that all you wanted to do wad kill Nazis.
@dragon_ninja_2186
@dragon_ninja_2186 Жыл бұрын
I know it was a very hard and depressing movie to watch but like others I do say it’s necessary to not only to see this film but to remember and honor those who died or survived this and condemn those who perpetuated it, deny it, repeat it, etc.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Yes this!!! I completely agree! No matter how hard it was this was always on my MUST watch list and I’m so grateful I finally experienced it! It’s so important!
@Dgunner22
@Dgunner22 Жыл бұрын
Very dark time in our History. May we NEVER forget so it may never be repeated !
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
!!!! 1000x yes to this!!
@Zorros2ndCousinTwiceRemoved
@Zorros2ndCousinTwiceRemoved Жыл бұрын
Everytime I lose faith in humanity, you know what I do? I follow a KZfaq recommendation for a reaction to Schindler's List. Watching someone get devastated by easily one of the most important films in movie history is a sure sign of their humanity and builds a connection to a complete stranger who feels the same I felt when first watching this. It reminds me we're all the same, though watching the news or movies these days or just people on social media makes that hard to believe. As individuals, we all have the potential to be good human beings, but larger amounts of people show that humans are the most cruel and ruthless creatures even the most sick and twisted mind could ever imagine. So thank you for reacting to this! By the way, of course Emilie Schindler wasn't jewish, what makes you think that? Had she been jewish, she would've ended up in a concentration camp, as would Oskar. He didn't save these people because he had a familial connection to them, he saved them simply because he looked beyond the label the Third Reich gave them and saw them as what they were: fellow human beings.
@MAMRetro
@MAMRetro Жыл бұрын
Your reactions to this masterpiece was incredible. Your tears made me cry as well. Courage. Never again.
@wtgardner6914
@wtgardner6914 Жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing reaction. Thank you for this. Schindler's List never fails to be an amazing movie, no matter how many times I watch it. Seeing it through your reaction was an added layer of feeling. Keep up the great work!
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so very much!!
@sweetmusicsos
@sweetmusicsos Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! Your crying reminded me of my reaction watching this film the first time. And your crying was somehow healing for me in a deep way. I'm not Jewish but I do tend to feel things deeply - this film especially. You really helped me! You're an angel😇
@pogosmama1
@pogosmama1 Жыл бұрын
My ex-husband’s family was wiped out on both parent’s sides. His grandmother and grandfather (maternal) didn’t know each other, were married when they were 15 and sent to the US from Greece with the Nazis breathing down their necks. They were the only survivors. They were blessed with a large family that I love unconditionally. They accepted me even though I am Church of England and I accepted them. We kept holidays together and they are the best memories of my life. This film is especially painful for me not only because of them but all of my Jewish friends and I didn’t know a single family that wasn’t torn apart. When the massacres in Rwanda happened I was again horrified beyond words and couldn’t believe that a genocide on that scale could ever happen again. I grieve for Cambodia also, and of course, now Ukraine. When are we ever going to get our act together??
@ThePensive8
@ThePensive8 Жыл бұрын
I found it interesting that they depicted the young girl in red... one soul too many were murdered and the fact that the German army didn't see them as people, yet Oscar Schindler did. This movie is heartbreaking, unfortunately a reality that is bound to repeat itself should America continue to deepen the political divide amongst themselves. Thank you for sharing your reaction.
@dp3154
@dp3154 Жыл бұрын
In answer to your question at 16:00- prior to 1939, there were 3 million Jews living in the nation of Poland. Nowadays, the Jewish population of Poland is at 20,000; though over a million people in Israel are of Polish ancestry sufficient to be passport eligible.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Holy far out that is a lot less than I thought… can’t say I blame them for not wanting to stay in Poland after such trauma. My grandpa saw Australia on the map and thought it was great because it was as far as possible from Poland. 💔
@piotrproszewski3977
@piotrproszewski3977 Жыл бұрын
​​​@@MovieJoobyou mention Poland 3 times, and we are innecent...but not a one time Germany....they should go far away from Germany and Germans....they had good life in Poland, no country in europe had so big juish community in 39
@stevenwood2436
@stevenwood2436 Жыл бұрын
I'm so sorry that your family went through that😢 it breaks my heart just watching this film let alone actually going through it. I think this film is the best one to see what actually happened.
@GrumpyGrampa
@GrumpyGrampa Жыл бұрын
Love your reaction to this must see masterpiece of a movie. I am 62 years old and from Sweden but I also cry through this movie.
@anitaherbert1037
@anitaherbert1037 Жыл бұрын
This film, though painfully beautiful is so traumatic I have only been able to watch it twice. With a long gap between. Some images will never leave me. I cannot think how anyone with a familial connection to these disgusting events must feel. The bravery and endurance of individuals in the face of real horror is life affirming. For me my favourite bit is the real individuals with the actors who portrayed them at the end.
@Jubelsau
@Jubelsau Жыл бұрын
I recently read "A Writer at War" by Vasiliy Grossman, edited by Antony Beevor and "If This Is a Man" by Primo Levi. The first follows a jewish Soviet war correspondant, and consist of his letters, diary entries, articles and notebook entries, interspersed with commentary by Beevor. Near the end of the book you can find an article Grossman wrote after interviewing the few survivors of Treblinka II, an extermination camp built in 1942. It is probably both the worst and most important pages I have read thus far. The second is a memoir by an italian jew that spent 11 months in Auschwitz III (Monowitz), and is a detailed account of life in the work camps, with eye opening reflections on the human condition. They are both well worth reading, should you want to learn more about the holocaust, although you might want to read a less depressing book between the two.
@philchazwill
@philchazwill Жыл бұрын
Well done. Such an agonising, moving and essential watch. Thank you for sharing your personal family story. So important for the whole world to remember. ♥
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the beautiful comment! ❤️❤️
@sallybannister6224
@sallybannister6224 Жыл бұрын
John Williams music, is like a violin crying at the horror of it all... adds to the heart-wrenching complete sickness of it all.
@epa316
@epa316 Жыл бұрын
Tragic as the events shown in this movie are, they were toned down a lot from the reality of what actually happened. The real events were too horrific to show on the big screen.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Very very true!!! They couldn’t show all the r-pe, torture, experimentations and so on that tragically occurred as well! 💔
@itt23r
@itt23r Жыл бұрын
The SS officer screaming in front of the hellish scene of the exumed bodies being conveyed into the bonfire at minute marker 25:11 is Albert Hujar. He was largely responsible for the deaths of the 1,000s they were burning and he is also a Nazi war criminal who has never been caught. So I suspect Spielberg put that scene in his his movie as a secret message to Hujar, if he is still alive, to show him what his eternity is going to be like.
@j9lorna
@j9lorna Жыл бұрын
My granddad was one of the first into Belsen. They forced the guards to dig and bury the dead themselves. One officer put on gloves so he didn't have to touch the bodies and it angered by granddad so much that the Genava Convention was forgotten.
@elinepomstra8495
@elinepomstra8495 10 ай бұрын
this movie forever will bring me to tears, but your intro alone was so beautifully worded. I'm not Jewish,but my grandparents lived through it here in the Netherlands and hearing their experience was special. from my grandma refusing to leave her dads side as a german stood at there house with a grenade to them having people hiding and snuggling things and having a hidden radio. it reminded me of why i am the way i am and why these stories need to be told
@Josephhikes
@Josephhikes Жыл бұрын
This movie is always hard to watch , and seeing how hard it was on you made it especially heartbreaking. I believe it’s very necessary to see movies like this one. I’m glad your grandfather survived.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your beautiful words!! It is most definitely worth it! ❤
@twinshark429
@twinshark429 Жыл бұрын
When you said you had no idea there were woman guards, there was a woman named Erma Grese. She was so depraved they called her the "Hyena of Auschwitz." When she was hanged by British forces for crimes against humanity, she was only 22...the youngest woman ever hanged by British law in the 20th century.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Oh wow that is so intense!! And so young! Such cruelty at such a young age 💔
@beverleyferguson8942
@beverleyferguson8942 Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob Most of the hanging after the trials was done by Albert Pierpoint. Who was the hangman for Britain. A very interesting man.
@ronp5293
@ronp5293 Жыл бұрын
Watching you react to this made me think of what happened when I saw this movie in the theatre. As the end credits rolled by, nobody moved. It was quiet. Eventually, in the dark you could hear some people crying but trying hard to stifle it. (I almost did myself.)
@kylespeirs6510
@kylespeirs6510 5 ай бұрын
Girl I’m sorry this happened and just want to give you a hug. I remember seeing this with my former ex who was Jewish and it was a hard watch for both of us.
@lizrutherford2656
@lizrutherford2656 Жыл бұрын
I first saw this when I was a junior in high school, 1997. We'd spent a week covering the Holocaust. The teacher, the week before, had sent permission slips home because of the graphic nature. Not one parent opted out. The entire class had the same reaction as you. A lot of stifled crying, "oh my god" in hushed tones, looking away, extra Kleenex. I have seen this film (and yes, it's a FILM), only three more times since then. It is up to us, whether we are descendants of survivors or not, to honor those killed and to make sure that this level of pure hatred, pure evil, never happens again. As far as Amon Goth, he was tried and convicted at the Supreme National Tribunal in Poland. His trial ran from August 27-September 5, 1946. Goth was found guilty of membership in the Nazi Party and personally ordering the imprisonment, torture, and extermination of individuals and groups of people. He was hanged on September 13, 1946, at Montelupich Prison, not far from the Płaszów concentration camp.
@tehdesp
@tehdesp Жыл бұрын
This and American History X are definitely frontrunners for the "Best Movie You'll Never Watch Again" category.
@bruce3242
@bruce3242 Жыл бұрын
Everytime I watch this film I cry..... It shows the absolute horror, sadism, cruelty, terror, violence, brutality and absolute hopelessness the world offers..... But it also shows the absolute beauty, and hope that comes from humans and shows that there is good and that life unfortunately has a lot of bad, but those few good things, good deeds, sacrifice, love, empathy really are here and that even in the darkest of times there is that slight bit of light that burns it's way through.
@kylespeirs6510
@kylespeirs6510 5 ай бұрын
This film left me speechless and we all need to learn from this film so history doesn’t repeat itself. I’m so sorry this happened.
@skylinerunner1695
@skylinerunner1695 Жыл бұрын
I too am only alive today thanks to the fortunate and timely escape of a single member of my family, helped by kindly friends who despised the Nazi regime. Words can't convey the respect I have for that conscientious wet-nurse who saved your Grandfather, thus ensuring your beautiful existence today. It made your reaction all the more poignant. The Holocaust can never be adequately conveyed through film, but we must use what tools we can, so I deeply appreciate you using your platform to share this with your viewers. I watched and cried with you, with grief for the fallen, and also with gratitude that against the worst of odds, we live and breathe today.
@ovuvuevuevueenyetuenwuevu
@ovuvuevuevueenyetuenwuevu Жыл бұрын
It's hard to watch for myself as well. I am German and old enough so I was able to talk about those times with my grandparents. I think it's not my place to apologize for what happend back then. I cant blame myself or my Generation for those horrible crimes. But I feel it's my and our duty, no matter if German or not, to make sure that history cant repeat itself. Never get lazy or cozy guys. I can assure you that this happend before. You dont have to be on the edge all of the time. But think for yourself and step up for the good in this world.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
You and your generation have nothing to apologise for! Germans are such lovely and mindful people! Your generation and the ones after are the apology as you are such great people! ❤️
@danielle4405
@danielle4405 10 ай бұрын
Your people and their history are so beautiful. And they are strong for surviving such violence and hatred during this war .. none of them deserved this. Thank you for the emotional reaction 💙 keep being you and doing what you’re doing. Subscribed
@alix9687
@alix9687 Жыл бұрын
One of the best films ever made but also incredibly sad and shocking that it was exactly like this😔 great reaction!
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for your kind words!
@richlisola1
@richlisola1 Жыл бұрын
I think Hasidic Jews were almost a majority of Eastern European Jews at certain point before World War Two-The movement began in the 1700s and swiftly spread. Hasidism appealed to Jews who wanted to return to a more religious life, and they had way more children than secular or less religious Jews. I’m from New York, and I have toured the Williamsburg Hasidic neighborhood in Brooklyn. It’s fascinating, I felt very safe and the people seemed so alive. Kids played together without fear, like it was the 1950s! One odd thing I noticed is a certain lack of historical knowledge among that community. They honestly believed Moses dressed like a Hasidic man for example. When the reality is, the Hasidic dress was modeled after 16th Century Polish nobility
@mbnqpl
@mbnqpl Жыл бұрын
In village that my father's family comes from there was a family hiding Jews, polish Jews. Sadly germans found them and killed them. My grandpa was a soldier, his brothers were in resistance group, they both died killed by german grenade. My grandpa was being transported to german concentration camp but he was lucky to jump off the train with his colegue, thats why I am here writing this today. I'm proud of being Polish. We will never forget.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Holy shit that is so intense and I am so glad he escaped!! So many incredible Polish people who weren't even Jewish risked their lives and their loved ones lives to do the right thing. I am so heartbroken that they were killed for doing such a brave thing. 💔
@mbnqpl
@mbnqpl Жыл бұрын
@@MovieJoob thank you!
@DapperGentsClub
@DapperGentsClub Жыл бұрын
Shalom! This is the first video I've watched from you. I also share Jewish ancestry and this film gets me every time. Thank you so much for a honest reaction and thank you also for sharing your Saba's story.
@bobbyscarfo2544
@bobbyscarfo2544 Жыл бұрын
One man made a difference in as many lives as he could during what can be described as possibly the worse acts against humanity.... ever. This part of history is burned into my memory..... we should all NEVER forget! And you young lady.... are absolutely beautiful!
@zachnesmith
@zachnesmith Жыл бұрын
The girl in the red dress (as I have recently learned) was inspired by a story from legendary actress Audrey Hepburn. She was living in Germany with her parents (who were fascists but changed their tune when they saw what a lunatic SHitler was.) While she was smuggling messages to the allied forces in her shoes (as the S.S never checked young kids) she saw a family being herded onto the trains, including a little girl in a red dress. She told Spielberg the story while working on what would be her final film, Always. Audrey Hepburn=legit badass.
@stevensiferd7104
@stevensiferd7104 Жыл бұрын
You didn't know there were women guards. If you do a little research, you'll find that some of those women were more vicious than their male counterparts.
@XRP2020
@XRP2020 Жыл бұрын
Texan here who's unaware of yout knowledge but thankful to watch Schindler's List by your "side"
@jurgenolivieira1878
@jurgenolivieira1878 Жыл бұрын
The girl the red coat at the end really brought it home for me...
@johnny2151
@johnny2151 Жыл бұрын
Fun fact Spielberg requested that he get no salary while making this film he took a moral decision and thought it would be morally wrong to profit from a holocaust movie.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Oh wow really! I had no idea!
@piotrziemba2257
@piotrziemba2257 Жыл бұрын
polish guy here i must say that this film just terrified me , it is scary what people can do to other people without remorse. Interesting to know that you're jewish , have a nice day
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
I totally agree! And thank you so much for joining me on this tough watch! ❤️
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
I’m Jewish by heritage but atheist by religion 😊
@craigmorris4083
@craigmorris4083 Жыл бұрын
Mazel tov for making it through it. It's rough. I cry every time.
@klauspoetsch1841
@klauspoetsch1841 Жыл бұрын
Great and tough reaction! When I first saw this movie I knew it was going to be something special and different, because it was filmed in B/W. I only wanted to add that I´m living only some km away from Mrs. Schindlers grave. When I visit my relatives, I always visit her grave too.
@charliepepper333
@charliepepper333 Жыл бұрын
Wish I could watch this with you but it’s heartbreaking 😢 so I’m sending a virtual hug instead 🤗
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the virtual hug!! 😊
@BobBlumenfeld
@BobBlumenfeld Жыл бұрын
I can see how difficult this was for you to watch. Yasher kochech to you for just attempting it.
@MovieJoob
@MovieJoob Жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!!
@jeremynation3186
@jeremynation3186 Жыл бұрын
If we as people are going to venture on trying to rid the world of hate, we have to start with ourselves individually, and the first thing we have to get rid of in ourselves is pride.
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