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CAN'T STOP CRYING!😭 Schindler's List (1993) Movie Reaction *First Time Watching* 

MJoy4Fun
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The most heartbreaking movie so far that we both have seen! 😭😭😭
Crying again while editing this video 😥We did our best to include the most important parts of the movie but if you still want to see more you can visit our Patreon page 😊
#schindlerlist #moviereaction
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28 июн 2021

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Комментарии : 677   
@cantbesure0714
@cantbesure0714 2 года назад
I saw this in the theatre when it came out. When it was over you could hear a pin drop. Then it was like walking out of a funeral. Nobody was talking. I’ll never forget that silence.
@Gort-Marvin0Martian
@Gort-Marvin0Martian 3 года назад
I took my 3 boys with me to see this film. We watched the it with about 500 other people in the theater. When the film was over everyone sat and watched all the credits and only then did we all leave. Not a word was spoken by anyone. We all walked out in silence. I can't watch the entire film again. It is to painful.
@O_zitas_tis_geitonias
@O_zitas_tis_geitonias Год назад
Ok now tell your 3 boys that Jews are responsible for poverty wars etc… SOW
@georgeannec3444
@georgeannec3444 2 года назад
The candle at the beginning goes from color to black and white. If you notice near the end, when the Rabbi lights the two candles, everything is still black and white but the flames are in color. Very symbolic of hope returning.
@numbersandsports4206
@numbersandsports4206 3 года назад
"History is reminding us of how lucky we are today" was a beautifully said quote to start off your post movie review. Great reaction guys.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Thank you ❤️❤️❤️
@sspdirect02
@sspdirect02 3 года назад
It should also be pointed out that Spielberg wouldn’t even communicate with the actors playing the Einsatzgruppen. He would give them direction but wouldn’t give small talk as he was unable to get past the uniforms. Remember, these were actors of the German theater. But a beautiful thing happened earlier in production. They had Passover at the hotel they we’re staying at in Krakow, Poland. Spielberg had all the Jewish actors sitting around at a table and then all the German actors walked in wearing the yamakas and they sat next to the Jews and participated in the Passover ritual and Spielberg was moved to tears.
@uli48
@uli48 3 года назад
Well, it's a Hollywoood movie directed by... Spielberg. What can you expect about historical accuracy.
@i_love_rescue_animals
@i_love_rescue_animals 3 года назад
@@uli48 His comment isn't about historical accuracy - it is about what happened on the set!
@i_love_rescue_animals
@i_love_rescue_animals 3 года назад
Oh, that's a moving story. Thanks for telling it.
@lampdust1016
@lampdust1016 3 года назад
Lol what a loser
@amongsttheruins4490
@amongsttheruins4490 2 года назад
So stunning, so brave. Did they all throw shekels in the air at the end?
@sspdirect02
@sspdirect02 3 года назад
32:03 This was Steven Spielberg’s idea. During the making of the film, several Holocaust survivors showed up on the set in Krakow, Poland and began talking to Spielberg about their lives follow their survival. And eventually he came up with the idea of showing up to Jerusalem and have the survivors and their acting counterparts visiting the grave of Oskar Schindler. Since Spielberg didn’t take a salary from this movie considering it “blood money” Spielberg used the money made from the success of Schindler’s List to create a nonprofit organization called The Survivors of the Shoah Visual History Foundation. It soul purpose is to record testimonies of Holocaust survivors. Over 52,000 recorded testimonies from 56 different countries and 32 different languages. These testimonies will be used as a teaching tool to instruct future generations about overcoming racial hatred. Eventually, the foundation (which now permanently resides at the University of Southern California) would record testimonies from survivors of other genocides committed in other countries such as Rwanda, Cambodia and Bosnia.
@stefanforrer2573
@stefanforrer2573 2 года назад
sadly, if you look around in the world, not even 100 years later, fascism is on the rise again and people seem to lose empathy very quickly
@stefanforrer2573
@stefanforrer2573 2 года назад
@@gideonroos1188 you are aware that these regimes aren't necessarily communist, just because they call themselves that, right? or do you believe north korea is actually a peoples repulic and not a dictatorship?
@gordanblansky7137
@gordanblansky7137 2 года назад
@@gideonroos1188 no they dont
@gordanblansky7137
@gordanblansky7137 2 года назад
@@gideonroos1188 ? You’re delusional
@MarlaLynnS1
@MarlaLynnS1 Год назад
Some of the survivors that were there said they have panic attacks whenever they saw Ralph Fiennes because he gave such an amazing performance. Also, they had a full staff of psychologists and psychiatrists for the actors who “played” Nazis because they were really getting severely emotionally and mentally.
@rickardroach9075
@rickardroach9075 3 года назад
36:44 It’s pretty accurate. It’s played in history lessons at German schools. In fact, the real Amon Göth was much worse in real life; they toned it down in the film for fear that no one would believe it.
@josef-ralfdwerlkotte8333
@josef-ralfdwerlkotte8333 3 года назад
@@drunkenork5373 ne all german kids see it. Was not so bad.
@Blandina11
@Blandina11 3 года назад
@@drunkenork5373 all school kids have to see this, we must never forget. And most European countries show this movie in history lessons.
@emmaeltringham91
@emmaeltringham91 3 года назад
@John B When I was at junior school (around 8) in the 1960's we had to watch the World at War episode entitled 'Genocide' as it is actual footage it is way worse than watching this movie.
@drunkenork5373
@drunkenork5373 3 года назад
@@Blandina11 No they really shouldn't, it affected me as an adult, if a kid sees this it could be quite traumatic to a young mind. I agree with the other poster that it can be shown at high school level but not kids.
@Blandina11
@Blandina11 3 года назад
@@drunkenork5373 good thing you're not a history teacher. And oc it's not shown in the small classes. Cheers 👍😊
@GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy
@GuitarLessonsBobbyCrispy 3 года назад
I watched Schindler's List last weekend for the first time in years, and was just so completely overwhelmed with emotion. I couldn't stop thinking about the movie all week.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
very deep movie... but what makes it touching more.. is the Reality that happened... i just can't imagine it was real
@solvingpolitics3172
@solvingpolitics3172 3 года назад
@@MJoy4Fun You did an amazing job reviewing this movie.
@43abriles
@43abriles 2 года назад
HI GUYS.THANKS FOR THAT REACTION. JUST TO LET YOU KNOW THERE’RE MORE PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD THAT ALSO HELPED JEWISH SOME OF THEM ARE CALLED: THE BUDAPEST ANGEL FROM SPAIN ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-dSZhPbh8J9o.html AND FROM MEXICO THE MEXICAN SCHINDLER. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-4r7LxcnISxA.html
@utalomAlibbantakat
@utalomAlibbantakat 2 года назад
@@MJoy4Fun "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." (John Stuart Mill )
@michaelwiedrich4494
@michaelwiedrich4494 2 года назад
A movie with a lot of disgusting truth, and that I say it as a german !!! Thx god, I wasn`t living in that time !! But well, that`s my country, that`s our history !!
@Berenfox
@Berenfox 3 года назад
"I could have got one more person - and I didn't" That's the most important sentence in this movie. To realize the worth of a single life, to realize that one life makes a world of a difference, even with 1100 people saved, is the core of humanity. I wished more Germans had come to that insight after the End of the Third Reich. Instead most of them hid behind excuses like "I only followed orders" or "I didn't know". Every single one of them could have got one more person - only they didn't.
@robertopalomino4604
@robertopalomino4604 3 года назад
Many did try to do something about in secret. The July 21st plot is an example and others. Most German were proud of Germany but not proud Nazis. Nationalism can blind you to the evil your country does.
@zegh8578
@zegh8578 3 года назад
The ring includes the saying of saving one life being the same as saving the world entire, which reflects back to that sentiment: One life! In the last moment, before he collapses, he looks around himself, desperate, to find that *one* missing person.
@WileChile51
@WileChile51 Год назад
He tried so hard and didn't have to... A great man.
@michaelmiller6924
@michaelmiller6924 3 года назад
The Pianist is another one about The Holocaust that is a must.
@i_love_rescue_animals
@i_love_rescue_animals 3 года назад
I remember starting to watch the Pianist in the theater and I had to leave about halfway through. I just couldn't take it. 💔
@deborahflynn1708
@deborahflynn1708 3 года назад
I saw it as well seeing the SS solders pushing the man who was in the wheelchair off the porch ...
@thepodbaydoorshal
@thepodbaydoorshal 2 года назад
It's a tough one. Yeah perhaps even more blunt than this one. Mandatory viewing.
@irabernstein
@irabernstein 2 года назад
La vita è bella! Life is beautiful! a 1997 italian film covering similar history
@ellygoffin4200
@ellygoffin4200 3 года назад
The family putting the jewelry in the bread were doing so that they would have something to bribe with. Whether to avoid a transport to the death camps or for better work detail etc. Goethe daughter learned about the atrocities done by her father from this movie and was then able to confront her mother about this. Also the person who made the ring at the end of the movie was the cousin of my wife's grandfather.
@ironmanos
@ironmanos 2 года назад
Saving the jewels at 7:19 wasn't stupid. At one point they could make the difference between starving, cold, or could even buy their salvation. They could be used in the ghettos or concentration camps to get food, warm clothes, footwear, even false papers or the favor of a guard or a group dedicated to saving people from the Nazis. It didn't guarantee anything, but it gave a better chance of survival.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 года назад
👍👍
@merchillio
@merchillio 3 года назад
I must have seen that movie so many times, either by myself or through reactors like you. That scene at the end where he obsesses over the people he could have saved by selling more things… it gets me every time. Neeson’s performance is heart wrenching.
@tiredoffools8929
@tiredoffools8929 3 года назад
@Jean-Dominic Lapointe I feel the same way every time I watch that scene.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
❤️❤️❤️
@pcsixty6
@pcsixty6 3 года назад
I read a comment from previous reactions, that the "girl in the redcoat" was inspired from the testimony of a father during the trial of Adolph Eichmann who was one of the brain for the "Final Solution". The father said that he couldn't find any other members of his family except for his little girl because she was wearing a red coat.
@rekinlas
@rekinlas 2 года назад
I believe the girl was based on a real person. However, Spielberg mentioned in an interview that her red coat, and the indifference to her shown by everyone around, was to represent how at the time many of the world's leaders were aware of the obvious horrors enacted by the Nazis, yet they looked the other way.
@JLamstudio
@JLamstudio 3 года назад
a great film that no one sees anymore or even knows about is “THE KILLING FIELDS,” from 1984 with Sam Waterston and Dr. Haing Ngor, who won an Oscar for his role. The movie tells the true story of the Cambodian civil war and the atrocities of the Pol Pot regime, who was responsible for 2 million deaths. Pol Pot was the driving force behind the Cambodian genocide, the systematic persecution and killing of Cambodians that the Khmer Rouge regarded as enemies. The genocide, coupled with malnutrition and poor medical care, killed between 1.5 and 2 million people, approximately a quarter of Cambodia's population. “The Killing Fields” is an excellent film that we all need to see, and learn about. Dr. Haing Ngor, was also in Oliver Stone’s amazing film “Heaven & Earth,” was murdered in February of 1996. “The Killing Fields,” was his first acting role.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Thank you for the recommendations, we will check it out 😊👍❤️
@BaronVonGreenback1882
@BaronVonGreenback1882 2 года назад
A lesser know event at the end of world war two was known as The Rhine Meadows Camps, most people don't know about it, research it, then you'll know why !
@Unbronzed_Aussie_Laura
@Unbronzed_Aussie_Laura 2 года назад
I had a very lovely Cambodian family living across the road from me. The stories from when the husband and his parents were in a work camp were truely horriffic. The joy that these beautiful people took in their new life in Australia and their generosity was something that was not lost on me, even though I was quite young. Genocide should not be a thing that till exists but sadly still does. I have taught my own children about such atrosities and the importance of humanity and humility and to treat people the way they would like to be treated.
@jlerrickson
@jlerrickson 2 года назад
Hotel Rwanda is also overlooked but just as impactful
@strategicthinker8899
@strategicthinker8899 3 года назад
My great-grandfather was murdered in Dachau concentration camp. I can only watch a reaction, cannot bring myself to watch it outright. Thank you for being empathetic humans.
@mattnar3865
@mattnar3865 2 года назад
@Heather Stephens What the hell is wrong with you?
@proprocrastinator5349
@proprocrastinator5349 3 года назад
Shooting a Holocaust drama as grim as “Schindler’s List” obviously took an emotional toll on director Steven Spielberg, but it turns out the filmmaker had an unexpected lifeline to help him see the light on set. “Robin knew what I was going through, and once a week, Robin would call me on schedule and he would do 15 minutes of stand-up on the phone,” Spielberg said. “I would laugh hysterically, because I had to release so much.” Prior to “Schindler’s List,” Spielberg directed Williams in “Hook.” “The way Robin is on the telephone, he’d always hang up on the loudest, best laugh you’d give him,” the director said. “He’d never say goodbye, just hang up on the biggest laugh.”
@Knight_of_NI
@Knight_of_NI 2 года назад
I lost family at Auschwitz and this movie crushes me every time. I’m so glad you took the time to watch this because our memories will help ensure this never happens again. Those who forget the past are doomed to repeat it. Respect
@SRG1966
@SRG1966 3 года назад
Amon Goeth's real life granddaughter is still alive, she is biracial. She wrote a book about him, saying how he would have had her shot.
@shortybarnesyanik
@shortybarnesyanik 3 года назад
I have that book! It’s called”My Grandfather Would Have Shot Me”!
@randallknapp7528
@randallknapp7528 3 года назад
@@shortybarnesyanik I will buy that book.
@amongsttheruins4490
@amongsttheruins4490 2 года назад
How the hell would she know she never knew him? Lol
@SRG1966
@SRG1966 2 года назад
@@amongsttheruins4490 um, because he was a racist Nazi murderer?
@LouiseTheBeaverWarrior
@LouiseTheBeaverWarrior 2 года назад
@@amongsttheruins4490 are you actually this clueless?
@thegorn68
@thegorn68 3 года назад
The important thing to remember is this holocaust in Nazi Germany was NOT some one-time event in history. There are similar ones going on today somewhere in the world. There were so many in just the 20th Century alone (i.e. The Killing Fields of Cambodia, Rwanda, etc.) We MUST continue to fight the good fight and not repeat the same atrocities against one another, nor stand by and let it happen.
@tanelviil9149
@tanelviil9149 3 года назад
Stop virtue signaling you privileged kid.
@Shadow-Kalbo1
@Shadow-Kalbo1 3 года назад
it happening in china as we speak but neither the media nor the democrats will call them out on it
@patinho5589
@patinho5589 3 года назад
@@tanelviil9149 he isn’t. He is pointing out that we are all hypocrite who generally do nothing to help the world. In north Korea now there are hundreds of thousands of people in gulags. We don’t help. We sit and watch RU-vid.
@tanelviil9149
@tanelviil9149 3 года назад
@@patinho5589 Yes he is virtue signaling, that's all what privileged LIBERAL ignorant people do on the internet while knowing nothing about the real history.
@ash_1419
@ash_1419 3 года назад
@@tanelviil9149 so tell us the REAL history
@xhagast
@xhagast 3 года назад
What good does a man to gain the world if he loses his soul? Schindler collected sins but in the end he gave up his fortune to save lives. He died in poverty, a failure, supported by the Jews he saved. But now people hear his story and weep and bless him, and thousands descend from those he saved. Better than to die rich and alone and be forgotten.
@commanderkruge
@commanderkruge 3 года назад
Terry Pratchett in one of his books wrote something along the lines of: "Nobody is truly dead, as long as their name is still spoken.". In another place he puts it: "Nobody is truly gone as long as there is still ripples in the waters of time from what they did". Schindler's name will be remembered for a long time and the "ripples" he made in time are still growing with each new descendant of the people he managed to save. To me that sounds as close to being immortal as you can get.
@atomictsarina4378
@atomictsarina4378 3 года назад
Saving Jews in Poland was a very dangerous thing - there was a death penalty for doing that for the whole families. And still, Poles were sawing Jews - check out Irena Sendler's story and how she saved dozens of Jewish kids from the ghetto. There is a movie about her with Anna Paquin called "The Courageous Heart of Irena Sendler". Also, nowadays there is an interactive museum in the former Schindler's factory in Krakow - definitely worth seeing.
@tomicbranislav3
@tomicbranislav3 2 года назад
It was not just Poland, any of the ocupied teritories , if they find you helping Jews thats an automatic death sentence....
@atomictsarina4378
@atomictsarina4378 2 года назад
@@tomicbranislav3 No. The special edict about the death penalty for this "crime" was made only in Poland. I.e in France, Holland, or Belgium the official penalty for this was a prison (or concentration camp sometimes). This special legislation (death sentence) was introduced by the Germans only in occupied Poland.
@tomicbranislav3
@tomicbranislav3 2 года назад
@@atomictsarina4378 I was mostly thinking of eastern and southeastern European countries where it was same as Poland... I am from the Balkans so trust me I know my history... History major by the way...
@Tristan_Anderwelt
@Tristan_Anderwelt 3 года назад
This film is a must watch for every family once the kids are old enough to understand. But please, dear parents, watch the film with the children and help them understand
@edp5886
@edp5886 3 года назад
I love how the color fades as the flame goes out at the very beginning of the film.
@SCharlesDennicon
@SCharlesDennicon 2 года назад
Being speechless after such a masterpiece is the right attitude.
@sspdirect02
@sspdirect02 3 года назад
16:32 At this point, Germany knew that they were losing the war. They feared that if the Allied forces found out they committed mass genocide, they would be charged with crimes against humanity, a crime that carried the death penalty. So this was a way to cover their tracks and destroy all the evidence.
@montanus777
@montanus777 Год назад
true. except for the fact that crimes against humanity were not offcially a thing yet. that was implemented in the nuremberg trials to be able to put charges on someone, where charges of other warcrimes wouldn't have worked. but you're absolutely right, that the nazis were fully aware, their actions would have consequences - not necessarily the death penalty, but e.g. harder conditions for peace negotiations or german POWs.
@AaronHatcher
@AaronHatcher 3 года назад
Its black and white for 2 reasons. First is like yall said, to make it feel more authentic. The second reason is because it wouldve been rated r if it was in color because the blood would be colored instead of muted. Idk how this makes it worse but that's what the MPAA does, not make sense. Lol this was done in kill bill volume 1 in the crazy 88 fight at the end. They made Tarantino turn it black and white because of too much red blood. It doesnt make alot of sense but honestly this movie works in black in white perfectly and I cant imagine it being in color actually. It's also in back in white to show the hopelessness of the holocaust also. Why the candle going out at the beginning is the transition to black and white. Their light dying and a dark time comes. Then the color comes back at the very end
@rekinlas
@rekinlas 2 года назад
Schindler's List was indeed rated R given the violent and disturbing content. As you say, Spielberg wanted the film to appear more authentic - like a documentary or newsreel. I've also read he didn't use many filmmaking techniques available today - to make it feel like it was from the era.
@August377
@August377 2 года назад
"What a man. What a legend." I've never heard anyone say it better. What a legend, indeed.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 года назад
❤️❤️
@pangkaji
@pangkaji 2 года назад
Poldek Pfefferberg one of the survivors convinced the writer Thomas Keneally to write the book Schindler's Ark. The book was then republished as Schindler's List. When asked his reasons for wanting a book written about Schindler, Poldek said "Schindler gave me my life and I tried to give him immortality".
@a.zimmerman1867
@a.zimmerman1867 3 года назад
It is not really jewelry. It is loose diamonds. That is, for lack of a better word, their currency. They could trade diamonds for a lot.
@PetterVessel
@PetterVessel 3 года назад
Ralph Fiennes played his role so well. * applause*
@SCharlesDennicon
@SCharlesDennicon 2 года назад
He was robbed of a fucking Oscar in 94.
@StevenJInLA
@StevenJInLA 2 года назад
@@SCharlesDennicon To be fair he had stiff competition: Leonardo DiCaprio, John Malkovich and Tommy Lee Jones (winner for his role in The Fugitive).
@bruceheckerman7343
@bruceheckerman7343 2 года назад
You guys have my the best reactions on RU-vid! Because my late wife and I always sounded like you two when watching movies! I miss her very much, and hate watching movies by myself, but at least can bring back good memories watching movies with you. Thank you. I wish you all the successes you deserve.
@fixxxer200072
@fixxxer200072 3 года назад
This should be tattooed onto the conscience of every human being
@Uriahjw
@Uriahjw 3 года назад
This movie is the tops of all the WWII movies ever produced. Transporting you to a time of great terror for the Jewish people. I once met a friend of my father that had a number tattooed on his arm. I asked my dad why he had a number on his arm and the man hearing me replied because I was in a WWII camp as a child and this number is how they keep track of us. I will never forget the look on his face as he looked at the number. This Movie made his look have much greater meaning. My heart still breaks when I stop and think about him.
@amlgandolfo
@amlgandolfo 3 года назад
I had a similar experience when I was about 5 yrs old. My Uncle married into a Jewish family and I noticed the tattoo on a family member’s arm. I didn’t say anything but asked my sister about it later that night. She explained what it meant.
@gandalfthewhite4245
@gandalfthewhite4245 3 года назад
36:30 actually there were 19 thousand men an women who were similar to Schlindler, they are known as Righteous Among the Nations, a polish nurse named Sendler comes to mind, she saved about 2000 jews
@Kunztmann
@Kunztmann 3 года назад
there is a movie about it , it is call The Courageous Heart of Irena Sendler, it is not as powerful as SL, but still really good
@squashedeyeball
@squashedeyeball 3 года назад
7:28 They swallowed it in the hope they'll be able to use it as a bribe, if they ever get the opportunity. Not out of concern for "stupid jewelry". Which is why all the bodies were opened and dissected before cremations.
@KickedMangoStudios
@KickedMangoStudios 2 года назад
The theme song alone makes me cry! John Williams is legendary and Itszak Perlman makes his violin WEEP with emotion. It's the most haunting theme I've ever heard
@justsmashing4628
@justsmashing4628 3 года назад
None of the cast or production crew accepted any money for making Schindler’s List…all profits went to charity.
@KTBroadcasting
@KTBroadcasting 2 года назад
It was so beautiful to see such an emotional reaction, guys - thank you for sharing. This has long been one of my favorite movies. I made sure my sons saw it, and when appropriate I will show it to my grandson. In America, they showed it unedited on television once in a while as a special with an advisory for kids. And I know many teachers in High Schools around the country, still show it in History, Social Studies and Ethics classes a lot...and of course film class electives and such.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 года назад
❤️❤️❤️
@Mr.Goodkat
@Mr.Goodkat 3 года назад
You should react to "Come and see" it inspired Spielberg when he was making this to get that realistic feel.
@Rob-H
@Rob-H 3 года назад
That is such a bleak film!
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Thank you for the suggestion ❤️😊👍
@ronmaximilian6953
@ronmaximilian6953 3 года назад
It's a very brutal movie
@commanderkruge
@commanderkruge 3 года назад
@@ronmaximilian6953 True, very bleak, very horrifying. It's an even tougher sit than this movie here, but well worth watching, because like Schindler's List it's about things that people did.
@ronmaximilian6953
@ronmaximilian6953 3 года назад
@@commanderkrugeI watched the movie to understand my father's experience and his unresolved PTSD. My father was a Holocaust survivor. He didn't die in a camp because he claimed that his father was the Jewish Schindler. My grandfather and namesake, Maximilian, set up a camp in the Drohobycz ghetto creating crates and packing material for the German Army. My grandfather had been an officer in the Austro-Hungarian army and used this to get along with a German officer who had a similar history journal World War 1. The cover was to have the Jews be productive and hopefully get better rations. My grandfather went beyond this by using the factory and transportation to work with a Polish resistance to get people out of the ghetto and into the forest, after he found out that the Nazis intended to kill everyone. Eventually, the Nazis found out that my grandfather had been stealing gasoline, something that could have gotten a German killed. Fortunately, The Gestapo called the factory and my grandfather took the call pretending to be a German. And so my paternal family fled. My father, who wasn't even 10 at the time was forced to become a child soldier in a partisan unit. Children can kill to survive, but it comes at a horrible price.
@andromeda331
@andromeda331 3 года назад
Such a hard movie to watch but one everyone needs to see.
@gloriatrujillo722
@gloriatrujillo722 3 года назад
im so glad this was recomended to me. i watch a ton of reaction videos and you guys are awesome. intelligent, insightful, and emotional....great job yall.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Thank you 😊👍❤️
@jillk368
@jillk368 3 года назад
The jewelry they ate could save some lives. It was war time (portable wealth). Other than that comment, though, I thought it was a really well-done reaction. Very sensitive and thoughtful.
@squashedeyeball
@squashedeyeball 3 года назад
Truly a great watch! And you raised a lot of points from memory that are quiet true... I would say, watch the testimonies from time to time, when you're able.
@richardclegg5853
@richardclegg5853 2 года назад
"Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it",. And we think this could never happen here... as long as hatred exists, and it surely does, it could easily happen here...
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 года назад
ofcourse!! this goes for everything...
@keiththompson7280
@keiththompson7280 2 года назад
It's good to see that two people feel such compassion for others. God Bless, from Tonganoxie
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 года назад
Thank you 👍 God bless you too ❤️
@VikingsFan2022
@VikingsFan2022 2 года назад
Branko Lustig the CO Producer of the Film was an actual Survivor Of Auschwitz when they filmed the Auschwitz scene was actually filmed there Branko pulled Liam a side and showed him which barrack he stayed in for 3 years
@quietdemon8138
@quietdemon8138 2 года назад
One of Spielberg’s many magnum opuses and one of the most important motion pictures ever made, Spielberg began production on this almost immediately after completing the main filming of Jurassic Park, he actually had to oversee the cgi for the dinosaurs and the audio mixing while on the way to film either the concentration camp or ransacking scenes, he would privately cry with his wife during the production and said that he wouldn’t have been able to get through it if it wasn’t for her, it is undoubtedly one of the most difficult films to watch but it is fundamentally important to remember what happened and ensure that it NEVER EVER happens again, rest in peace to EVERY innocent person ✌️
@suepall5425
@suepall5425 2 года назад
Thank you for such a thoughtful and compassionate reaction.
@russ4862
@russ4862 Год назад
This was a fabulous reaction. You both touched me. Many thanks for this reaction. 🙏😊
@gorankopcic7827
@gorankopcic7827 3 года назад
I've been a movie collector for a 35 years now, an here is my top 6 movies ever: 1. Titanic 2. Braveheart 3. Schindler's list 4. The Shawshank redemption 5. The green mile 6. Gladiator Watching all of this movies, excerpt Shawshank, I was crying at the end of them EVERY TIME I watched it. EVERY TIME! Titanic, on Jack's drowning, Braveheart, on the execution of W.W., Green mile, most of the movie, Gladiator, when he dies after the fight with Commodus, and Schindler... DURING THE ALL MOVIE!
@tiredoffools8929
@tiredoffools8929 3 года назад
@Goran Kopcic. Excellent list. If you haven't seen Saving Private Ryan yet, it is a must. For me, it would be within top three of this list.
@gorankopcic7827
@gorankopcic7827 3 года назад
@@tiredoffools8929 Haha! Didn't you read my comment. 'I've been a movie collector for a 35 years now...' I'm 52, and have seen thousands of movies, and I saw Private Ryan in 1998... I probably watched some movies that you never heard for them... Thanks for your suggestion, but I've seen Ryan for over 30 times now. My personal record is Aliens, over 150 times, and The abyss, over 160 times... I have more than 45 TB of hard discs, all full of movies (UHD and FHD), and I probably could qoute all the script of Private Ryan... hahaha!
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Thank you ❤️😊👍
@gorankopcic7827
@gorankopcic7827 3 года назад
@@MJoy4Fun No problemo, pal. I'm also an electronic music composer, so if you want to hear my music, it's here... soundcloud.com/user-283504795/synthetic-love-345 If you want to hear more of my music, Facebook, Goran Kopcic, picture in blue shirt...
@steve6valdez
@steve6valdez 3 года назад
Great reaction! I was right there with you two. 😢 What we can do now is remember, try to make this world a better place and make sure that this never happens again. It starts with each one of us doing our own little part in our own little part of the world.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
❤️❤️❤️
@jasonp.1195
@jasonp.1195 3 года назад
Amazing and heartbreaking film. I appreciate your reaction to it. Below is another amazing story about survivors of that murderous era. "Chiune Sugihara was a Japanese diplomat who served as vice-consul for the Japanese Empire in Kaunas, Lithuania. During the Second World War, Sugihara helped thousands of Jews flee Europe by issuing transit visas to them so that they could travel through Japanese territory, risking his job and the lives of his family." - Quoted from the Wiki description.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Thank you for the recommendations👍❤️😊
@dawnmguzman
@dawnmguzman 3 года назад
Sophie's Choice will absolutely break your heart, it's literally painful to watch in parts. Meryl Streep disappears into her character.
@mr2gti
@mr2gti 3 года назад
It is quite possibly the greatest movie ever made. How the horrors of war were put to film, was impeccable. It's also a bloody good reminder how horrible the human race can be, to itself. All the actors nailed it - every single one of them!
@theflyestoneyouknow603
@theflyestoneyouknow603 3 года назад
23:13 that group is actually going to the crematorium, where they'll be burned; dead or alive
@Yellowstonetim
@Yellowstonetim 2 года назад
Thank you for this reaction. The most we can do with this both horrible and beautiful history is to learn and share, as you have, to remember and to keep it from ever happening again. May God bless Oskar's soul. Thanks again.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 2 года назад
👍👍❤️ Thank you for watching 😊
@amystattoo
@amystattoo 2 года назад
This film is so profound. It makes me very emotional, but your commentary also brought tears to my eyes.
@kathleensmith3555
@kathleensmith3555 2 года назад
It took me awhile to decide to watch this again with you -- Its so hard to watch but so important too -- Im crying with you
@indyracingnut
@indyracingnut 3 года назад
We are still here and we thrive....even after all that. Do not feel bad for us.....We always overcome. And we always will.
@goldboy150
@goldboy150 2 года назад
Saving one life is an amazing feat and a heroic action. There are thousands of these heroes scattered around Europe who risked their own well-being and that of their own families in order to hide Jews during the Holocaust. My grandparents were saved by a Hungarian family who arranged for them Christian identity cards. Including for my grandmother who was pregnant with my mother in 1944. My grandparents and my mother survived and left Europe for Australia a few years after the war ended. My grandparents brothers and sisters not so fortunate. Most of them (and their parents) died in auschwitz and Stutthof concentration camps. Saving one life, one family makes you a hero. Saving 1,100 makes you something more. It takes a special human being to do something when every incentive besides your own humanity (money, safety, safety of your family) points you in the direction of doing nothing.
@jandekker6008
@jandekker6008 2 года назад
Jewellery could be vital later to trade for food, water, escape. That's why they kept it.
@user-ll8te7mq9q
@user-ll8te7mq9q Год назад
7:18 Imagine that you come home from work or school hungry, and there is no food ready at home, so you complain that you are "starving to death". In the ghetto people really died of hunger. They lived every day, all day, on a slice of bread and a soup made entirely of water, only water. There were days and even weeks when they did not eat at all. Can you imagine that feeling? These jewels bought them food. They would throw a diamond ring from the wall of the ghetto, and receive bread in return.
@thirdpartynationalis
@thirdpartynationalis 3 года назад
Thank you ....people like you make a different in the world. You are a wonderful couple ...very compassionated with a good heart...we have hope that this things will never never happen again.....
@roycroftki5358
@roycroftki5358 3 года назад
The scene where the gun malfunctioned, I wonder what would of happened if they knew that man was a rabbi.I don't think he would of survived.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
For certain! But you could see his face when it happened though... He couldn't face the error.. they weight so much to bare those killings... Many commited suicide... We are not made to do such things!!! Sad history :(
@georgekoul
@georgekoul 3 года назад
Liam Neeson's acting on this movie is one of the best of all times for sure!
@birdseyefr
@birdseyefr 3 года назад
Thank you for this reaction! This is a great and important movie
@rbloomquist69
@rbloomquist69 2 года назад
One of the best movies that you'll ever watch and not want to watch again.....
@1evilgsta1
@1evilgsta1 3 года назад
This movie just punches you in the heart.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Yes it really does 👍😊
@Julian-to7ro
@Julian-to7ro 3 года назад
Loved your reactions. You are very intelligent and followed the film very well. Thank you 😊
@i_love_rescue_animals
@i_love_rescue_animals 3 года назад
Thank you for this wonderful reaction of such a horrifying period in our world history. It is truly beyond horrific what happened to the Jews. Liam Neeson was amazing as Oskar Schindler!
@evelynne2846
@evelynne2846 3 года назад
One of the most traumatic effect on me was seeing the piles of family pictures taken from them. You know they were burned. The photos they would have told their grandchildren about and the stories of who their ancestors were. Families wee erased. I took Polish college courses. Polish history and Polish literature. You know that Schindler's story is just a small part of these atrocities. Thank you for reviewing to this movie. In many high schools, this movie is being shown to students.
@davidsumner7604
@davidsumner7604 3 года назад
Actually a lot of them weren't burned. One of the unique aspects of the Holocaust is how thoroughly the Germans documented what they were doing. I don't think I've ever heard of any other genocide where the perpetrators kept so much documentation and photographic evidence of what they were doing.
@evelynne2846
@evelynne2846 3 года назад
@@davidsumner7604 I meant the pics were likely burned. Either way, the pics were never returned to the families or what was left of the families because they didn't keep a record of of which pictures belonged to whom or their ancestors if any. So they may as well been burned. Their family history was gone forever.
@davidsumner7604
@davidsumner7604 3 года назад
@@evelynne2846 You'd be surprised. Every so often some German person will clear out their family's old attic and find a bunch of photographs that their grandfather held onto that had been confiscated from a Jewish family. Yad Vashem is still receiving stuff like that.
@evelynne2846
@evelynne2846 3 года назад
@@davidsumner7604 That's good to know and hopefully the photos can be reunited with the owner or family.
@edwarddavis6827
@edwarddavis6827 3 года назад
Really heartfelt review and very meaningful thank you
@jean-paulaudette9246
@jean-paulaudette9246 3 года назад
Marian, the reason we say racism is bad, these days is because we have been shown what it can become, if it is let be.
@OhArchie
@OhArchie 3 года назад
Perhaps too much of what we call racism these days doesn't match the level of actual racism.
@jean-paulaudette9246
@jean-paulaudette9246 3 года назад
@@OhArchie Agreed, but we should, I think, be aware of to what it can lead.
@tiredoffools8929
@tiredoffools8929 3 года назад
@@OhArchie Yes, that is true for sure, however, we can't ignore actual racism just because some people over use the term or don't fully understand it. Ignoring racism, or treating it as if it doesn't exist has always been part of the problem.
@OhArchie
@OhArchie 3 года назад
@@kyvalrie3646 Today in schools, children are being taught that they are inherently evil because of the color of their skin. This is *genuine* racism, the kind Hitler used to turn Germans against Jews and to justify their murder. It’s objectively provable racism and a far cry from a loan denial.
@chileanzombie42
@chileanzombie42 2 года назад
Both your reactions really touched me
@pattiharvey1787
@pattiharvey1787 Год назад
Congratulations for making it through this movie you two 👍 It's a difficult film to react to because it's all true to fact. What's more, the movie was perfectly cast in black and white mostly and we had Spielberg directing it. This movie will stand the test of time, an epic forever. Thank you for sharing it with us 👍👍
@jean-paulaudette9246
@jean-paulaudette9246 3 года назад
8:47 I think you are both right. I think they are convinced, that to be 'loyal sons of Germany' they do what they are told must be done...but yes, they are also feeling people, who have compassion for others, I think that kind of behavior caused many many German soldiers a whole lot of guilt-based trouble, when they were older, and not so "Gung-ho! Point me at 'em!" Like all children, they were easily led.
@amongsttheruins4490
@amongsttheruins4490 2 года назад
Right, it couldn't be the hatred and bigotry toward the German people that was spread by the Allies before, during and after the war. If anyone should feel guilty it's Britain and the United States who took the side of those barbaric communists in Russia and raped and murdered the German people on a scale incomprehensible. The Victor's write the history and no one is lied about more to this day. What the allies did to Dresden and the German people was the true holocaust.
@petrmilota6398
@petrmilota6398 3 года назад
Hi guys.. Oskar was born in Svitavy in Czech Republic which is sudeten part where lots of german and czech people lived alongside before the war
@davedalton1273
@davedalton1273 3 года назад
I was very moved by how much you were moved. Thank you.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
thank you so much!
@OronOfMontreal
@OronOfMontreal Год назад
My Romanian parents raised me in Montreal, Canada, where we had many Jewish friends from Hungary and Romania. When I was about 12 years old, one of the men told us of his escape from the German soldiers, one Winter. He was about 5 years old and hid inside the deep hole of an outhouse (toilet) that was still in use by the soldiers. He survived there for three days and nights, until he deemed it was safe enough to get out and run into the nearest forest for shelter. I heard this story in the mid-1970s. You can imagine my shock to learn, in 1993, that others had undergone such a horror, and survived.
@LucaDGropius
@LucaDGropius 2 года назад
The black and white movie was a choise of Spielberg 'cause he said that he couldn't imagine a world with life in that time (a world of colors)
@bryonensminger7462
@bryonensminger7462 3 года назад
He got everyone to his table and payed for everything to get in good with the high ranking officers so he could get the contacts to build things for the army
@maryboylan3093
@maryboylan3093 3 года назад
Its the darkness in all our hearts causes this.
@StevesFunhouse
@StevesFunhouse Год назад
You two are a couple of beautiful people ... I love your reactions but, this one was the one that showed your real personalities and your heart. You make it worth while.
@testpattern23
@testpattern23 3 года назад
probably one of the heaviest movies you'll ever watch
@niki7997
@niki7997 2 года назад
I saw this in the theater when it came out in 1993. I was 14, so I knew what the Holocaust was. I knew the facts. I don't think I learned any new information from the movie, except for these particular people & their personal experiences. But man that movie shook me to the core. It doesn't matter how much knowledge you have, you cannot prepare yourself for the horror. Like I said, logically I had the facts but seeing it portrayed on -screen is a whole different thing. I just remember repeating the words..."HOW could that happen?!" over & over. I knew it, but couldn't wrap my head around it. The scariest thing, far & away, is that this wasn't really even that long ago. I mean...my grandparents were alive. My grandfather was in the US Navy. So It's apx. 30yrs since I've seen it & I only just re-watched it a year ago. It's def something I think everyone should have to watch at least once. It's such a great movie but absolutely heartbreaking, horrifying, & everything else you can think of . *note have kleenex handy
@joedirt688
@joedirt688 2 года назад
This movie, nor the events that transpired shall not ever be forgotten, it will not only have its place cemented in movie history, but shall live in the hearts and minds of people forever!
@bigjoeofthe707
@bigjoeofthe707 2 года назад
I like how every reactor is having the proper reaction. And even the ones who wanna present themselves as tough as some “alpha male” are even brought to tears when watching this.
@darthaeontheeternal1727
@darthaeontheeternal1727 2 года назад
As a Native American born male & A Jewish Adoptee, this film really hits me HARD considering that BOTH my blood & adopted ancestors went through this still hurts, and it is very much a subject at least for Native Americans that HAS YET to be resolved anywhere near this level, IF that is THIS can be called a resolution as NOTHING WILL EVER undo what has been done, it pains me greatly knowing NOT only in US & Russian politics people use the same excuses Nazis did to justify their actions but people still get away with committing atrocities of this level today, the main argument there being the still abysmal situation in South Africa & even in South America, If i could have 1 wish it would be for all of it to stop & the perpetrators either brought to a swift & decisive end along with their followers, or that they be brought to justice, they're crimes brought to light, & they be sentenced accordingly.
@micheletrainor1601
@micheletrainor1601 Год назад
The little girl in the red coat is actually a memory of the actress Aurdrey Hepburns who spoke of her to speilberg. She said through the darkness and screaming bodies was this beautiful little girl in a red coat. However it was the expression the little girl had on her face that haunted Ms Hepburn as she said she was not crying or anything she seemed to have a look that indicated she knew what was going to happen and that she had accepted her fate as she was put onto the train by a nazi officer. Ms Hepburn was a spy for the allied forces and worked with the resistance during the war and had seen so many horrifying things but this one she could never shake. Speilberg wanted to honour her memory and to say nobody should ever be forgotten.
@Sam-gi8vh
@Sam-gi8vh 3 года назад
lies + fear of the other + hate = what we all experience in this movie. Sadly in our time, these tactics are on the rise again. Let us all never forget and may God give us the strength to never allow something like this to happen ever again.
@Wahots79
@Wahots79 3 года назад
I was 13 when this came out. My dad was at that time stationed in Germany. After watching this with him, he took me, my sister and my then step mother to Dachau - which was a concentration camp turned museum and memorial to those who died there and all who died in WWII. Harsh for a kid...maybe, but I think it was a very good and very important eye opener. It was a powerful and moving experience, one I'll never forget...and one I never plan on repeating. This movie, while very hard to watch, is incredibly made, supremely acted, and the cinematography was second to none, but it'd not a movie one sits down to watch for fun. It is though a movie that I believe should be shown in EVERY high school. It tells a true story that cannot be forgotten...it's too important that we never forget the depths of evil that humans are capable of, what hate and fear can cause, and what people can "overlook" if told to.
@amongsttheruins4490
@amongsttheruins4490 2 года назад
Or what people can be told and believe without question under threat of persecution. You know it's illegal in 19 countries to question this one piece of history? That they throw old women into prison for simply pointing out historical inaccuracies. It doesn't surprise me in the slightest that they force children to watch this type of fictional propaganda, get em young and you control the minds of entire generations. What better way to perpetuate a lie that can be harvested for political and financial gain when everyone is programmed to knee jerk accept the lie the moment it is spoken under threat to themselves.
@kimberleyravenswood5287
@kimberleyravenswood5287 Год назад
Oh it just broke my heart to see you cry. This is a tough film, but so so important.
@sspdirect02
@sspdirect02 3 года назад
I have a lot to say about this movie because it’s Steven Spielberg’s best film. Nothing has ever come close.
@tiredoffools8929
@tiredoffools8929 3 года назад
@Sean Pultz...it is a Masterpiece for sure, and I agree it is arguably Spielberg's best film, but Saving Private Ryan is also a Masterpiece and could be argued as Spielberg's best. So in my opinion SVP does come close, so I don't entirely agree with your statement. With that said, both of those films are not only represents Spielberg's greatest achievements in film making, but they are both some of the greatest films ever made.
@ayoydonsafamal8380
@ayoydonsafamal8380 3 года назад
@@tiredoffools8929 Spielberg made Schindler list for his mother and Saving private Ryan for his father.
@tiredoffools8929
@tiredoffools8929 3 года назад
@@ayoydonsafamal8380 That is a great fun fact. Thanks for sharing. That makes perfect sense. Spielberg's passion for storytelling really shows in both films, and while they are difficult to watch emotionally, I consider them both Masterpieces as many others do.
@trhansen3244
@trhansen3244 3 года назад
I would say Jaws is his best. And Raiders of the Lost Ark a close second.
@marcoadan1
@marcoadan1 3 года назад
The violin music in this film is... something.
@kagemaru259
@kagemaru259 2 года назад
The real little girl in the red coat actually survived both the Holocaust and the War; she's still alive today. There were actually Schindler Jews on set as advisors who can be seen at film's end putting the rocks on Schindler's grave; when Ralph Fiennes appeared in costume, they said that he resembled the real Amon Goeth in looks and mannerisms so much that many of them began to tremble with fear, some to the point of crying and panic and had to be escorted off set.
@MrGox
@MrGox 2 года назад
Amazing reaction, amazing movie! It got everyone emotional for sure.
@jesterforhire
@jesterforhire 2 года назад
All my love to you both for a beautiful and sensitive reactors and human beings. Writing from Seattle, Washington USA. Thanks for your vulnerability and depth of the interpretation. This movie is a masterpiece. 💜
@richardzinns5314
@richardzinns5314 2 года назад
I will never forget when I first watched this movie: almost at the very beginning we see Schindler dressing to go out to dinner, and although he is alone (so no dialogue) and doing a mundane task, the scene is riveting. That, I realized at the time, is how you know you are watching the work of a master filmmaker. And every scene thereafter was just as brilliantly done, just as unforgettable -- one of the greatest film masterpieces ever made.
@pliny8308
@pliny8308 3 года назад
I just loved your reaction. You seem like such a genuinely nice, compassionate couple. Kudos to you.
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Thank you and thank you for watching ❤️😊❤️
@bethhowton2719
@bethhowton2719 3 года назад
Thank you for sharing this story, everyone should see this movie at least once. Enjoy
@MJoy4Fun
@MJoy4Fun 3 года назад
Agree ❤️👍💯
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