★★★★★ (10/10) Recommendation: Watch it. Then talk about it. Then remember the name: Oskar Schindler. And the 1,200 souls on a list that stopped the night.
The is three hours and fifteen minutes long, yet it contains no filler. Several sequences have become iconic in cinema history. Schindler--39-s List Movie
By the end of the war, Schindler was a penniless man. In the film’s most poignant scene, he looks at his gold lapel pin and weeps, realizing that selling it might have saved one more person. This serves as a "useful" reminder for us today: Why This Story Matters ★★★★★ (10/10) Recommendation: Watch it
Spielberg famously refused to accept a salary for the film, stating that it would be akin to taking "blood money." Instead, he used his earnings to establish the Shoah Foundation, an organization dedicated to recording and preserving the testimonies of Holocaust survivors. This sense of duty permeates every frame of the film, elevating it from a standard Hollywood production to a moral imperative. And the 1,200 souls on a list that stopped the night
The red coat symbolizes the blood spilled and the vibrant lives extinguished by the Holocaust. It is the catalyst for Schindler's transition from a passive observer to an active savior.