Schindler's List: A Look at Steven Spielberg's Best Film

Schindler's List is a Tribute to Oskar Schindler, an Unlikely Hero During the Holocaust

By Alex Diaz-Granados, published Jul 06, 2006
Published Content: 108  Total Views: 134,368  Favorited By: 9 CPs
Rating: 4.3 of 5
Even though Steven Spielberg had made some of the most successful - and profitable - films in movie history (E.T.: The Extraterrestrial, Jaws, the Indiana Jones series), he was always perceived as a master craftsman but never as a "serious" director capable of making a grown-up film. 

This is an odd perception, considering that in addition to such crowd-pleasers as Raiders of the Lost Ark and E.T. (along with the plethora of projects he has been involved with as executive producer - Who Framed Roger Rabbit? and the Back to the Future trilogy), Spielberg had directed such serious fare as 1985's The Color Purple and 1987's Empire of the Sun, which deal with such weighty topics as race and the effect of war on children.

One film, released in late 1993 - the same year that Jurassic Park set worldwide box office records - changed that perception forever: Schindler's List.

Based on the true story of Oskar Schindler, a German philanderer, member of the Nazi Party, and war profiteer whose desire to make money from Hitler's European war slowly but irrevocably morphed into a desire to save over a thousand of his Jewish labor force from the Nazis' genocidal "Final Solution," Schindler's List is a powerfully moving film. 

It not only never flinches from the inhumanity of Hitler's willing executioners - there are all sorts of terrible things going on in here, including torture, manhunts, mass executions, and random acts of cruelty - but it also touches on the central belief felt by Spielberg himself that decency and righteousness can triumph over even the most implacable tyranny and hatred.

Working from Steven Zaillian's adaptation of the fact-based novel by Thomas Kenneally, Spielberg chose to film Schindler's List in black and white because most of the documentaries, records and photographs he had seen were in black and white. As a result, whenever he does use color, especially in the key "Special Aktion" sequences where Schindler (Star Wars: Episode I's Liam Neeson) catches a glimpse of a single scarlet-clad girl as the Jews of the Krakow Ghetto are ruthlessly rounded up by SS troops. 

Takeaways
  • Based on Thomas Kenneally's "non-fiction novel"
  • Liam Neeson stars as Oskar Schindler, Ralph Fiennes as Amon Goeth
  • Won 7 Academy Awards, including one for John Williams' score
Did You Know?
Steven Spielberg had wanted to make this film right after E.T., but he says the 10-year interval between films gave him more maturity and wisdom before tackling such a sensitive project.
Comments
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
 
I've been studying this time period extensively and hope to see Schindler's List soon. Good work on the article!

Posted on 03/07/2008 at 4:03:07 AM

Type in Your Comments Below - (1000 characters left)
Your name:

Submit your own content on this or any topic. Get started »
Showing Comment 1 of 1
 
Most Commented On