Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Schindler's list: 600 words.

Schindler's list: 600 words.

Schindler's List has become the most striking film in the world, and its ideological seriousness and extraordinary artistic expression temperament have reached an almost insurmountable depth. There have been many movies about the mass slaughter of Jews during World War II, but this is the first real feature film about Germans awakening their conscience, risking their lives to resist the Nazis and save Jews. In the film, Schindler was not a hero at first. Why did he become a hero in the end? The film didn't answer-it just showed his behavior. Spielberg used a symbolic little effect foil:

Schindler saw a little girl in red walking through atrocities and massacres almost unscathed between the stormtroopers who were shooting wildly with sticks and the driven Jews when cleaning up the Jewish residential area in Krakow. This scene shocked Schindler. Spielberg regards this girl as a key figure in the transformation of the whole movie. In black and white photography, only the little girl used red. In Schindler's eyes, the little girl was the highlight of the whole black-and-white massacre scene-later, the girl appeared again-she was lying in a corpse truck and sent to the crematorium.

This picture has become a classic pen, and its profound connotation and artistic value far exceed that of ordinary film works. From the beginning of the film to the Nazi surrender, black and white photography was used to enhance the sense of reality and symbolize the dark ages of the Jews. Later, when the Nazis surrendered and the Jews walked out of the concentration camp, bright colors suddenly appeared on the screen, which made the audience feel that they had walked from darkness to sunshine and could appreciate the cheerful mood of the people in the play to lift the death threat.

Zanussi Nikolaus Stein von Kamienski, the film's photography director, has mastered the picture texture of black-and-white photography, with a heavy flavor in it, especially in the poverty-stricken areas of Poland, where the low walls, bricks and damp atmosphere restore the true flavor of the times. At the same time, Schindler, played by Irish movie star Eminem Nathan, and Stern, the Jew, played by Ben Kingsley who won the Oscar in Gandhi, are also indispensable factors for the success of this film.

It is difficult for a good movie to be as perfect as Schindler's List. It should be said that its existence is an eternity of the film. The Academy Awards are just a faded foil.