Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Does Schindler's List feel the horror of war?

Does Schindler's List feel the horror of war?

The film uses black and white photography, and many of the exterior scenes used are the real exterior scenes of this scene (including Schindler's original factory site and even the gate of Auschwitz). Spielberg showed us how Schindler handled the crazy Nazi system. He bribed, he cajoled, he boasted, and he tried not to get caught. In the boldest part of the film, the train full of his employees went to Auschwitz by mistake. Schindler personally went to the death camp, boldly persuaded the managers, spared the Jews, rescued them from the brink of death and put them on the train to his factory.

The most surprising thing about this movie is that Spielberg serves the story so completely. The film is well acted, well written, well directed and looks very good. Every play is a masterpiece managed by production designers, photographers, special effects and extras. Spielberg himself, with his outstanding personal style, had many gorgeous scenes that we paid attention to and remembered deliberately in his previous works, but this time he disappeared into his works. Actors such as Nissen and Kingsley also lost that dazzling performance. Everyone is working for the same goal.

At the end of the film, there is an overwhelming emotional impact, and the person saved by Schindler personally appears. We know that there are 6,000 Schindler Jews and their descendants, while there are only 4,000 Jews in Poland. This seems to tell us an obvious truth. Schindler did more than just a country in saving Jews. But this conclusion is too simple. The message of this film is that in the face of the Holocaust, one person did something, while others were insensitive. Perhaps, in order to do what he has done, he must be an unpredictable, reckless, unplanned and reckless liar like him. No rational person with a reasonable plan can go that far.