Wednesday, 28 December 2011

Why I love Classics- 'Schindler's List: A Review


Directed by Steven Spielberg, ‘Schindler’s List’ is a heart-rending account of The Holocaust and how Oskar Schindler, a German businessman and war-profiteer, saves the lives of more than one thousand Jewish-Polish refugees from imminent death and entire extinction of the community.
       The film documents and recreates vividly the carnage during World War II, when Nazis occupied Krakow and dispossessed the Jews of their businesses, their homes, and placed them in inhuman conditions in ghettos and from there, moved them to concentration camps for execution. The change of heart of Oskar Schindler from an uncaring, womanising, pleasure-loving businessman to an unlikely hero that he eventually turns into by saving over a thousand Jews by making a list and employing them in his factory marks the magnanimity of his act as against the stomach-turning barbarian of the Nazis.
       For an adaptation (based on the novel ‘Schindler’s Ark); the film has been excellently directed with some supremely realistic performances- be it Liam Neeson as the protagonist or Ben Kingsley as his close Jewish collaborator and Ralph Fiennes as Amon Goeth. It has been brilliantly shot in black and white to give the effect of certain graveness and starkness that the story conveys. The cinematography that plays with different grains further adds to the atmosphere, as does the thoughtfully selected music score. Through all these and many more combined factors, the effect on the audience is riveting, to say the least.
       The stunned silence that follows the running time of the movie effectively surmises the horror that makes one cringe at the atrocities meted out during The Holocaust. The violent, graphic scenes are incorporated to show the ruthless brutality and in that, it succeeds in having the desired effect. This line conveys it all - “Whoever saves one life, saves the world entire.”

No comments:

Post a Comment