Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Film Lesson: "Schindler's List"


In our Global 4 class, we watched the movie "Schindler's List". This movie illustrated the Holocaust in a less disturbing manner. The movie also threw in some romance to make the story a bit more interesting, I guess you could say. Although the movie included fictional scenes of the Jews being taken away to the concentration camps and being killed and tortured, it still was not as powerful as "Night and Fog". This does not mean that "Schindler's List" didn't leave me upset and bothered. Something that was powerful to me as a viewer was how the children were roughly taken away from their parents by the Nazis. They would be taken to work at the concentration camps and they were to be tortured if they didn't obey the Nazis that ran the camps.

Another thing in the movie that bothered me was how the children would have to view all this violence happening around them. They probably saw their own neighbors get violently beaten to death. That is something that can be very traumatizing for these children at such a young age. It's sad to know that some of these children didn't live long enough to finally be liberated. These children probably had goals they wanted to achieve in the future and their dreams were crushed just because of cruelty and prejudice. As I said in my previous blog, I believe "Night and Fog" was more powerful than "Schindler's List". Seeing the real stuff has a more powerful effect than a Hollywood version. Most of the scenes in "Schindler's List" will stay in my head for a minimal amount of time, but the many scenes in "Night and Fog" will definitely stay in my head for a larger amount of time, if not as long as I live. Again, I say that the Holocaust is an event in history that I will never forget reading and learning about.

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