TOP "I Could Have Got More" Reactions *SPOILER* - SCHINDLER'S LIST

2024 ж. 13 Нау.
244 208 Рет қаралды

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  • 👍 Like & Subscribe for more! ▶ What Scene Should be next? ▶ Let Us Know if we should do a Part II and WHO should be in it?!

    @1stTimeReact@1stTimeReactАй бұрын
    • Please do Pulp Fiction next!

      @LuisOrtiz-xo5kc@LuisOrtiz-xo5kcАй бұрын
    • There is a LOVE PASSAGE in the Quran which is a Talmudic reference only and Allah makes sure is never applicable to Muslims. I wonder if you know it. Quran 5:32-33 "Ordained for the Children of Israel is that IF A MAN KILL A MAN other than for murder or mischief IT IS AS IF THEY HAVE KILLED THE WHOLE OF MANKIND, AND IF A MAN SAVE A LIFE IT IS AS IF HE HAS SAVED THE WHOLE OF MANKIND. To them was given all prophets (only to Jews is this true), yet still they continue to excess. To them that strive against Allah and his messenger is given: execution by crucifixion, the cutting off of opposite hand and foot, exile from their land. This is the punishment that shall befall them in this life, in the next a grievous punishment shall befall them." The LOVE PASSAGE is declared only for Jews to do and not for Muslims at all. Muslims are to crucify Jews and exile them from their land.

      @ReligionOfSacrifice@ReligionOfSacrificeАй бұрын
    • Try a mash up of “Bridge of Khazad Dum” LOTR Fellowship Reaction GOLD is JUST TRUST ASH 👍👍🤣🤣 Other reactors to consider; Diegesis Rob & Trin Spartan & Pudgey Perfect Mix Centane Rob Squad Movie Reactions Stef Solari Pilar’s Little Studio (subtitles needed) 👏👏👏👏👏

      @flooglebinder3493@flooglebinder3493Ай бұрын
  • I still maintain that he was robbed of an Oscar. Sure, Tom Hanks is brilliant, but that award should have gone to Liam Neeson that year.

    @SailorYuki@SailorYukiАй бұрын
    • Completely agree. Also Ralph Fiennes was exceptional as the horrible Amon Göth

      @B355Y@B355YАй бұрын
    • No. Two great performances can exist in the same year. Hanks was better.

      @williammccormick984@williammccormick984Ай бұрын
    • @@williammccormick984 but they both can't win the Oscar 🤣

      @B355Y@B355YАй бұрын
    • @@B355Y And the right person won it.

      @williammccormick984@williammccormick984Ай бұрын
    • Tom Hanks carried forest Gump.

      @Fudge_Fantasy@Fudge_FantasyАй бұрын
  • Let's not overlook the brilliance of Ben Kingsley in this film.

    @marleinasmom@marleinasmomАй бұрын
    • Agreed.

      @Fatherofheroesandheroines@FatherofheroesandheroinesАй бұрын
    • Absolute legend!

      @vivacious_me@vivacious_meАй бұрын
    • He wasn't even nominated in the 66th Academy Awards. Though not b/c he was overlooked but b/c it was perhaps the most competitive year for the Best Supporting Actor category: Ralph Fiennes as Amon Goth, Tommy Lee Jones as Samuel Gerard (The Fugitive), John Malkovich as Mitch Leary (In the Line of Fire), Leonardo DiCaprio as Arnie Grape (What's Eating Gilbert Grape), Pete Postlethwaite as Giuseppe Conlon (In the Name of the Father), Val Kilmer as Doc Holliday (Tombstone), Sean Penn as David Kleinfeld (Carlito's Way), certain actors in True Romance, etc...

      @jp3813@jp3813Ай бұрын
    • I'd switch out Tommy Lee for Kingsley any day. Lee is good, but the character is nowhere near the depths of Itzhak Stern. ​@@jp3813

      @Kasino80@Kasino80Ай бұрын
    • Watch him in Sexy Beast....what an actor

      @davidkane1658@davidkane1658Ай бұрын
  • This movie is so crazy.. Because for the first time in film history, "dramatization " is actually a toned down version of the actual events to make it more palatable for the audience

    @ElijahBenjamin-ug6op@ElijahBenjamin-ug6opАй бұрын
    • Yeah the books are... i mean... horrible is the only word i can think of. Brilliant film, though. Still one of my favourites.

      @thanossnap4170@thanossnap4170Ай бұрын
    • Hacksaw Ridge did the same thing. People would t have believed the real events. Wild stuff.

      @BravoTango44@BravoTango44Ай бұрын
    • I mean there’s the mini series roots and any of the happy slave depictions in cinema, but I get what you’re trying to convey.

      @rodcarter2082@rodcarter2082Ай бұрын
    • @@rodcarter2082 Cinema can't show what happened, because humas are too horrible. I'm sure a lot of younger people still believe segregation was hundreds of years ago. I mean... I was born before apartheid was abolished. And i'm 35. That is insane to think about.

      @thanossnap4170@thanossnap4170Ай бұрын
    • @@BravoTango44 yes true... The pacific campaign was just as brutal

      @ElijahBenjamin-ug6op@ElijahBenjamin-ug6opАй бұрын
  • Instead of relishing his triumph, Schindler broke down into despair over the realization he could've saved more lives. What a gut-wrenching scene this was.

    @knuckleheadX98@knuckleheadX98Ай бұрын
    • It shows his true testimony of humanity. We lost that as the human race. The guilt that you could have helped just one more person. Never let go of that. Ever. That humanity is what keeps this world alive. Even if it's just complimenting someone on their outfit, will go a long way.

      @SLOTHSRIDEUNICORNS@SLOTHSRIDEUNICORNS20 күн бұрын
    • Great Hollywood moment. That particular moment never happened, though.

      @citizenbobx@citizenbobx13 күн бұрын
  • The director who was responsible for so much childhood joy created one of the most gut-wrenching scenes in cinematic history.

    @PhantomFilmAustralia@PhantomFilmAustraliaАй бұрын
    • Whats his name?

      @Matagu1@Matagu1Ай бұрын
    • What most people don’t know is that after a day of shooting on this movie, Spielberg would go home and connect with the artists at ILM to review the CG work being done on Jurassic Park.

      @rogerdsmith@rogerdsmithАй бұрын
    • ​@rogerdsmith Robin Williams would also call him every night after shooting to help keep his spirits up. Making this movie was emotionally draining Spielberg, and Robin Williams knew it.

      @RemyJackson@RemyJacksonАй бұрын
    • The director is Steven Spielberg

      @blackbolt6027@blackbolt6027Ай бұрын
    • ⁠@@Matagu1Steven Spielberg. Very famous director

      @twelved4983@twelved4983Ай бұрын
  • There is no possible way for me to understand why Liam Neeson didn't win an Academy award that year.

    @Fatherofheroesandheroines@FatherofheroesandheroinesАй бұрын
    • Because the same type of people who came out in support of Palestine on Oct 8th of last year also have votes for Oscar winners.

      @MrVvulf@MrVvulfАй бұрын
    • @@MrVvulf I'm sorry, what? You on the right video bud?

      @themajesticmoose8147@themajesticmoose8147Ай бұрын
    • @@themajesticmoose8147 he is unfortunately correct.

      @Fatherofheroesandheroines@FatherofheroesandheroinesАй бұрын
    • ​@@Fatherofheroesandheroines Also Tom Hanks got it instead for his performance as Forst Gump. So, still at least someone decent got it.

      @RockwellSocratese@RockwellSocrateseАй бұрын
    • @@MrVvulf man, it's gonna be rough for you once you find out Israel fired on its own people on October 7th so they could blame Palestinians for it

      @CarmenFiala@CarmenFialaАй бұрын
  • "There will be generations because of what you did." - always gets me, the enormity of what he did for those bloodlines, when he could have just looked the other way, he risked everything to keep them all as safe as he could until it was over. I remember in the film, as the color slowly crept back into the picture with the candlelight...and then the burst of bright blue sky and the faces of all these survivors from Schindler's acts - there wasn't a dry eye in the theater, I was 13, it was cold, wet and Christmas time - we watched the resolution of the picture with Neeson standing over Oskar's grave...and we all walked out into the night, cold, raining and just wiped the tears from our faces. Such an experience. It even made my Dad tear up...

    @mattturner7531@mattturner7531Ай бұрын
  • The significance of a man who was once worth so much scrambling on the ground to find an inexpensive ring he had mistakenly dropped. That scene really shows how in touch Schindler became with his humanity

    @sheen-4509@sheen-4509Ай бұрын
  • I read today a comment someone made in another, unrelated post. It was, "People worry about time travel because one small change in the past can affect the present, but never think that making one small change today can affect our future." Make a small change towards a better future.

    @zuzax1656@zuzax1656Ай бұрын
  • I read from somewhere that working on this movie weighed so heavily on Spielberg’s heart that he would call Robin Williams at the end of every day to ask him to tell him jokes for 3 hours.

    @josiahricafrente585@josiahricafrente585Ай бұрын
    • And Robin was such a sensitive soul, I wonder how difficult it must've been for him...

      @mousetreehouse6833@mousetreehouse6833Ай бұрын
  • This scene always breaks my heart. He did more than anyone could have. He was a true hero in a very dark time.

    @soundwave6083@soundwave6083Ай бұрын
  • "There will be generations because of what you did" And there are........what a great man

    @jessedellross3245@jessedellross3245Ай бұрын
    • 🤓🤓🤓

      @whatisreddin7367@whatisreddin7367Ай бұрын
  • One of the most emotional scenes in cinema in my opinion.

    @Noahboy8@Noahboy8Ай бұрын
  • My grandpa was in the 3rd army division and helped liberate Dachau and Buchenwald concentration camps. I have photos of those camps! Never ever say it never happened! I have proof! He never said one word about it...

    @mrkrinkle72@mrkrinkle72Ай бұрын
    • My dad was in the Air Force and we lived in Germany in the '70's. We took a tour of Dachau once and it really affected me. Even 30 years after it was operational it just felt weird and wrong, like the very air was poisoned.

      @brettkenschaft4239@brettkenschaft4239Ай бұрын
    • So why are Lefties nowadays are PRO Palästina and people like Greta from sweden against J2ws. Are they SICK???

      @scrinbot@scrinbotАй бұрын
    • ​@@brettkenschaft4239 I truly believe a place can hold energy of previous events. Especially if those events were dark and horrible. No doubt there's plenty of that around these places.

      @plumdutchess@plumdutchessАй бұрын
    • Salute my friend….my grandfather was a B-17 bombardier with the 490th bomb group during that time. He cried every single time he spoke of the war.

      @dominionablazeministriesin9892@dominionablazeministriesin9892Ай бұрын
    • ​@@plumdutchessMy best friend's wife is Polish, and she's visited the Auschwitz memorial site in both parts. She knows I'm a bit of a history nut - unlike her husband - and she was trying to explain how indescribably painful and chilling it is to actually be there in person. Yes, it's changed, but she felt a real unease just walking around, breathing the air, feeling the ground beneath her feet, hearing the noises, the wind blowing etc. Apparently it's like nothing else you'll ever experience, almost as if the voices of 1.1 million souls are faintly whispering to all those who visit, for all eternity, and she said she felt she had to quietly beg for God to forgive humankind when she left. I really want to go there myself, but part of me thinks I'd find it'll take too heavy a toll on my heart.

      @Nightopian1982@Nightopian1982Ай бұрын
  • I think what's horrifying, is the fact that a pin, a FUCKING pin....was worth 1 person.

    @Dan-qy6zv@Dan-qy6zvАй бұрын
    • Welcome to this shitty world. First time?

      @davidsavage5630@davidsavage5630Ай бұрын
  • When it cuts to the in color and the then current day survivors....absolutely devastating.

    @neilmccomsey9550@neilmccomsey9550Ай бұрын
    • I actually feel kinda happy to see the real survivors at the end. It shows them as they are and as they should be: alive and old, a gift thanks to Schindler's hard work

      @Meggimagine@MeggimagineАй бұрын
    • That's the part that has me sobbing 😭 The survivors standing proudly in color! I was 15 when I saw it in the theater with my youth group. Some people were moved to clap and cheer in the moment! Not a dry eye in the entire theater!

      @kylaarmstrong-benjamin8066@kylaarmstrong-benjamin8066Ай бұрын
  • The letter actually saved his life

    @alexdavis-mann8513@alexdavis-mann8513Ай бұрын
  • Such a beautiful scene. After keeping his humanity locked away and remaining stoic for the whole story, he finally lets all of his repressed emotions out in a burst, like a raging river, and at last we see the toll that being around all of this murderous evil has taken on him. He wants no thanks, and feels only regret that he couldn't do more. What an incredible soul he had.

    @jculver1674@jculver1674Ай бұрын
  • I've never not cried at this scene. And here I go again.

    @illiterateno2@illiterateno2Ай бұрын
  • I love and hate that scene. Crying all the time. NEVER let this happen AGAIN! From Germany!

    @kult5185@kult5185Ай бұрын
    • ❤️ 💙 💜

      @Music-Is-Real-Love@Music-Is-Real-LoveАй бұрын
    • Well, we have a psychotic, dictator wannabe that wants to turn America into nazi Germany now. And his name is... trump. But we will not let that happen.

      @Michelles222@Michelles222Ай бұрын
  • I remember my grandmother explaining what the tattoo on her arm was when I was a kid, right after this movie came out

    @limabravo6065@limabravo6065Ай бұрын
    • We're you old enough to understand the situation concerning your grandmother? If so, it must've been devastating for you...

      @mousetreehouse6833@mousetreehouse6833Ай бұрын
    • My sincere condolences to your grandmother.

      @ryuoh6928@ryuoh6928Ай бұрын
    • @@mousetreehouse6833 I was old enough but only just and if my grandmother had told me all that she did like a horror story (which she could have ) I'd have been terrified way more than I was. But to her credit she treated the subject with dignity and while yeah it scared me and was the first time I can remember understanding what people are capable of. But at the end she took my hand and said something I've heard from other survivors since "Its OK, I survived and Hitler didnt" and I think that sentiment says more about the steel in these people's spines than anything else ever could. I've since been to war and seen all kinds of things that I'd rather forget, but it was nothing compared to watching everyone like you be murdered slowly, quickly and everything in between and on an industrial scale, and having the reserves of humanity to come out the other side a whole person and comforted by the thought that the person responsible for your years long torture took the cowards way out. She was as close to a saintly person as I'm ever likely to meet but her story left me with a sense of awe and a little healthy fear. And her always having a gun on her made a lot more sense after I can tell you that, the same little .38 snubby I carry today.

      @limabravo6065@limabravo606529 күн бұрын
  • Too bad most of you weren't around to see it in a large movie theater on its opening weekend. Imagine the sound of 1,000 people sobbing.

    @stevensiferd7104@stevensiferd7104Ай бұрын
    • I had a few friends who had already seen it and they warned me to bring an entire box of kleenex. I actually did. And good thing because there were so many people around me sobbing and couldn't wipe their noses and I spent the last 5 minutes of the movie handing out tissue.

      @clarkmacgowan5114@clarkmacgowan511415 күн бұрын
  • This is the one movie that I cannot and will not watch again. It's just too overwhelming and sad. And unfortunately we're getting to a point in history where I feel compelled to ask...Everyone knows this is a true story, right?

    @brettkenschaft4239@brettkenschaft4239Ай бұрын
    • Yes, it is happening in Gaza right now

      @shawnanderson6313@shawnanderson6313Ай бұрын
    • ​@@shawnanderson6313 It shouldn't be happening to anyone at all no matter what

      @jaknasty6464@jaknasty6464Ай бұрын
    • ​@@shawnanderson6313Indeed... never again, means never again FOR ANYONE!

      @Tricia_K@Tricia_KАй бұрын
    • Yes your point being ? @@jaknasty6464

      @shawnanderson6313@shawnanderson6313Ай бұрын
    • ​@@shawnanderson6313Ukraine

      @Usandthem31@Usandthem31Ай бұрын
  • "So much death. What can a man do against such reckless hate?" King Theoden, Lord of the Rings

    @killer92173@killer92173Ай бұрын
  • I’m pretty sure that everyone’s mind goes to the little girl in the red coat when he says “I could have got one more”. Absolutely heartbreaking but an incredibly important film.

    @leonbrooks2107@leonbrooks2107Ай бұрын
    • 1 million children

      @ConstructionHoney@ConstructionHoneyАй бұрын
  • I'm a 6 feet 1 inch 210 pounds tough looking guy, and I cry easily when emotionally moved. I can't help it. I'm actually glad to be this way. It doesn't make me weak, it makes me human.

    @rsviews2167@rsviews2167Ай бұрын
    • Pssh, you not that big bro, chill

      @747Cone@747ConeАй бұрын
    • 6ft 4" 120kg & was crying a bit too.

      @dave_h_8742@dave_h_8742Ай бұрын
    • @@dave_h_8742 See now that's worth saying your a big guy. Thank you.

      @747Cone@747ConeАй бұрын
    • Calm down mate it's just a film

      @stevovimy@stevovimyАй бұрын
    • I'm an ugly 6ft2, 98 kilo Aussie bloke who loves beer and heavy metal music, and I bawl my f*cking eyes out every time. And watching peoples' reactions makes it happen all over again...

      @Roddrummer@RoddrummerАй бұрын
  • 2 movies about 2 different extraordinary men saving lives in 2 different parts of WWII - Oskar Schindler in Europe and Desmond Doss in the Pacific. Schindler: "I should have gotten one more." Doss: "Dear Lord, please help me get one more." Remarkable stories, I'm just sorry most of the world never even heard of these men until after they were gone. EDIT: By the way, speaking of saving one more life, another film you will want to see is opening this month - "One Life", about Nicholas Winton, a Brit who rescued hundreds of Jewish children from Nazi occupied territories. Another amazing story.😢

    @moeball740@moeball740Ай бұрын
    • That the one with Anthony Hopkins?

      @welcometothemovies9157@welcometothemovies9157Ай бұрын
    • @@welcometothemovies9157 Yes, I believe so.

      @moeball740@moeball740Ай бұрын
    • Hacksaw Ridge another beauty of a film…flawless

      @dominionablazeministriesin9892@dominionablazeministriesin9892Ай бұрын
    • Let us not forget Audie Murphy.

      @stinky60096@stinky60096Ай бұрын
    • I haven't seen "Schindler's List", but watching this clip made me immediately connect a parallel to that scene from "Hacksaw Ridge".

      @thejuniorseas7683@thejuniorseas768329 күн бұрын
  • I Like Tom Hanks very much, but this is Liam Neesson in his absolute best. This was really worth an Oscar.

    @deniscabrerizo9910@deniscabrerizo9910Ай бұрын
  • I hope the reactors watch One Life. It's about Sir Nicholas Winton saving the lives of 669 children.

    @Lloyd-Franklin@Lloyd-FranklinАй бұрын
    • Great movie!!.

      @Music-Is-Real-Love@Music-Is-Real-Love26 күн бұрын
  • Its impossible to watch this scene, the acting combined with the music, without crying. The music cuts right through your soul

    @michadegraaf4570@michadegraaf4570Ай бұрын
  • Neesan and Fiennes were robbed of Oscars that year.

    @worldofdoom995@worldofdoom995Ай бұрын
    • Too many folks today think Fiennes’ portrayal of Voldemort was his best villain, never realizing he portrayed one of the most despicable human beings in history. He is an amazing actor

      @bullgravy6906@bullgravy690626 күн бұрын
    • @@bullgravy6906Yeah, I always kinda giggle when people talk about how he was so amazing as Voldemort. Like... we already saw him as a sadistic racist Nazi, of course he could act that part again in a robe with a stick in his hand.

      @kaceyreed1284@kaceyreed128423 күн бұрын
  • I love movies-comedies, action, thrillers, etc. But this film shows why it's so very important to produce, show and archive films of historical and human significance. Some will attempt to downplay or deny events such as this, but this movie, and others like it, will let this piece of history remain available to future generations. What a powerful telling of history.

    @AVGuyhall@AVGuyhallАй бұрын
  • My father teared up when this scene played. I've never seen him overcome with emotion like that before. The amount of sadness for the tragedy mixed with anger at how this all even happened was all across his face during the final moments of the film. Movies like this are meant to remind us and warn us about the worst humanity has to offer and to hopefully help us never repeat the mistakes that led to these events.

    @Whineanddine52@Whineanddine52Ай бұрын
  • This all happened in my country. My grandmother also hid Jews in her house. She's dead now but I'm still proud of her...

    @rafakowalczyk3044@rafakowalczyk3044Ай бұрын
    • Bless your grandmother!

      @kaceyreed1284@kaceyreed128423 күн бұрын
    • God blessed your grannie.

      @lesliebegazo4342@lesliebegazo434223 күн бұрын
  • One of the first movies that really broke me when I watched. I was a kid and network tv was airing it uncut as seen in theaters - no commercials, unedited for content - I think I was in middle school. Such a heavy movie.

    @Philsh12@Philsh12Ай бұрын
    • I remember that. On my local station they gave a parental warning.

      @Fatherofheroesandheroines@FatherofheroesandheroinesАй бұрын
    • @@Fatherofheroesandheroines they did but my parents didn’t have a clue what I was doing/watching most of the time, definitely saw things I really shouldn’t have waaaay to early, lol

      @Philsh12@Philsh12Ай бұрын
  • My God. Those violins sound like they are weeping.

    @user-us5pv8zw3z@user-us5pv8zw3zАй бұрын
    • Violins were made to imitate the range and sound of a humans voice. This masterpiece of music is a perfect example.

      @ichmeiner4531@ichmeiner4531Ай бұрын
  • It was during passover of 2018 when I got the Blu-ray of Schindler's List. I cried in this scene. As the credits played after the film visit Schindler's headstone with piles of stones on top (Jewish tradition of respect) in the present day I sat there taken back by this documentary drama. My wife went to the bathroom as the credits and the piano theme played, but she came back she found me fallen over on the sofa crying. I am a messianic jew, born in the house of Levi, and I am a Kohen. These were my people who suffered.

    @mkaplan1383@mkaplan1383Ай бұрын
    • So humbled by your pain. Bless you.

      @stinky60096@stinky60096Ай бұрын
  • This compilation video shows us that no matter where you’re from in the world, or what differences you have, there’s a real human connection to Oskar Schindler’s lamentation.

    @williambryan3346@williambryan3346Ай бұрын
    • Oskar Schindler is the only member of the Nazi Party to be buried in Jerusalem, and listed among those they call "Righteous among the Nations", the term used by Jews for Gentiles who aided and saved European Jews during the Holocaust.

      @Isildun9@Isildun9Ай бұрын
  • I clicked this link because I thought it would have been interesting to see the reactions and then after the second one, I started to cry too.

    @SickNickManson66@SickNickManson66Ай бұрын
  • I love that line from the Talmud. It's so true. The world is different for everyone who lives in it, so if you save a person's life, you also save their world, the entire world they lived in. It underscores how much lives within each being, how much history, how much vision, how much pain, how much experience. Every person contains an entire world, formed of their experiences, feelings, thoughts, hopes. Every single one.

    @Serai3@Serai3Ай бұрын
  • I went to see this movie in theatres when it came out and all of us left, silently, but weeping. We walked slowly off the theatre...

    @LadyMorgaine1976@LadyMorgaine1976Ай бұрын
  • Magnificent scene in a movie that touches one's soul deeply, which is the ultimate expression of art in my opinion. How Neeson didn't win an Oscar is proof that the whole award's thing is irrelevant.

    @el_mal_de_ojo@el_mal_de_ojoАй бұрын
  • If this breakdown really occured, it not only shows a flawed and tragic induvidual, but actual growth that he acknowledges by viewing not only the actions they praised, but the sins he could have abstained to enrich his life with the source of our only real happiness: each other.

    @ChairmanKiel@ChairmanKielАй бұрын
  • I enjoyed this, well done. A couple of suggestions; Return of the King “I can carry you” and “you bow to no one”. Also Sixth Sense again with the car scene. 💚

    @user-np2dp8ck4j@user-np2dp8ck4jАй бұрын
  • There are few movies on my 'never watch again' list. This is one. Watched this back in the 90s and to this day remember how physically and emotionally drained i was at this masterpiece.

    @markhoward408@markhoward408Ай бұрын
  • Just wanted you to know IM crying right along with you, Doesnt matter how many times ive watched this movie, this part, this story, WOW! Bravo Mr. Spielberg, BEN and LIAM! WHomever casted this movie, Perfect. What a wonderful story to tell. im thankful for it!

    @tas22222@tas22222Ай бұрын
  • I didn't know I needed to cry this hard tonight, I guess you did.

    @buddystewart2020@buddystewart2020Ай бұрын
  • Real heroes are like that. No matter how much they do, they never feel like they've done enough.

    @victormagana774@victormagana774Ай бұрын
  • Liam did such an incredible job of portraying Oscar. My God....the anguish of the man... standing in the very heart of darkness, which he could not stop. Yet he saved over a thousand lives. Remember his story... then go, and do the same.

    @gabrieljohns8161@gabrieljohns8161Ай бұрын
  • That "i couldn't done more" speech has to be one of the best in any movie ive ever seen.

    @ldm673@ldm673Ай бұрын
  • I made it through the whole movie without a tear, but this scene got me so hard. The full weight of what you've seen during the whole movie just hits you.

    @djgizmoe@djgizmoeАй бұрын
  • Sucks that all of his efforts ended up with him living in poverty and declaring bankruptcy twice before dying of a heart attack.

    @gwynbliedd_@gwynbliedd_Ай бұрын
    • At least he knew the difference he made in the world. Not many can live such a heroic life.

      @unclejoe3397@unclejoe3397Ай бұрын
  • “A person Stern”, the simplest and yet most powerful line in movie history. Change my mind

    @Grande79@Grande79Ай бұрын
  • every person in the world should be made to watch this movie

    @moviesrocks2@moviesrocks2Ай бұрын
    • TOTALLY agree!

      @wendyryder2708@wendyryder2708Ай бұрын
    • found the jew

      @whatisreddin7367@whatisreddin7367Ай бұрын
  • There will be Generations because of you.

    @bolikde9389@bolikde9389Ай бұрын
  • This movie toght me that even in the darkest moments in history there can still be sparks of good acts in humanity.

    @mistycampaign9344@mistycampaign9344Ай бұрын
  • Tom Hanks won for Philadelphia. It was a heart wrenching story that was completely focused on him. His performance deserved the Oscar. Schindler's List was more like an ensemble cast that put in brilliant performances. It definitely deserved Best Picture. And finally Steven Spielberg could not be denied the Oscar. But, besides the strong cast performances, the true brilliance of Schindler's List was the visuals. Old men and women made to run, naked, in a circle. Children hiding in the sewers. The callus behavior of the Nazi's. The dead stacked in a mass grave. That was the real power of Schindler's List.

    @stinky60096@stinky60096Ай бұрын
  • How have people never seen this.

    @Fudge_Fantasy@Fudge_FantasyАй бұрын
  • Liam Neeson wasn’t lying. He truly is a man of many skills.

    @lucasdotcomm@lucasdotcommАй бұрын
  • This scene will always kill me and pluck my heartstrings

    @ShatteredDreams90@ShatteredDreams90Ай бұрын
  • I traveled around Bayern 5 years ago with one of my closest friends and my dog. We visited Dachau taking turns while one of us stayed outside with my dog (as dogs aren't allowed inside). Good thing we had an excuse for not staying too long in...and we still came out bawling. Never forget (and to think that now a whole civilian population is being massacred again and the irony of who's doing the massacre...how low can we, as Human Beings, continue to get?)

    @sarat.1744@sarat.1744Ай бұрын
    • Tal parece que las víctimas se volvieron victimarios 😔😔 y es DEMASIADO trágico, injusto, cruel y los epítetos podrían seguir pero son nuestros gobiernos los que se deben fajar los pantalones y hacerlos el pare porque ELLOS SÍ PUEDEN hacerlo, tienen el poder, nosotros desafortunadamente no 😭😭😭😭.

      @lesliebegazo4342@lesliebegazo434223 күн бұрын
  • Gandalf "Its what we do with the time that is given to us." It is purpose of the later generations to never let it happen again! NEVER AGAIN, NEVER FORGET!

    @conniegaylord5206@conniegaylord5206Ай бұрын
  • You really do need to give those tear ducts a good flushing every now and then 😭

    @KB-xp6dq@KB-xp6dqАй бұрын
  • Well this is a new level of masochism for me.

    @mattgates8865@mattgates8865Ай бұрын
  • This one killed me😢

    @charlesbarnes6912@charlesbarnes6912Ай бұрын
  • Really love the scene the enormity of his actions are essentially lost on him as he doesn't see the 1000 people he saved but the millions he couldn't. Liam really plays it so well a man broken by what he views as inaction despite being literally surrounded by people thankful for doing all he could and giving up practically everything to save them.

    @BaeBunni@BaeBunniАй бұрын
  • Damn, you are cranking out these videos one after another. Impressive production rate. And you’re getting the views as well.

    @NemeanLion-@NemeanLion-Ай бұрын
  • I can;t watch this brilliantly made film now without seeing the standing ovations given to an actual SS criminal in the Canadian Parliament last September. It makes me physically sick. The Soviet people and Red Army lost 27 million people fighting the monsters who perpetrated the Holocaust. They destroyed 80% of Hitler's war machine. Their sacrifice must never, ever be forgotten as it was the primary reason Nazi Germany was defeated.

    @escapetheratracenow9883@escapetheratracenow9883Ай бұрын
    • Germany was overstretched

      @yvonnesanders4308@yvonnesanders4308Ай бұрын
    • @@yvonnesanders4308 They needed the oil, gas, wheat, steel, fertilizer etc to power the intended 1000 Year Reich.

      @escapetheratracenow9883@escapetheratracenow9883Ай бұрын
    • Don't forget Lend/Lease. Without it, things would have been a lot different. Luckily, they weren't.

      @Muschelschubs3r@Muschelschubs3rАй бұрын
    • lol. google the Holodomor.

      @whatisreddin7367@whatisreddin7367Ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this. Actually been waiting for this one.

    @leoffdagrate@leoffdagrateАй бұрын
  • There is only ONE WORD to describe this movie MASTERPIECE...

    @thomasjones4265@thomasjones4265Ай бұрын
  • Incredible movie. What a scene. As perfection as you can get

    @questionblock8949@questionblock8949Ай бұрын
  • That scene gets me every time and the last scene at the grave.

    @user-jl5lo6cx4g@user-jl5lo6cx4gАй бұрын
  • This channel is going places

    @tisdue@tisdueАй бұрын
  • The movie is so touching. The reality today..not so much.

    @riverraid81@riverraid81Ай бұрын
    • 👌😞😞

      @Tricia_K@Tricia_KАй бұрын
  • When I first started watching your channel the first scene I thought of was this scene right here. When I watched Schindler's List in the movie theater, I walked out a mess. This scene in particular just turned me into a puddle. It broke my heart. I'm glad that other's felt the same way. I bought the DVD as well but could never watch it. It's not like I forgot the movie and may have avoided it so I wouldn't be heartbroken again. Of course, it happened when I watched this video. I begin getting weepy just thinking about it.

    @sergiorivas@sergiorivasАй бұрын
  • I have watched Schindler's List back in college back in the early 1990's. But more than years later, the most haunting image for me from this film is the file of human corpse being casts in fire and that one stand-alone image of a little girl in red dress walking on the desolate street (only to see later on the young girl's demise). This film is so powerful that it's message has embedded itself in my memory. This film also made me aware of the acting prowess of Liam Neeson

    @enricotoloy@enricotoloy27 күн бұрын
  • Very well done, so so touching. Thank you for posting.

    @hmsljj@hmsljjАй бұрын
  • This conversation did not happen in reality:) which makes this one of the most beautifully written scenes in cinema 😭 looking at his possessions, crying because human life was worth so much more. Gets me every single time 🥺😭

    @OpalLeigh@OpalLeighАй бұрын
  • I can’t believe this is the same movie that has a very funny scene involving hiring an typewriter. Man Steven Spielberg knows his craft!!!!!

    @eminosose@eminososeАй бұрын
  • I first learned the story about Anne Frank, "Boy Meets World" episode in the early 90s. Then i read her book. Then i watched this. Maaan, i felt a whole lot for Jewish people bc they suffered so much & had to pass it on to the next generation. Im black, Catholic & hard of hearing woman & i loved history. This movie here taught me a lot. Respect, love & be kind to other. We are different but we are sharing one thing in which is Earth. Bless yall so ever much. ❤❤❤

    @tracyleesmith781@tracyleesmith781Ай бұрын
  • I literally had to to walk out of the theater because I was sobbing so hard. This movie destroyed me.

    @touchtherapy4kidz@touchtherapy4kidzАй бұрын
  • If possible, i think another important scene in the movie I'd love to see you to make a video of is the scene when Stern accepts Oskar's drink, accepting Oskar as a good man and they have a drink in silence.

    @thehumblevaudevillain@thehumblevaudevillainАй бұрын
    • For some reason, it was the children hiding inside the latrine toilets that has always stuck in my mind 💔

      @kaceyreed1284@kaceyreed128423 күн бұрын
  • I can think of so many scenes in movies that have very few to no reactions. Up! - Climbing up the hill scene Karate Kid - ending Ghost - the pottery scene The Fugitive - the dam scene Dead Poets Society - ending The Sting - ending On Golden Pond - "gettin' dark Chelsea" scene Awakenings - Leonard's relapse scene

    @libertyresearch-iu4fy@libertyresearch-iu4fyАй бұрын
  • A film that never leaves you... and still.. STILL humans do not learn.. sad times.

    @twohammersverdanskaddict8567@twohammersverdanskaddict8567Ай бұрын
  • Has anyone ever heard of the Bainbridge Island exclusionary zone? Basically, Japanese Americans and other legal non-citizens of Japanese descent lived in and around Bainbridge Island, Washington. During WWII, they were rounded up and placed in camps in the deserts of California and elsewhere. Several locals took legal ownership of their Japanese neighbors' property, sometimes very valuable farm land. Once the war concluded and we returned to relative normalcy, these neighbors returned the property to the Japanese for nothing. Just wanted to share that.

    @teeheeteeheeish@teeheeteeheeishАй бұрын
    • Yes, 😢

      @juliaalexander5788@juliaalexander5788Ай бұрын
  • John Rabe hearing about oskar: “those are rookie numbers you gotta bump those numbers up.”

    @bufongodemdabae308@bufongodemdabae308Ай бұрын
  • Yeah, that scene fractured me. I still remember sobbing like a baby! 😭

    @rackinfrackin2883@rackinfrackin2883Ай бұрын
  • This is one movie I feel everyone should watch. The acting from everyone is amazing and they did such a beautiful job with a horrific subject.

    @violetpup4272@violetpup4272Ай бұрын
    • maybe some people prefer non fictional movies

      @whatisreddin7367@whatisreddin7367Ай бұрын
  • I got through 1 reaction and started bawling

    @brianrogers7360@brianrogers7360Ай бұрын
  • I've said it before, but I'll say it again, Steven Spielberg making this absolute masterpiece after making schlock movies his whole life is like Zane Gray turning around and writing Romeo & Juliet.

    @anonygent@anonygentАй бұрын
  • I remember watching this in the theater and bawling like a little kid through the ending scenes. Bawling.

    @steveparish4209@steveparish420926 күн бұрын
  • I was in the theatre for this once in a lifetime masterpiece. You could hear the sobbing from the whole theatre.

    @GORT70@GORT70Ай бұрын
  • I watch this movie every few years just to remind myself of the importance of it. No matter how many times I've watched I always sob during this scene .

    @CBO4evr@CBO4evrАй бұрын
  • You know who else was a real life hero? Gert Frobe who played Auric Goldfinger in the 007 film. He was a villain in the movies but in real life he played the part of a Nazi to use his position to help many Jewish people to safety throughout the war at great personal risk to himself. His films were banned in some countries due to his Nazi affiliation until a Jewish survivor came forward and told how he hid and saved the man and his family. No one will ever know how many he may have helped save..

    @davidsavage5630@davidsavage5630Ай бұрын
  • The thing that always gets me, is that it's such a human reaction. We as the viewer know that what he did took tremendous courage and humanity, yet, a normal human reaction to praise during such tragedy is to see all the ways you could've done better and only focus on your "mistakes"

    @trevorjackson4744@trevorjackson474428 күн бұрын
  • I've only cried with 3 movies in my life. This is one of them, and it devastated me for like 2 days. What a beautiful yet harsh movie

    @JokenHatake@JokenHatakeАй бұрын
    • Have you seen "Jacob the Liar" starring Robin Williams?

      @b7748@b7748Ай бұрын
    • @@b7748 i haven't, but now i will. Thanks for the recommendation!

      @JokenHatake@JokenHatakeАй бұрын
  • Greg cries at everything ever hahahah

    @bobbyfischer9927@bobbyfischer9927Ай бұрын
  • I’m not emotional when it comes to movies but this is one of few Hollywood scenes that gets to me.

    @connorgoss7489@connorgoss7489Ай бұрын
  • I have to say my life changed with this movie but I must admit it was not the first time, I already watched it younger but couldn't understand the weight, you really need context and history, culture and religion, a little of everything to really comprehend this darkness and yet beautiful sight.

    @LuisAlbertoPerezNajera-xz1hl@LuisAlbertoPerezNajera-xz1hlАй бұрын
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