This list is life.

Vern 2022-04-24 07:01:01

Turning on the TV at midnight to watch "Schutra's List" was doomed to toss and turn that night. The film is less than ten minutes into the beginning, and the Jews in the film have been shot and killed like prey by the Naji army. The director did not take close-up shots of the faces of the deceased, but instead used a wide lens to record the fall of one person after another.

At the same time, Shutra on the other side was drinking and singing with friends freely. At that time, how could he have thought that one day, he would have such a deep bond with that group of people? In fact, from the moment he decided to find Jew Stan as an accountant, Shutra's fate had completely changed.

Looking at it, I actually cried for the brutal German general Goethe. Living in that era, wearing Nayi's military uniform, how many responsibilities and restrictions did you carry? Goethe was undoubtedly in love with the Jewish woman. From the first day I saw Helen, I said, "You will be my maid from now on." Even though she was in bed with different women, in my heart, what I really needed was the one he ordered and shouted. One day, Shutra visited Goethe and said to the girl in the stairwell, "He loves you, but he doesn't know it." One morning, Goethe looked at Helen, leaned forward slowly, and stroked her gently He said softly, "After the war, if you want to write a letter of recommendation... I am willing to write it for you. Sometimes, both of us are lonely." Shouted, "You bitch trying to seduce me." Hit her again. Tears came down, because I remembered a sentence my friend said before: "We need love, and we want to love others. If a person can't love, it is a pity." What Goethe left behind were tears of sympathy. The loved one is clearly standing in front of her, but she wants to deny her and escape this kind of feeling. What is the feeling?

There are many moving scenes in this movie. The most profound scene is that Shutra, with a cigarette in his mouth, earnestly instructs Stan to record one Jewish name after another. By the end, an exhausted Stan leaned against the back of his chair, looked at the typewriter, and said to himself, "This list is life."

Life is fragile. One bullet, one pistol, is enough to send us out of the world.

However, life is so precious. He was still breathing when he woke up, saw the color in his eyes, and couldn't help muttering C'est la vie.

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Extended Reading
  • Carmella 2022-03-20 09:01:03

    Schindler was very impressed by the Nazis sweeping the Jewish quarter inside. The only red in the whole play really made countless people's hearts. John Williams’s Jewish nursery rhymes soundtrack is so good, I deliberately searched for the Chinese lyrics, no matter what I said wrong, don’t care, I just want you to come back well. .

  • Hannah 2021-10-20 18:59:33

    "You are never drunk, that is excellent self-control. Self-control is power." "Power is when we have an absolute reason to kill someone, but we don't do that. That's the style of the ancient emperor. That is. It’s power."

Schindler's List quotes

  • Oskar Schindler: In every business I tried, I can see now, it wasn't me that failed. Something was missing. Even if I'd known what it was, there's nothing I could have done about it because you can't create this thing. And it makes all the difference in the world between success and failure.

    Emilie Schindler: Luck?

    Oskar Schindler: [Schindler kisses his wife's hand and smiles] War.

  • Itzhak Stern: The standard SS rate for skilled Jewish workers is seven marks a day, five for unskilled and women. This is what you pay to the Reich Economic Office. The Jews themselves receive nothing. Poles you pay wages. Generally, they get a little more. Are you listening?

    Oskar Schindler: What was that about the SS? The rate? The what?

    Itzhak Stern: The Jewish worker's salary - you pay it directly to the SS, not to the worker. He gets nothing.

    Oskar Schindler: But it's less. It's less than what I would pay to a Pole.

    Itzhak Stern: It's less.

    Oskar Schindler: That's the point I'm trying to make. Poles cost more. Why should I hire Poles?