The achievement of Schindler’s List - World Socialist Web Site
▻https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2018/12/07/list-d07.html
#Steven_Spielberg’s #Schindler’s_List opened in movie theaters 25 years ago. It went on to win Best Picture, along with six other honors, at the Academy Awards in March 1994.
The film, in a restored version, is being re-released this week and shown in selected theaters in the US. We are posting below the review that was published in the International Workers Bulletin, a forerunner of the World Socialist Web Site, on January 10, 1994.
In a recent interview with NBC News, Spielberg expressed his deep concern about the current rise not only of anti-Semitism, but of “xenophobia” and “racism.” He suggested that “this may be the most important time to re-release this film, possibly now is even a more important time to re-release Schindler’s List than 1993, 1994, when it was initially released. I think there’s more at stake today than even back then.”
–------
Schindler’s List at 25: looking back on Spielberg’s defining Holocaust drama | Film | The Guardian
▻https://www.theguardian.com/film/2018/dec/06/schindlers-list-25th-anniversary-steven-spielberg-holocaust
A big-screen rerelease leads to a re-examination of the 1993 Oscar winner which had a profound effect on critics and audiences
Pamela Hutchinson
@pamhutch
Thu 6 Dec 2018 08.00 GMT
Last modified on Thu 6 Dec 2018 16.25 GMT
Shares
1,054
‘For Spielberg, telling Schindler’s story was a tool to combat ignorance, but it is work that continues.’
‘For Spielberg, telling Schindler’s story was a tool to combat ignorance, but it is work that continues.’ Photograph: Allstar/Cinetext/Universal
Twenty-five years ago, Steven Spielberg brought out two of his best movies, in a matter of months. The films were poles apart in style and subject matter, and the process of completing one while shooting the other left the director exhausted and emotionally ragged. In spring 1993, Spielberg was in Poland, recreating the terror of the Kraków ghetto and the Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp for Schindler’s List by day, and each night he was calling Industrial Light & Magic in California to oversee the special effects for the dinosaurs in Jurassic Park. Spielberg’s friend Robin Williams would call him up once a week to tell him jokes for 15 minutes at a time and release the tension.