Schindler’s List

25 years have passed since the premiere of one of the most important films in the history of cinema. Steven Spielberg’s moving, shocking Schindler’s List returns to theaters! The film will be available again on the big screen on January 27, 2019. This is not a coincidence date – this is the day of the 74th anniversary of the liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau camp.

Cinema Classics: Schindler’s List

January 27th, 2019, 7 PM
Forum cinema, 5 Legionowa Street
Tickets: 12 PLN / regular ticket, 10 PLN / discount ticket – available at the cinema’s box office and on bilety.bok.bialystok.pl

Schindler’s List
USA 1993, 195′
dir. Steven Spielberg

Based on a true story, Steven Spielberg’s Schindler’s List stars Liam Neeson as Oskar Schindler, a German businessman in Poland who sees an opportunity to make money from the Nazis’ rise to power. He starts a company to make cookware and utensils, using flattery and bribes to win military contracts, and brings in accountant and financier Itzhak Stern (Ben Kingsley) to help run the factory. By staffing his plant with Jews who’ve been herded into Krakow’s ghetto by Nazi troops, Schindler has a dependable unpaid labor force. For Stern, a job in a war-related plant could mean survival for himself and the other Jews working for Schindler. However, in 1942, all of Krakow’s Jews are assigned to the Plaszow Forced Labor Camp, overseen by Commandant Amon Goeth (Ralph Fiennes), an embittered alcoholic who occasionally shoots prisoners from his balcony. Schindler arranges to continue using Polish Jews in his plant, but, as he sees what is happening to his employees, he begins to develop a conscience. He realizes that his factory (now refitted to manufacture ammunition) is the only thing preventing his staff from being shipped to the death camps. Soon Schindler demands more workers and starts bribing Nazi leaders to keep Jews on his employee lists and out of the camps. By the time Germany falls to the allies, Schindler has lost his entire fortune — and saved 1,100 people from likely death. Schindler’s List was nominated for 12 Academy Awards and won seven, including Best Picture and a long-coveted Best Director for Spielberg, and it quickly gained praise as one of the finest American movies about the Holocaust.

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