Schindler's List is a
1993 American drama film about
Oskar Schindler, a
German businessman who saved the lives of more than a thousand
Polish Jewish refugees during the
Holocaust by employing them in his factories. The film was directed by
Steven Spielberg and based on the novel
Schindler's Ark by
Thomas Keneally. It stars
Liam Neeson as Schindler,
Ralph Fiennes as
Schutzstaffel (SS) officer
Amon Göth, and
Ben Kingsley as Schindler's Jewish accountant
Itzhak Stern.
The film was a box office success and recipient of seven
Academy Awards, including
Best Picture,
Best Director, and
Best Original Score, as well as numerous other awards. In 2007, the
American Film Institute (AFI) ranked the film eighth on its list of the 100 best American films of all time (up one position from its 9th place listing on the 1998 list).
Plot
The film begins in 1939 with the relocation of
Polish Jews from surrounding areas to the
Kraków Ghetto shortly after the beginning of
World War II. Meanwhile,
Oskar Schindler (
Liam Neeson), an unsuccessful businessman, arrives in the city from the
Sudetenland in hopes of making his fortune as a
war profiteer. Schindler, a member of the
National Socialist Party, lavishes bribes upon the
Wehrmacht and
SS officials in charge of procurement. Sponsored by the military, Schindler acquires a factory for the production of army
mess kits. Not knowing much about how to properly run such an enterprise, he gains a close collaborator in
Itzhak Stern (
Ben Kingsley), an official of Krakow's
Judenrat (Jewish Council) who has contacts with the Jewish business community and the
black marketers inside the Ghetto. They lend him the money for the factory in return for a small share of products produced. Opening the factory, Schindler pleases the Nazis and enjoys his newfound wealth and status as "Herr Direktor", while Stern handles all administration. Schindler hires Jews instead of Poles because they cost less (the workers themselves get nothing; the wages are paid to the
SS). Workers in Schindler's factory are allowed outside the ghetto, and Stern falsifies documents to ensure that as many people as possible are deemed "essential" to the German war effort, which saves them from being transported to concentration camps, or being killed.