THE 25TH ANNIVERSARY OF 'SCHINDLER'S LIST'
You are re-releasing 'Schindler’s List' after 25 years. Do you believe it can still make an impact?
At the Tribeca Film Festival, I experienced my first audience in 25 years watching 'Schindler’s List'. It was a full house, and the reaction — I turned to Kate [Capshaw, his wife] and said “Oh my God, they’re still listening.” With this renewed cycle of hate, and initiatives at the Shoah Foundation, I thought it could open up a conversation that genocide can happen anywhere when an ordinary society goes wrong. Charlottesville and the aftermath made a huge impact on wanting to reissue the film.
What sticks with you 25 years later about filming in Poland, where the carnage happened?
In four months’ filming in Krakow, the hair on the back of my neck never went down. It was really hard every morning to simply get out of the car and walk to the set. I wanted to use the locations where Schindler stayed in Krakow, including the Jewish Ghetto, even shooting very close to the Płaszów forced labor camp.
We shot just outside Auschwitz, building a barracks and backing the train into Auschwitz proper, so when the train exits Auschwitz, it appeared in the film as if it’s entering the death camp. That was one of the coldest nights I ever experienced. That mournful silence within the company of actors — you could hear a pin drop.
READ THE NEW YORK TIMES ARTICLE
LINKING THE MEMORY OF THE WORLD
ŚWIATA
Links to the most interesting and valuable articles dedicated to memory around the world (wide web)