Tuesday, November 30, 1993

Schindler’s List released

Schindler’s List


Released: November 30, 1993


Studio: Universal Pictures


Genre: war epic/history


Box Office (numbers in millions):

Domestic: 96.90 Worldwide: 322.10


Adjusted for Inflation:

Domestic: 208.10 Worldwide: 696.20

Directing: Steven Spielberg


Screenwriting: Steven Zaillian


Starring: Liam Neeson, Ben Kingsley, Ralph Fiennes



Review:

“Who the hell would’ve thought that immature, moneybags director Steven Spielberg would make a movie that is (a) a serious, grown-up film, and (b) the best movie made by Hollywood in years?” ML “As in his earlier work, there’s a sense of wonder at the inexplicable, but it’s no longer childlike.” T95 This is his “greatest dramatic, black and white masterpiece.” FS “Filmed almost entirely on location in Poland…with a pace to match the most frenzied Spielberg works, this looks and feels like nothing Hollywood has ever made before.” LM “As painful as it is powerful,” TV this is “Spielberg’s most intense and personal film to date.” LM

The movie is a “staggering adaptation of Thomas Keneally’s best-seller” LM about Oskar Schindler (Neeson), the real-life, opportunistic, German Catholic industrialist. He “initially flourished by sucking up to the Nazis” LM and “employing cheap labor from Polish Jews in his Cracow cookware factory.” FS He eventually went broke, but by giving them jobs, he saved “over 1,000 Jews from the senseless, brutal extermination in Auschwitz.” FS

In addition to Neeson’s “towering” LM performance as Schindler, Kingsley is “superb as his Jewish accountant (and conscience)” LM and Fiennes, who portrays Amon Goeth, is “the hideous, disturbing evil personified” FS “odious Nazi commandant.” LM

“The elastic editing and grainy camerawork lend an immediacy as surprising as the shockingly matter-of-fact depiction of violence and casual killing.” T95 “At times the film becomes a scream of horror at the inhumanity it recalls and recreates, and the b/w images never become aesthetically sanitized. True, the Jews are huddled, victimized masses. True, too, that Spielberg finally relents and tries to ‘explain’ Schindler so that the last hour becomes steadily more simplistic and sentimental. Otherwise, however, it’s a noble achievement, and essential viewing.” T95


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Awards:


Oscars:

Wins: 7 – Best Picture, Best Director, Adapted Screenplay, Art Direction, Cinematography, Editing, and Original Score

Nominations: 12 – including Best Actor (Neeson), Best Supporting Actor (Fiennes)


Other Lists/Honors:


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First posted 7/30/2019; last updated 6/2/2023.

Friday, June 11, 1993

Jurassic Park brings dinosaurs to life

Jurassic Park


Released: June 11, 1993


Studio: Universal


Genre: sci-fi/fantasy/monster


Box Office (numbers in millions):

Domestic: 402.80 Worldwide: 1109.80


Adjusted for Inflation:

Domestic: 900.64 Worldwide: 2183.50

Directing: Steven Spielberg


Screenwriting: Michael Crichton, David Koepp


Starring: Sam Neill, Laura Dern, Jeff Goldblum, Richard Attenborough, Wayne Knight


Review:

“Dinosaurs are recreated from genetic material for a theme park on a remote island. Chaos erupts during a test run when the dinosaurs break free and prey on the park guests. Landmark visual effects brought dinosaurs back to life.” A07

“When dinosaurs first ruled the movie-Earth, they did so in a herky-jerky stop-motion manner that while charmingly effective, required a fair dose of disbelief-suspension.” E18 Spielberg, however, makes us feel “for the first time they could be real, breathing animals (as opposed to monsters).” E18 The credit goes both to the “astonishing animatronics work” E18 of Stan Winston and the groundbreaking CGI from Industrial Light & Magic.

Critic Roger Ebert said Spielberg was so devoted to creating the dinosaurs that the human characters suffered. Ebert calls them “a ragtag bunch of half-realized, sketched-in personalities, who exist primarily to scream, utter dire warnings, and outwit the monsters.” RE

Richard Attenborough as the millionaire who creates the dinosaur theme park is “basically a good soul” RE but “realizes the error of tampering with nature.” RE Two dinosaur experts (Neill and Dern) are invited, along with a mathematician (Goldblum) to preview the park before it opens.

“An unscrupulous employee (Wayne Knight) shuts down the park’s computer program so he can smuggle out some dinosaur embryos.” RE “The subsequent events – after the creates get loose – follow an absolutely standard outline” RE although “there is a high technical level to the execution of the cliches” RE because the director is Spielberg.


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Box Office:


Oscars:

Wins: 3 – Best Sound Effects Editing, Best Sound, Best Visual Effects

Nominations: 3


Other Awards:


Other Lists/Honors:


First posted 5/29/2023.