Steven Spielberg told the “girl in the red coat” from Schindler’s List not to watch until she was 18.
She watched it at 11 and was horrified.
“I was ashamed of being in the movie.”
At 18, she watched it again.
She realized “I had been part of something I could be proud of.”
“Do not compare, do not measure. No other way is like yours. All other ways deceive and tempt you. You must fulfil the way that is in you.”
- Dr. Carl Jung
Lo del @TolucaFC ya es algo muy turbio, ayudas descaradas en @LigaBBVAMX y @TheChampions estoy seguro que en unos años sabremos el porqué de tantas y tantas rojas perdonadas en finales
Philip Seymour Hoffman showing up in The Talented Mr. Ripley (1999) instantly changes the energy of the movie. That entrance.… complete scene stealer from the second he appears.
Amon Göth in Schindler’s List (1993) may be one of the most terrifying villains in film history.
What makes him so frightening is not intelligence, power, or theatrical evil — but cruelty without reason.
In the haunting “Balcony Hunt” scene, Göth casually shoots prisoners from his balcony as if human life means nothing. One moment calm, the next violently unpredictable, he turns fear into something constant.
Amon Göth is terrifying because he doesn’t feel like a movie villain.
He feels real.