Want to collect fifty classic movies.

Titanic

◎Synopsis:

In search of the Titanic, which sank in the Atlantic Ocean in 1912, and the ship's precious treasure - the valuable "Heart of the Ocean" jewel - treasure hunter Brock salvages a rusty safe from the wreck. Rusty safe from the wreck, but unexpectedly there is only a well-preserved sketch - a young woman wearing a diamond necklace. The TV news caught the attention of a 100-year-old woman, who was so excited that she took a helicopter to Brock's salvage ship. It turned out that her name was Ruth Dawson. Dawson, the woman in the portrait.

◎Chinese name "Titanic" / "Titanic"

◎Titanic

◎Year 1997

◎Country United States

◎Category Disaster/Romance

◎Length 195Min13sec

◎Worldwide box office 1.845 billion U.S. dollars ($600 million in North America, $300 million in China). North America $600 million, China 3.6 billion yuan)

◎Screen color Color

◎Dialogue language English

◎Theme song "Love Never Ends"

◎Directed by James Cameron James Cameron

◎Special Guests: Leonardo DiCaprio Leonardo DiCaprio .... Jack Dawson

Kate Winslet Kate Winslet .... Rose DeWitt Bukater

Billy Zenner Billy Zane .... Caledon 'Cal' Hockley

Kathy Bates Kathy Bates .... Margaret 'Molly' Brown

Bill Paxton Bill Paxton .... Brock Lovett

Gloria Stuart .... Rose Dawson Calvert (Old Rose)

Frances Fisher Frances Fisher .... Ruth DeWitt Bukater

Bernard Hill Bernard Hill .... Capt. Edward J. Smith

Jonathan Hyde Jonathan Hyde .... J. Bruce Ismay

David Warner David Warner .... Spicer Lovejoy

Victor Garber Victor Garber .... Thomas Andrews

The Sound of Music The Sound of Music

Title The Sound of Music

Translation The Sound of Music

Date 1965

Country USA

Length 174 Mins

Category Musicals

Language English/Mandarin

Directed by

Robert Wise Robert Wise

Written by

Ernest Lehman .... (screenplay)

Howard Lindsay .... .... (book) &

Russel Crouse .... (book)

Maria von Trapp .... (book "The Story of the Trapp Family Singers") uncredited

Starring:

Julie Andrews Julie Andrews . .Maria Maria

Christopher Plummer Christopher Plummer . .Captain Georg von Trapp Colonel Georg von Trapp

Eleanor Parker Eleanor Parker . .Baroness Elsa Schraeder Baroness Elsa Schraeder

Film Genre: Family / Drama / Music / Biography

Length: 174 min

Country/Region: U.S.A.

Dialogue Language: English

Color: Color

Format: 70 mm widescreen Film

Mix: Mono / 70 mm 6-Track / Stereo

Production Cost: $8,200,000/estimated

Copyright: (Copyright ?MCMLXV by Argyle Enterprises, Inc., Twentieth Century-Fox Film Corporation; 2 March 1959; LP30289)

Filming date: September 1, 1964 -

Camera: MCS 70 (Modern Cinema Systems) (aerial shots)

Recording format: 65 mm

Development formats: 8 mm (anamorphic), 35 mm, 70 mm, 16 mm

Film length: 1060 m (8 mm prints), 4695 m (Sweden)

Principal characters

Georg Von Trapp

Maria

Liesl

Friedrich

Louisa

Kurt

Brigitta

Marta

Gretl

Gretl (Gretl)

Awards

38th Academy Awards: Best Picture, Best Director, Best Editing, Best Score and Best Sound.

Synopsis

A 22-year-old Maria is a volunteer nun at the Salzburg convent of The Sound of Music, but her active and nature-loving nature always gets her into trouble. Mother Abbess, the Mother Superior of the convent, feels that her lively personality is not suitable for monastic life. So when she receives a request for a governess from Colonel von Trapp's family, she decides to let Maria go, and in doing so, allows her to discover her true purpose in life. (Interludes: The Sound of Music (Maria), Maria (The Sisters))

Maria arrives at the home of Captain Georg Von Trapp to find him a widower with seven children, whose long life in the navy and the grief of his late wife have caused him to treat his children with the same strictness as he would discipline a soldier. Soon Maria realizes that the reason the governesses have left is that the children have been denied their father's affection and have been playing tricks on him to get his attention. (Interlude: I Have Confidence (Maria)

The Colonel asks Maria to be as strict as he is, but instead of listening, Maria uses her natural gentleness and kindness to win the children's friendship. While the Colonel was away, she sewed play clothes for each child from curtains, led them on trips to the market, picnicked in the beautiful Alps, and taught them to sing. The children's old constraints and melancholy were gradually replaced by music and laughter. (Interludes: Sixteen Going on Seventeen (Lisa and Rolf), My Favourite Things (Maria), Do-Re-Mi (Maria and the children))

Soon the Colonel returns home, bringing with him Uncle Max, whom the children love, and the children's not-so-favourite, the Colonel's girlfriend, Baroness Elsa Schraeder (Elsa Schraeder). The Colonel is very upset with Maria, but he is touched when he hears the children singing for the Baroness, as Maria has brought back the music that has been absent from the house since his wife's death. Maria also prepares a puppet show with the children, and the Colonel is captivated by Maria's infectious enthusiasm. (Interlude: The Sound of Music Reprise (The Children, The Lonely Goatherd (Maria and the Children), Edelweiss (The Colonel and Lisa)

A few days later, the Colonel and the Baroness have a grand ball together, at which the children also sing. At the ball, Maria demonstrates the Austrian folk dance "Laendler" to the children. Surprisingly, the Colonel came up to Maria and danced with her, and at the end of the dance they looked at each other, and the love between them was obvious. All of this is seen by the Baroness, and that night she urges Maria to return to the convent. Fearing that her feelings for the Colonel might grow deeper, Maria quietly leaves. The children are even more upset when they learn that the Colonel is to marry the Baroness. They went to the convent to look for Maria but could not see her. Maria confesses her love for the Colonel and her overwhelm with life to the Mother Superior, who tells her to have the backbone and courage to find her true love even if she has to climb over every mountain in the world. So Maria returns to Von Trapp's house. Upon Maria's return, the Baroness realizes that she can no longer salvage the relationship between Maria and the Colonel, and she voluntarily withdraws from the engagement. The Colonel and Maria speak to each other, and soon they are married. (Interludes: Climb Ev'ry Mountain (Mother Superior), My Favourite Things Reprise (The Children), Something Good (Maria and the Colonel), Maria Reprise (The Sisters))

Unfortunately, their lives didn't turn out to be happily ever after. While they were still on their honeymoon, the German Nazis occupied Austria. Even the young man Rolf, whom eldest daughter Lisa loved dearly, became a Nazi. When they rushed back to Salzburg, they found Nazi flags already rampant everywhere. While they were away, Uncle Mike, who was in charge of the children, helped them register for the Salzburg Festival (Salzburg Music Festival). As soon as the Colonel returns home, he receives a telegram from the Nazis asking him to report immediately to the Nazi Navy. The Colonel, who had always hated the Nazis, decided to lead his family out of Austria. When they left the villa at night, they were stopped by the Nazis, who had been hiding outside the door to watch them, so the Colonel explained that they were leaving to attend the Hilsburg Festival performance and produced the program as evidence. Accompanied by the Nazis, they arrived at the venue and performed the songs that the children had prepared. At this point, the Colonel and Maria sang "Snowdrops", a song so rich and deep in love for their homeland, Austria, that the audience in attendance sang along with the Colonel through the song, despite the gun-toting Nazi guards nearby. (Interludes: Sixteen Going on Seventeen Reprise (Maria and Lisa), Do-Re-Mi Reprise (Maria, the Colonel and the children), Edelweiss Reprise (Maria, the Colonel and the children), So Long, Farewell Reprise (Maria, Colonel and Children))

After the show, the Colonel's family flees the show while the awards are being presented, the Nazis chase them all the way to the convent, and with the help of the nuns, the Colonel's family hides behind a gravestone from the Nazis, and then they go over the Alps and out of Austria. (Interlude: Climb Ev'ry Mountain Reprise (The Nuns)

The film is refreshing, subtle, touching, and elegantly **** appreciated. There is both humor and affection, as well as deep and serious feelings.

My Fair Lady

Chinese Name: My Fair Lady

English Name: My Fair Lady

Starring: Audrey Hepburn

Release Time: 1964

Film Director: George Cukor

Film Actors: Audrey Hepburn (Audrey Hepburn)

The film is a film about a young woman who was born in the United States. Audrey Hepburn

Rex Harrison

Stanley Holloway

Screenwriter:

George Bernard Shaw .... (play) (as Bernard Shaw)

Alan Jay Lerner Alan Jay Lerner .... (book of musical play)/(screenplay)

Region: United States

Language: English

Film Description:

Thirty-seventh (64) Academy Award for Best Picture My Fair Lady was nominated for thirteen nominations capturing Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Color Film Cinematography, Best Color Film Artwork, Best Color Film Costume Design, Best Sound, and Best Adapted Music in eight categories.

Eliza Doolittle, the flower girl, has a beautiful face. Elisa Doolittle is a beautiful, intelligent and well-behaved woman from a humble background and a poor family. She sells flowers on the street every day to make some money to subsidize her family. One day, Eliza's vulgar voice attracts the attention of the linguist Professor Higgins, who boasts that with his training, a flower girl can become a noblewoman. Feeling that the professor's words are an opportunity for her, Eliza comes to his door and asks him to train her. The professor's friend Pickering makes a bet with him that if Elisa is allowed to attend the Ambassadors' Parade that will be held six months later as a noble lady without the truth being revealed, then Pickering is willing to pay for all the costs of the experiment and Elisa's schooling, which stirs up the professor's fighting spirit, and Higgins gladly accepts the challenge. He is not to be outdone, and he teaches from the most basic letter sounds. Higgins was an energetic and scientific scholar, who could sleep and eat on every matter of interest. He is open-minded and holds no ill will, but he is also childlike, with no regard for the feelings of others, and he trains Eliza severely.

On one occasion, when Higgins took Eliza to his mother's family dinner, the young gentleman Freddie was y impressed by Eliza's beauty and ease of speech, and fell in love at first sight, not recognizing that she was the dirty flower girl who had once hawked her wares to him in the rain. Higgins is more than 40 years old, not married, he never look at young girls, but now in life can not live without Eliza. He relies on Eliza to look after his clothes, food and appointment arrangements.

What annoyed Eliza, however, was Higgins' simple, rough temper. He taught her gentle phrases, but never treated her with gentleness.

Six months later, Higgins confidently took Eliza and Pickering together to a reception hosted by the Greek ambassador. Eliza was attending this reception at the ambassador's as Colonel Pickering's adopted daughter, and she gave it her all, talking, laughing, poised, and radiant. When she appeared in front of everyone, people stopped talking and admired her mesmerizing demeanor. Her treatment of people rounded and sophisticated, but just right, Higgins's first student Nepomuk used all their skills and Elisa around, but by Elisa confused and failed, Higgins succeeded.

But upon returning home, as Higgins ignores the presence of the exhausted Eliza and instead focuses on celebrating the success of the bet with his friends, Eliza's pride is hurt and, aggrieved, she leaves Higgins' home in anger. She meets the infatuated Freddie on her doorstep-he comes to hover under Eliza's window every night, silently watching Eliza, who is touched by his infatuation.

While Higgins is grumpy, he treats Eliza with genuine affection, and after Eliza runs away in a fit of bitterness, he goes to his mother's house to see her, only to have another fight. Higgins is surprised and angry when Eliza says she wants to marry Freddie, and leaves angrily. But on his way home he can't stop thinking about Eliza, and while he is alone at home listening to the recording of Eliza, Eliza returns! She still loves Higgins!

Behind the Scenes: The 37th (64) Academy Award for Best Picture, My Fair Lady was nominated for thirteen awards, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Actor, Best Color Cinematography, Best Color Cinematography, Best Color Cinematography, Best Color Costume Design, Best Sound, and Best Adaptation of Music.

"Schindler's List"

Film Archive

Original Title: Schindler's List

Translation: Schindler's List

Directed by Steven Spielberg Steven Spielberg

Produced by

Branko Lustig Branko Lustig

Gerald R. Molen Gerald R. Molen

Steven Spielberg Steven Spielberg

Written by:

Stevie Zaillian Steve Zaillian

Cast:

Liam Neeson Liam Neeson

Schindler's List Directed by Ben Kingsley

Ralph Fiennes Ralph Fiennes

Carolyn Girdell Caroline Goodall

Jonathan Sagalle Jonathan Sagalle

p>Genre: Drama

Length: 195 minutes

Release: 1993

Country: United States

Awards: 66th Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay, Best Art Direction, Best Cinematography, Best Film Editing, and Best Score in seven categories.

Worldwide box office: $321 million (in U.S. dollars)

[Edit Paragraph]Movie Review

Exploring and eulogizing the trajectory of human nature in special circumstances

With the shocking power of great influence and deep and painful artistic charm

Deeply epic pattern and heart-stopping emotional power

[Edit Paragraph this paragraph]Synopsis

In September 1939, when the German army captured Poland within two weeks, the Nazis ordered that Jews throughout Poland must be concentrated in designated cities for registration, and more than 10,000 Jews arrived in Krakow from the countryside every day.

The Jews in Krakow elected 24 Jews to form a committee to help the Jews who had been concentrated in the city with issues such as lodging and meals, assigning labor and settling disputes.

Oscar Schindler, a German entrepreneur who had just arrived in Krakow from his homeland, was tall, handsome and had a suave demeanor. He generously and profusely befriended German officers and SS men at hotels and various social occasions.

Schindler also came to the registry office looking for a Jew named Itzhak Stein, who had worked as an accountant in an enamel factory in Liebzig. Schindler was interested in buying the mismanaged enamel factory to produce edible utensils to supply the army and make a war fortune. He asked Stein to manage the factory as his accountant and assistant. But what puzzles Steyn is: what does Schindler do?

Funds are back in place and the factory is renamed Emalia. The SS stipulated that the hiring of skilled Jewish laborers was to be paid 7 marks a day, and 5 marks a day for other types of work and for female laborers, but that the entire amount had to be paid directly to the government treasury, and the Jews were not to receive a penny. The Polish workers were hired at a higher wage. So, of course, the Jews became Schindler's choice.

The recruiting office was crowded, and Steen carefully gave effective pointers to the applicants to help his compatriots find the right place to go, and covertly forged all sorts of qualifications for teachers and musicians who were not qualified to enter the factory in order to avoid being copied on a blacklist for the Germans to push onto trucks and send away.

One day a one-armed worker named Ruinstein came to thank Schindler in person. He said he had almost been killed by the SS and was grateful that the factory had saved him and that he would repay him. Still, Ruinstein was pulled out of the line and shot by German officers later while clearing snow. Schindler approached the Germans to intervene, and a senior SS officer told him that giving Jews a place in the business would mean betrayal.

On one occasion, Stein and many Jews were put on a train, and when Schindler learned of this, he rushed to the station in a hurry, wittily reprimanded the German officer, and found Stein at the window as the train started, and kept him, chastising him to save himself from this disaster by not forgetting to bring his work permit in the future.

On March 13, 1943, the Jews of Krakow were subjected to a horrific pogrom. The SS drove into the ghetto with packs of dogs and killed every one of them, and Krakow was a place where people were scared to death. The bloodshed was terrible. Riding back with his mistress, Schindler stopped at the hill, and everything in front of him was a great shock. He was so shocked by what he saw that his mistress, choking on her sobs, pleaded with him to go away.

Looking at the empty factory, Schindler was worried. After much deliberation, he decided to go to SS commander Amon Gott and ask him to authorize the resumption of production by making the Emalia factory an auxiliary labor camp. Gott, who said that many conditions had to be met in order for this to happen, took the opportunity to make a lot of money out of it. Naturally, Schindler understood, and said that he would repay him satisfactorily for his help.

Schindler arrived at the Plaszow labor camp and took the opportunity to meet with Steyn. Stein told him not to forget to send gifts for the birthdays of SS officers and their families, and that he must also honor the people in the Ministry of Finance and the Quartermaster's Office on time, and that the expenses of the SS Command would have to be sent on the first day of every month. In exchange for the right to be allowed to open a concentration camp metal-working factory.

The factory opened by Schindler became a refuge for many Jews during the days when the Germans were frantically slaughtering them. Schindler celebrated his birthday by blowing out the candles on a five-tiered cake and kissing every woman around him. A Jewish girl from the factory with a Jewish girl, also holding their cake, wished him a happy birthday on behalf of all the workers, and Schindler kissed them too, but he did not realize the trouble this would cause.

An order came over the radio for all living Jews to assemble in the square at once. The Jews, who had just arrived in the camp from Hungary, had no idea what fate awaited them. Amon Gott ordered all sick Jews to be exterminated. When they heard the officer say that they would have to undress to examine their bodies, the women broke their fingers and squeezed out blood to apply to their faces and lips to increase the color of their blood.

On the platforms, the Jews who stayed in the stuffy tank cars endured the scorching sun and thirst. Schindler, after handing Gott, who was sitting on the platform, an ice-cold soda, suggested calling a fire engine and amusing himself by spraying the Jews with a water hose. Gott instructed the soldiers to do so, and the Jews greeted the fountain of life with their mouths. Schindler instructed the soldiers to spray more toward the roof of the car, and Gott, who was watching him, realized what was going on and the smile on his face tightened.

The Gestapo arrested Schindler for violating the Führer's racial regulations by inadvertently kissing the Jewish girl who delivered the cake on the night of his birthday. Gott explains this to Gestapo chief Julius and intercedes on Schindler's behalf, settling the matter with money. Schindler was released on bail after some warnings.

In April 1944, more than 10,000 Jews had been murdered in the Krakow and Plaszow ghettos. Amon Gott was ordered by his superiors to exhume the long-buried bodies for incineration and to transport the remaining Jews to Auschwitz. Schindler learns of this and asks Gott to give his accountant special treatment.

Seeing that the factory would become unsustainable, Schindler planned to go home, but Stein said he could keep the factory open, but of course he would have to hire new workers. Schindler thanked him from the bottom of his heart. A tear slipped from the eye of Steen, the accountant, whose future was uncertain and whose life and death were uncertain. Schindler's heart snapped to attention.

When Schindler came to Gott with several suitcases full of money and said he wanted to buy his workers, Gott asked suspiciously, "Why on earth? You must have an ulterior motive, you have to be honest with me!" Schindler says that this way he doesn't need to retrain his workers and it will be good for the army; he wants to produce arms. Schindler asked Gott for a price, how much for a Jewish worker?

In his office at the factory, Schindler smoked cigarette after cigarette, dictating lists to Steyn, who was typing them, and he finally bought Gott and Julius with money, he left all the children behind, and he saved one innocent life after another. His list grew longer and longer, and at this point Schindler showed a strange "greed", going to see Julius again and again, trying to get as many places as possible.

Steyn held the long list he had typed up, his hands trembling.......

On the last page of the list, there was a blank spot reserved for Gott's Jewish maid, Helen Kess. Gott, of course, refused to give her to Schindler, stating that he would never send her to a concentration camp, but would take her back to Vienna with him and would live with her. Schindler reminds him that this is just a wishful dream. But Gott says he'd rather take Helen Case to the woods and put a bullet in her head. But in the end Gott backed down, compromised, and for 14,800 marks handed Helen Case over to Schindler for work in a labor camp.

The Jews on the list were registered at the square and were to be sent by train in two groups of men and women to Zvitau-Brunlitz in the Czech Republic - the site of the munitions factory. Schindler told the Jewish men who arrived first that the women's train had left Plaszow and would soon reach the munitions factory. The women's train was on the move, and there was much rejoicing in the carriages. However. Instead, the train was driving to Auschwitz, and there was horror as the women were ordered to strip naked and bathe and disinfect, and the horrors of the legend finally came upon them.

Anxious, Schindler rushes to Auschwitz to get his workers back from the head of the camp. After some softballing, the chief, who had accepted a bribe, wanted to replace them with another 300 men. However, Schindler disagreed, and at his insistence, the headman finally relented. He also lectured the German soldiers that they were not allowed to shoot indiscriminately at Jewish workers in the munitions factory.

One day, Stein came to Schindler to report that all the shells produced by the factory were of substandard quality and that he feared prosecution by the military. But Schindler calmly said he would go and explain to the Germans. He told Stein that he was very happy that they were not producing good quality shells. For seven whole months he produced no acceptable product. In the meantime, he spent millions of marks to supply his workers as well as for bribes to German officials, and also used the money to buy some shells from the arms market as a product of the soldier's factory, to fob off the Germans. In doing so, it left Schindler broke and on the verge of bankruptcy.

Germany finally surrendered unconditionally. Schindler to the whole factory workers solemnly announced: they can from tomorrow onwards each go to find their loved ones. And looked back to discourage the German soldiers guarding the factory, put down their weapons, return home, and stop acting as Nazi executioners. The soldiers hung their heads and left quietly. Afterwards, Schindler proposed a three-minute silence in honor of the countless innocents killed. Before leaving, Schindler instructs Stein to distribute all the contents of the factory to the workers. The workers melted down their dentures and took out the silver and cast it into a rustic ring with a scripture engraved in Hebrew: Whoever saves one life saves the whole world. Steyn wrote a letter on behalf of all the workers and gave it to Schindler, in case he was arrested, with everyone's signatures on it.

Schindler was so excited that he burst into hot, uncontrollable tears. Faced with the incoherent Schindler, Stein said truly that it was because of him that 1,100 Jews were spared, and that their descendants have been blessed with his favor and will never forget it. Schindler said, "If I had lived less extravagantly, I could have saved more people, if I had made more money ...... I was so absurdly profligate ......" Schindler sobbed and fell on his accountant's shoulders and knelt down, and the workers rallied around and hugged their savior. Schindler walked away, and the people followed him for a long time, watching him until the end .......

Schindler was awarded the Medal of Justice by the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Jerusalem in 1958 and was invited to plant a tree on the Avenue of Justice.

At the end of the war, fewer than 4,000 Jews were left in Poland, and today more than 6,000 are descended from Jews saved by Schindler.

Schindler died on Oct. 9, 1974, and was buried in Catholic style in his hometown on Mount Zwietazir, where many, many surviving Jews and their descendants come every year to pay tribute to his memory.

"Schindler's List" is a true reenactment of the real-life historical events that led German entrepreneur Oskar Schindler to protect 1,200 Jews from fascist murder during World War II.

Schindler, a German speculator, was born in 1908 in Moravia, now in the Czech Republic. He was a member of the Reichstag party at the beginning of World War II. He was horny, enjoyable, and was known locally as a determined member of the Nazis. He was adept at using his relationship with the head of the punch bowl to seize maximum capital. In occupied Poland, Jews were the cheapest labor, so the shrewd war-wealthy Schindler employed only the victims of the Nuremberg Race Laws in his newly founded enamel factory. These men were given a job in the enamel factory and thus temporary safety from the murderous machine, and Schindler's factory became a refuge for the Jews. Those who worked for him were protected by working on important war products: the enamel factory supplied tableware and bullets to the troops at the front.

By 1943, the brutal bloodbath of the Krakow ghetto had shattered Schindler's last illusions about the Nazis. He had long known about the crematoriums and gas chambers built by the Germans, and had long heard that instead of water, poisonous gas flowed from the nozzles in the bathrooms and steam rooms. From then on, Schindler had only one idea: to protect as many Jews as possible from death at Auschwitz. He created a list of workers he claimed were "necessary" for his factory to function properly, and by bribing Nazi officials, he was able to keep this group of Jews alive. He was increasingly suspected of violating racial laws, but each time he was resourceful enough to avoid Nazi persecution. As always, he continued to risk his life to rescue Jews. When a train transporting his women workers made a wrong turn into Auschwitz-Birkenau, he spent a fortune chasing them back to his factory.

Soon, the Soviet Red Army arrived in the city of Krakow and announced to the surviving Jews working in Schindler's factory that the war was over. One night when it was snowing heavily, Schindler said goodbye to his workers, and the more than 1,000 Jews who had been rescued saw him off by handing him a self-initiated signed testimony to prove that he was not a war criminal. At the same time, they presented Schindler with a silver ring made by knocking out his silver tooth and beating it into a silver ring. Engraved on the ring was a famous Jewish saying, "Saving one life is the same as saving all mankind." Schindler could not hold back the tears. He was chagrined that he still had a gold medallion, for such a one could have saved at least one more person if he had sold it. Schindler had done everything he could for his salvation. All the money he had saved during the war was used to save Jewish lives ......

After the war, Schindler retired to a small town in Switzerland, penniless, living on the dole of the Jews he had rescued. After a few years, Schindler died in poverty. According to Jewish tradition, Schindler was buried in Jerusalem as one of the "36 Righteous Ones".

The film ends at Schindler's grave, where Jews who had been rescued by Schindler before the war and were in their twilight years decades later, as well as their descendants representing their forebears, walk past the grave, placing a stone on the gravestone as a sign of "thanksgiving that never changes." ......