Amon Goeth
Amon Goeth transcends the simple villain to become the incarnation of systemic, everyday evil produced by Nazism and antisemitism. As a psychopathic commandant who treats prisoners as 'vermin' and enjoys massacre as a hobby, he serves as the most powerful moral catalyst that drives protagonist Schindler to navigate the moral gray zone.
Psychopathic Everyday Life: Amon Goeth's Brutality
Amon Goeth is the film's most explicit and undisguised symbol of evil. As an SS officer and commandant of the Kraków-Płaszów concentration camp, he embodies an extreme antisemitism that treats Jews not as human beings but as "vermin." Goeth's cruelty is not merely massacre carried out on orders — it is closer to a psychopathic hobby woven into the fabric of everyday life.
Goeth's Psychological Profile: The Pleasure of the Hunter
Goeth's behavior is depicted repeatedly through the motif of the "hunt." According to testimony of the time, he would rampage through entire residential buildings, spreading terror like a rabid dog. For Goeth, killing Jews was not a struggle for survival but a pastime — a daily routine.
- Massacre as hobby: Goeth is portrayed as a psychopath with the hobby of shooting prisoners from his balcony. He would step out with a sniper rifle to music, treating the hunting of Jews as a daily routine — maximizing the psychological pleasure it gave him.
- The mentality of a butcher: He treated Jews like vermin, immediately shooting any who caught his eye unfavorably.
The Complex Relationship with Schindler: Where Evil and Opportunism Intersect
Goeth and Oscar Schindler maintain a cordial relationship early in the film, with Goeth providing Schindler with "conveniences" needed to operate the factory.
This relationship is not simple friendship but a transaction based on mutual benefit. Schindler uses his business acumen, bribes, and hospitality — the logic of capital — to win Goeth's backing and secure factory permits and military supply contracts.
This relationship setup cuts to the film's core theme. Just as Schindler's rescue of Jews is achieved not through pure good deeds but through "business acumen" and "bribery," his relationship with Goeth is likewise an unbroken chain of transactions with blurred moral boundaries.
Goeth's Role: The Mirror That Awakens Schindler's Conscience
Goeth is the existence that ceaselessly reminds Schindler of his own opportunistic, dissolute past. Schindler initially focused solely on profit, but begins a change of conscience after directly witnessing the horrific massacres in the Nazi ghetto. Goeth provides the decisive catalyst for that change.
Because Goeth symbolized the horrific reality of the camp, the very process of Schindler fighting against that evil system and deploying all his resources to rescue Jews forms the dramatic tension. Goeth's existence is the device that keeps forcing Schindler to question how dangerous "good deeds" are, and how great a price they demand. Tested on his moral limits before Goeth, Schindler ultimately transforms into an 'agent' who reverse-exploits the evil system through the logic of vast capital to save lives.
Why It Matters
Amon Goeth forms the film's most important moral axis of opposition. He is not simply a wicked man but a living testament to how the vast system of Nazism can destroy individual psychology and enable everyday atrocity. The 'massacre as hobby' he embodies poses a fundamental ethical question to audiences that goes beyond horror. It is the existence of absolute, systematic evil symbolized by Goeth that allows Schindler's complex process of saving lives through money and opportunism to be justified — keeping Schindler's acts in the complex moral gray zone of 'desperate struggle for survival' rather than dismissing them as a simple heroic narrative.
Other Character dives3
- arrow_outward
Emilie Schindler
Emilie Schindler, as Oskar Schindler's wife, provides the backdrop for the moral turmoil he experiences and the survival operation he conducts. She symbolizes the 'normality' of Schindler's life, serving as an emotional anchor as he transforms from a cold businessman into a protector of lives. Her presence lends human weight and a personal dimension to his actions.
- arrow_outward
Oskar Schindler
Oskar Schindler begins World War II as a corrupt, opportunistic businessman, but gradually feels the pangs of conscience as he witnesses Nazi atrocities, ultimately spending his entire fortune to save countless Jewish lives and transforming into an 'agent' of redemption. His story transcends simple heroics to explore the complex moral gray zone where capitalist logic and human conscience collide — driving the film's core themes.
- arrow_outward
Itzhak Stern
Itzhak Stern is far more than an accountant — he is the key figure connecting Oskar Schindler's cold business logic with his human conscience. By providing the practical know-how to run Schindler's factory, he forges a deep bond with him along the way. Stern's presence grounds Schindler's journey of redemption in a realistic and intellectual foundation, serving as an essential axis that completes the film's moral gray zone.

Back to the title
Schindler's List
12 deep dives in total