1946: Amon Göth, Schindler’s List villain
September 13th, 2008 Headsman
On this date in 1946, Plaszow concentration camp commandante Amon Göth was hanged near the camp site by Poland’s postwar Communist government.
Göth is most widely recognizable as Ralph Fiennes’ fiendish character in Schindler’s List, one of the American Film Institute’s top movie villains of all time. (And, naturally, a first-class bastard in real life, too.)
Here’s how Fiennes’ Goeth met his end:
A short-drop strangulation is not the way you’d want to go. It turns out, though, that Steven Spielberg (ever the sentimentalist) seriously tidied up the proceedings.
As you watch the video of the real Amon Goeth’s exit below — and it’s a snuff film, so proceed advisedly — consider the following:
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Amon Goeth does bear a passing fair resemblance to Ralph Fiennes.


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To judge by their getup — dig the masks! — the executioners might have been Batman and Robin.
To judge by the discharge of their duties, the executioners might have been Larry, Moe and Curly. Goeth survived two drops (notice the executioner on the right gesticulating in frustration as the second try fails) before they finally got it right:
Also On This Date
Possibly Related Executions
- 1962: Adolf Eichmann
- 1944: Col. Claus Schenk Graf von Stauffenberg, for the plot to kill Hitler
- 1946: The Nuremberg Trial War Criminals
Entry Filed under: 20th Century, Arts and Literature, Botched Executions, Capital Punishment, Concentration Camps, Death Penalty, Execution, Germany, Hanged, History, Infamous, Mature Content, Poland, Popular Culture, Soldiers, The Worm Turns
Tags: 1946, amon goth, cinema, communism, Fascism, holocaust, krakow, krakow ghetto, nazi, naziism, nazis, plaszow concentration camp, ralph fiennes, schindler's list, september 13, steven spielberg

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