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Directed by Steven Spielberg

Munich

A dark, bleak drama.

During the 1972 Olympic Games in Munich, eleven Israeli athletes are taken hostage and murdered by a Palestinian terrorist group known as Black September. In retaliation, the Israeli government recruits a group of Mossad agents to track down and execute those responsible for the attack.

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Where to watch

1

Munich is showing in 1 cinema in Los Angeles — next screening Sunday 16 August at 14:00 at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures.

Sunday, 16 August

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Munich

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Cast & crew

6

What people say

Logan Kenny2.0

on the one hand, a very angry and disillusioned portrayal of losing your faith in government and nation following acts of state sanctioned violence. on the other, an exploration of "they made us do this" instead of a true depiction of the reasons why Black September happened, what the Palestinian people experience to this day under the Israeli regime and a work that's still too enamoured with Israel's "right to exist" to dismantle it in the way it should be. Spielberg is obviously torn between the love of what he considers the homeland and the actions of violence taken by Mossad, but there's never any humanisation of the people his characters are sent to kill, any understanding of why these people are doing this. they are framed as the other, because framing them as anything else would challenge the state and its right to exist. it is easier to criticise the government by making the Palestinian faceless and silent outside of the people they murder, because you can criticise an agency like Mossad and the current government without truly challenging the foundations of blood and genocide that cause Israel to exist. it is more like Body of Lies than it is something more profound, a work that tries and maybe does believe that it's challenging the system, that it's breaking away from the propaganda and deconstructing Wars on Terror, but that ends up revelling in the same violence and the same propaganda just with a different skin. it is a very interesting movie built on conflict, similarly to how Eric Bana's protagonist is constantly reconciling with his beliefs in his country and his beliefs in his religion, which is why I understand the love for this. there are war movies that are built upon inherent conflict that I love, that I'll defend, that I reckon with constantly and come out the other side positive on. but to me, this is cruelty to the Palestinian people, that rewrites history to ignore Israel's past, that centres murderers and biased perspectives over truth and compassion with the oppressed, that claims to be about both sides that's only about the splintered sections of one. this is clearly a movie Spielberg had to make, and for some, it may be his masterpiece. for me, it's nothing but sound and fury.

James (Schaffrillas)3.5

Good movie but could not take the, uh, climax seriously

Sean Fennessey4.5

"I'm not comfortable with confusion."First revisit in 20 years. Possibly Spielberg's most formally commanding film. His most dialectical by far. Perverse, too. Framing it around a new father ruthlessly killing men and women for nearly three hours is an extraordinary choice. Answers no questions, and positions vengeance as an incurable disease. Blown away."Leave it."

Common questions
What is Munich about?+

It depicts the aftermath of the 1972 Munich Olympic massacre, following a covert Israeli team tasked with tracking down those responsible for the attack.

Who directed Munich?+

Steven Spielberg, the influential American filmmaker, directed this 2005 historical drama.

Is Munich based on a true story?+

Yes, the film is loosely based on George Jonas's book Vengeance regarding the Israeli government's retaliatory operations following the 1972 Olympics.

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