Munich

January 6th, 2006



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Munich

Still of Eric Bana in MunichStill of Eric Bana and Mathieu Kassovitz in MunichStill of Eric Bana and Ami Weinberg in MunichMunichSteven Spielberg, Eric Bana and Hanns Zischler in MunichStill of Mathieu Kassovitz and Hanns Zischler in Munich

Plot
Based on the true story of the Black September aftermath, about the five men chosen to eliminate the ones responsible for that fateful day.

Release Year: 2005

Rating: 7.7/10 (106,139 voted)

Critic's Score: 74/100

Director: Steven Spielberg

Stars: Eric Bana, Daniel Craig, Marie-Josée Croze

Storyline
After Black September's assassination of Israeli athletes at the Munich Olympics in 1972, Prime Minister Golda Meir okays a black-box operation to hunt down and kill all involved. A team of five gathers in Switzerland led by Avner, a low-level Mossad techie whose father was a war hero and whose wife is pregnant. It's an expendable team, but relying on paid informants, they track and kill several in Europe and Lebanon. They must constantly look over their shoulders for the CIA, KGB, PLO, and their own sources. As the body count mounts -- with retribution following retribution -- so do questions, doubts, and sleepless nights. Loyalties blur. What does it mean to be a Jew?

Writers: Tony Kushner, Eric Roth

Cast:
Eric Bana - Avner
Daniel Craig - Steve
Ciarán Hinds - Carl
Mathieu Kassovitz - Robert
Hanns Zischler - Hans
Ayelet Zurer - Daphna
Geoffrey Rush - Ephraim
Gila Almagor - Avner's Mother
Michael Lonsdale - Papa
Mathieu Amalric - Louis
Moritz Bleibtreu - Andreas
Valeria Bruni Tedeschi - Sylvie
Meret Becker - Yvonne
Marie-Josée Croze - Jeanette the Dutch Assassin
Yvan Attal - Tony - Andreas' Friend

Taglines: The world was watching in 1972 as 11 Israeli athletes were murdered at the Munich Olympics. This is the story of what happened next.



Details

Official Website: UIP [France] | UIP [uk] |

Release Date: 6 January 2006

Filming Locations: Bir-Hakeim Bridge, Paris, France

Box Office Details

Budget: $75,000,000 (estimated)

Opening Weekend: $6,040,860 (USA) (25 December 2005) (532 Screens)

Gross: $47,379,090 (USA) (26 March 2006)



Technical Specs

Runtime:  | Philippines: (cut)



Did You Know?

Trivia:
During the scene where Avner's team joins up with the Israeli commandos in Beirut, one of the commandos introduces himself as Ehud Barak. Barak was a member of the most elite commando force of the Israeli army, sayeret matkal, before becoming a politician and eventually Israel's Prime Minister.

Goofs:
Audio/visual unsynchronized: When Avner is waiting for the Palestinian's daughter and wife to come out of their building, before letting off the telephone bomb, the little girl says the same line twice. Off-screen, she says hello to her driver before she actually meets him. She comes out, repeats the same line, and says hello to the driver when she meets him.

Quotes:
[first lines]
American Athlete: Hey! Oh! Shame, shame! Closing down the beer garden. 100 meter dash powered by knackwurst and lager.
American Athlete: Where are you guys from?
American Athlete: What is your event?



User Review

Depth and detail - with no sides taken

Rating: 9/10

This movie relates more than just a story of "Vengeance". Besides proving that killing begets killing - it consists of numerous fine details that reveal the hard work done at getting to the depth of things:

For instance, only characters that get shot in the head slump to the ground. The rest take time to die - they walk a few steps, spurt blood and express a look of helplessness and inevitability before going out. Yes its horrifying to look at, which is the point, but it is also real.

Every character is different, and though common in their desire for vengeance, their temperaments are clearly distinguishable in the way the hit men approach their task. Even the terrorists are not stereotyped into hysterical, screaming lunatics. They range from the visibly nervous to the cool Abu Salameh with the movie star style. They are poets, intellectuals and guerrillas each with his story of the conflict. They speak passionately about home - a recurring theme, along with "family". Moreover, Spielberg does not attempt to mitigate the grotesque manner of their deaths, for the blood of the targeted men flows as freely as that of their victims - and when they are blown up, their body parts dangle from ceiling fans. You are not here to feel satisfaction over anyone's death, Spielberg says to the audience. Or as Caine would say in Kung Fu: "The taking of a life does no one honour."

There are no easy "shoot-em-dead" eliminations. There are neighbors, bystanders and obstacles that must be avoided and protected - with variable success. Innocent people may be harmed - and one has to live with that.

There are no mathematical certainties about the potential damage a bomb will cause.

Perspectives and convictions can change, sometimes regrettably. "Don't think about it - just do it" says Avner at one stage when a member of the team expresses doubts about a target's guilt. But at the end he wants evidence that the men he despatched were justifiably killed. Implausible? No; it is only when he has been reunited with his family and experiences the affection of wife and child that he allows himself to reflect from a different perspective - their targets had families too - what if he had killed the wrong men?

The paranoia that permeates the world of spies and assassins is built up gradually - to the point where every survivor mistrusts everybody else. One is doomed all one's life to walk with ears strained for following footsteps. The length of the movie creates the right atmosphere for this idea.

The end dissatisfies many because they would like a reassurance, a note of optimistic finality - but Spielberg rightly offers none. It would be dishonest of him to offer a false but comforting illusion.

It is interesting to contrast this movie with "Paradise Now" that has no violence, a modest budget, and views the conflict from the Palestinian camp. Both narrate completely different stories - yet, in their respective ways, both humanize their subjects, defuse myths about glory, and arrive at the same conclusion: "There's no peace at the end of this."

Holiday BlockBusters at AllPoster!
Holiday BlockBusters at AllPoster!


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