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Munich Movie Review
Munich Review

"Munich" Overview

Rating: R
2005
Cast and Crew
Director : Steven SpielbergProducer : Kathleen Kennedy,Steven Spielberg,Barry Mendel,Colin Wilson
Screenwiter : Tony Kushner,Eric Roth
Starring : Eric Bana,Daniel Craig,Geoffrey Rush,Ciarán Hinds,Mathieu Kassovitz,Hannis Zischler,Ayelet Zorer,Michael Lonsdale,Mathieu Amalric
It’s been a long, tough road watching Steven Spielberg grow up. Too often, the
great Hollywood money machine seemed to flip self-consciously back and forth
between his serious work (Schindler’s List) and the popcorn flicks (The Lost
World, The Terminal). For better or for worse, though, 2005 will be remembered
as the year when Spielberg finally and resoundingly merged these twin desires
into unified works of serious entertainment, first his stunning War of the
Worlds, and now Munich, a less complete piece of work, perhaps, but the most
ambitious of Spielberg’s career and truly something to behold.
What makes Munich even more ambitious than films like List or even Empire of
the Sun is that it’s not as recognizable a film as those classically-structured
epics. This film is part spy thriller and part meditation on violence but not
completely either. The result comes out as somewhat scrambled by the end, with
the pieces of about a half-dozen lesser movies mixed around inside, but there’s
rarely a moment when it’s not grabbing you by the collar and demanding your
undivided attention. We should have more of this kind of thing.
Munich is based on the aftermath of the September 1972 massacre of 11 Israeli
athletes at the Munich Olympics by a Palestinian terrorist group called Black
September. A long and harrowing reenactment brings the whole sordid and sad
spectacle back to life, most vividly the infuriating ease with which the
terrorists pulled it off and the Germans’ pathetically disorganized response.
The film jumps to Israel, where Golda Meier (played with stiff brio by the
indomitable Lynn Cohen) lectures the tense military and intelligence men
gathered around: “Every civilization finds it necessary to negotiate
compromises with its own values.” The members of Black September are
identified, photos shuffled about, files collected, and a team assembled, to
kill them all.
The first sign that this is not going to be a Bruckheimer revenge fantasy is
the mournful tone which this first stretch takes, no chest-thumping
adrenaline-stoking, just an inevitable countdown to death. The ad hoc group
Mossad puts together for the mission are even less action-film-ready, the team’
s head, Avner (Eric Bana, soulful and wounded-looking), a quiet family man who
just wants to get back to his pregnant wife. But nevertheless, they all find
themselves in Europe, no contact with Israel save for a safety deposit box
occasionally refilled with cash (“I want receipts!” barks one Mossad officer at
Avner), a list of men to take out, and no clue how long it will take.
Much of Munich follows the team’s long campaign of assassination, as they track
the Black Septemberists from one European city to the other. The morbid ends of
this campaign are verifiable by historical fact – one man killed by a bomb in
his telephone and another by a booby-trapped mattress – but the how had to be
mostly concocted by screenwriters Tony Kushner (Angels in America) and Eric
Roth, since the Mossad isn’t telling. Given that Kushner has more experience
exploring the soul on a Broadway stage than in staging cloak-and-dagger
missions, it’s not surprising that occasionally the film’s thriller element
goes wanting. However, it’s still exhilarating to see how this John Le
Carre-era spycraft was conducted in the old, pre-digital days, how resolutely
hands-on and improvised it had to be.
It’s not just the '70s accoutrements that bring to mind Le Carre, however,
there’s also the moral shadings of grey which Kushner and Spielberg wash the
film in. At the beginning of the mission, one of the team worries about
thinking of himself as an assassin, only to be curtly told, “Think of yourself
as something else, then,” a poor solution at best. While Munich never
explicitly questions the validity of Israel’s right to assassinate the
Palestinians – which will likely earn the film condemnation from many quarters
– it also never wavers from showing the devilish effects of what the campaign
does to the men who wage it. It isn’t long before the team is being hunted by
unnamed people, buying information on them from the same ideology-free dealers
that Avner buys intel on Black September from. Also, for every man they kill, a
worse replacement is quickly found, and the Palestinians’ terror campaigns just
continue. Haunted by his mission of death, Avner asks his contact Ephraim
(Geoffrey Rush, brilliant) what the point is of killing these men if they’ll
only be replaced; Ephraim’s real-world response is simply, “Why cut my
fingernails? They’ll just grow back.”
This is a film that leads you in loops, denying easy answers. Just as one
starts to wonder about the necessity of this mission, Spielberg cuts back to a
continuation of the Olympics massacre reenactment. Then, just as you may be
getting too comfortable with it, he introduces a Palestinian character to argue
with Avner (posing as a Basque terrorist) about the plight of his people. There’
s no action without reaction, no cause without effect, no easy answers after
the pulling of a trigger or the refusal to do so.
It all ends in shellshock and despair, as any honest film about war must do.
Even though Spielberg loses his way at times in the existential labyrinth he’s
constructed, and a few of the later espionage episodes are not entirely
convincing, he’s made a brave attempt to wrestle with the impossible here.
Unmissable.
Walkin' in Munich.
Reviewer: Chris Barsanti
Indeed Munich is a complicated film that weaves through many political, social
and ethical issues that are refreshingly unbiased. The emphasis seems to be
placed on how the Israeli 'hitmen' deal with their murderous encounters and
doesnt appear in any way to
try to justify the bloodshed from either side.
Eric Bana carried the story brilliantly with his genuine acting style and
intense, penetrating gaze that typified his performance in 'Chopper'..a
performance that ensured his career development to lead roles such as this.
I enjoyed it immensely and am pleased to see Spielberg still broadening his
touch and having the dedication to deliver a film of this complexity in such an
easy way,
Five stars from me ***** :) The Lucky One
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