Munich
Director: Steven Spielberg
Starring: Daniel Craig, Eric Bana, Geoffrey Rush
Details: US, 160mins, 15s.
Inspired by true events and based on the book 'Vengeance Day' by George Jonas, Munich is a slick and high-concept gung-ho flick in which the Israeli government (unofficially) takes revenge for the Munich atrocity by assassinating as many of the terrorists responsible as possible. But it's all done with subtle taste as Spielberg disguises his anti-Palestinian message in a quasi-espionage thriller. As a thriller, Spielberg meticulously sets up each kill with proficiency and without fanfare, but the breathers the director takes in between hits are far too long and drawn out; so much so that he is reduced to the use of flashbacks (the refuge of a lazy filmmaker) of the Munich tragedy to justify his characters' actions and to remind the audience that they are on the side of right - not that of cold-blooded assassins - and, in the reluctant yet enthusiastic Kauffman, he presents the human face of hate. Not that the PLO's point of view isn't addressed; in the overlong 2 hour, 40 minute running time they get roughly a minute's speech over a cigarette on a dusty stairway in Athens, while Kauffman's tacked-on empty regret in the closing stages is not to be overlooked. A far cry then from the pluralist views of 2000's documentary 'Black September' as Spielberg presents a heavily one-sided argument; with lines like "These people want to destroy us" and "They're maniacs", Munich deserves to be put into the same box as D.W Griffith's Birth Of A Nation. Mister Spielberg, this film is, considering the current political climate, both potentially incendiary and dangerous.
Review by Gavin Burke
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