Genre: Drama
Director: Steven Spielberg
Starring: Eric Bana, Daniel Craig, Geoffrey
Rush, Mathieu Kassovitz, Hanns Zischler, Ciarán Hinds
RunTime: 2 hrs 43 mins
Released By: UIP
Rating: M18
Official Website: www.munichmovie.com
Release
Date: 23 February 2006
Synopsis
:
Set
in the aftermath of the 1972 massacre of 11 Israeli athletes
at the Munich Olympics, Munich recounts the dramatic story
of the secret Israeli squad assigned to track down and assassinate
11 Palestinians believed to have planned the 1972 Munich massacre
-- and the personal toll this mission of revenge takes on
the team and the man who led it. Eric Bana stars as the Mossad
agent charged with leading the band of specialists brought
together for this operation.
Inspired
by actual events, the narrative is based on a number of sources,
including the recollections of some who participated in the
events themselves.
Movie
Review:
One
of the most hyped-up movies this season, “Munich”
lives up to expectations. Another offspring of Spielberg’s
well-known fascination with historical events, “Munich”
recounts the aftermath of the Munich Massacre of 1972, where
Israeli-government-sanctioned assassination operations carried
out by clandestine Mossad officers unleashes more than twenty
years of violent vengeance on Palestinians believed to be
responsible for Munich. Rife with political allegories, tough
questions, uncomfortable truths and striking irony, “Munich”
is one of those rare films that transcends its own domain
but remains, staunch, just what it is – a film.
Eric
Bana is Avner, an ex bodyguard of the Prime Minister Golda
Meir’s (Lynn Cohen in a stand out performance) and the
leader of the revenge mission. Though soon to be a father,
he joins the mission without hesitation – he is son
of Israel first and everything else comes after. The complex
depth of his character is such that regardless of how unconcealed
Avner’s patriotism is, his humanity as a father and
husband is always brimming; it is love you see in his eyes,
never detached zeal.
Indeed
it is because of this compassion that he is able to lead his
team of four. There’s Steve (Daniel Craig), the hitman
in charge of getaways, Robert (Matthieu Kassovitz), toy maker
by day and bomb diffuser on the sly, Carl (Ciaran Hinds),
who’s responsible for removing evidence and Hans (Hanns
Zischler), the forger. All are personalities in their own
right but Avner is the only one who is finally able to question
his purpose in the scheme of things while hanging on to his
tenuous grip on sanity. It could be said that in the end,
the others lose sight and lose their way and it is only Avner
who truly comes home, with whatever that’s left of him.
But nothing is that easy in “Munich”. Did Avner
really come home? Where is his home? What does it mean to
have a home?
Asking
some of the truly unanswerable questions of our time is Steven
Spielberg, director and producer in what is one of his less
didactic hence more sincere films. When Prime Minister Meir
speaks what will become one of the most iconic movie lines
of this decade, “Forget peace for now,” thus giving
the go-ahead for the revenge mission, the Israelis are no
longer the victims. Or are they? How do you justify violence?
Should the retaliation by nature be more acceptable than the
provocation? At several points of the movie, Spielberg virtually
pits two characters against each other and lets them debate.
He has no answers, leaves a trail of questions and has only
one, murky conclusion. “There is no peace at the end
of this.”
The
director is in his element when dealing with the thrilling
assassination scenes, which are timed to perfection and, for
want of better word, taut as hell. There is a scene where
Avner is supposed to green light a bomb explosion from the
adjacent hotel room of ground zero – the wild anticipation
leading up to the warped explosion translates into manic tension
and doubt as they begin to question the shady integrity of
their French liaison, Louis (Mathieu Amalric).
Maintaining
the rhythm for this highly demanding opus is a group of commandingly
talented actors. Bana as Avner is simultaneously soulful and
clinical; a rare phone conversation with his wife and daughter
is everything rending, a breakdown triggered by pent-up self-doubt
and loathing, filled with lonely desperation. What I enjoyed
most about the all-round acting was that it never oversteps
itself by smothering the movie, yet the actors hold their
own, never suffocating under the material. Geoffrey Rush (as
Ephraim, the squad’s unofficial caretaker) could have
blatantly overtaken Bana and the movie but he doesn’t
– the movie isn’t about showbiz and for that,
it must be respected.
The
story telling is masterful as Spielberg’s direction
is unseen. It feels non-intrusive yet totally absorbed and
confident, like a guiding hand pointing out the different
pieces of a puzzle that can never be solved. There are more
things going on in the movie that I can ever hope to do justice
to and personally, “Munich” is an experience that
demands one’s sole and direct engagement. There is no
way anyone can possibly enlighten another about “Munich”
because it’s not just about a textbook controversy.
It’s hardly even just about Munich. It is about everything
that was before and everything that came after it, about how
far the world has gone and how much further we can get.
In
the movie, the people assassinated are being replaced by ever
more extreme hardliners. When called on it, Ephraim claims
that they are killing for peace. Despaired by the oxymoron,
Robert exclaims, “We are supposed to be righteous!”
Carl retorts, “How do you think we got the land [in
the first place], by being nice?” Punctuated with wonderful
acting, the fiercely intelligent script is wrought with irony
and is flawlessly paced. As far as answers go, as mentioned,
Spielberg has none. But answers aren’t everything. Sometimes
it’s enough to simply ask the right questions.
Movie
Rating:
(It
takes considerable humility and poise to direct a seriously
mature movie that completely shuns judgment and moral preaching.
Heartfelt and emotional, “Munich” must arguably
be Spielberg’s magnum opus.)
Review
by Angeline Chui
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