Munich (2005)

  • Year: 2005
  • Released: 06 Jan 2006
  • Country: United States, Canada, France
  • Adwords: Nominated for 5 Oscars. 14 wins & 75 nominations total
  • IMDb: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0408306/
  • Rotten Tomatoes: https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/munich
  • Metacritics: https://www.metacritic.com/movie/munich
  • Available in: 720p, 1080p,
  • Language: English, German, French, Hebrew, Arabic, Italian, Greek, Russian, Dutch
  • MPA Rating: R
  • Genre: Action, Drama, History
  • Runtime: 164 min
  • Writer: Tony Kushner, Eric Roth, George Jonas
  • Director: Steven Spielberg
  • Cast: Eric Bana, Daniel Craig, Marie-Josée Croze
  • Keywords: revenge, paris, france, 1970s, hostage, terrorist,
7.5/10
74/100
78% – Critics
83% – Audience

Munich Storyline

In September 1972, Palestinian terrorists, posing as athletes, are able to infiltrate the relatively unsecured athlete’s village at the Summer Olympic Games in Munich, where they take Israeli athletes and coaches hostages, the release of who they consider illegally held Arab prisoners in Israel the requested ransom. Because the Israeli government refuses to negotiate, the terrorists, who end up being referred to as Black September, end up killing eleven of those hostages. Beyond the official Israeli response to the massacre, the Israeli government forms a covert team whose mission is to assassinate those eleven they see as responsible that are living in the western world. This team will have no official ties to the government or Mossad, including to their official unofficial handler, Ephraim. Although not an obvious choice on the surface, they choose as as head of this disparate five man team Avner Kaufman, a Mossad agent, former bodyguard to Prime Minister Golda Meir and son of a respected Israeli military leader. As the team goes about their mission, they agree to disagree about many aspects of what they are doing, including its purpose and what collateral damage is considered acceptable. They also have to alter plans based on the reaction by the Arab to their killings. Avner and the team will learn that the lines between who is considered a friend and an enemy can often be blurred.

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Munich Movie Reviews

One of Spielberg’s best since ‘Schindler’s List’

Having grown up with the likes of ‘ET’, the first three ‘Indiana Jones’ films (of which ‘Raiders of the Lost Ark’ is still one of his best) and ‘Jurassic Park'(also ‘Hook’, though it’s much less good through adult eyes, don’t dislike it though), it’s safe to say that Steven Spielberg was part of my childhood.

Am still shocked and moved by ‘Schindler’s List’, enthralled by ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind’, moved by ‘Empire of the Sun’ and ‘The Color Purple’ and thrilled but often scared senseless by ‘Jaws’, and consider all of these plus ‘ET’, ‘Raiders’ and ‘Jurassic Park’ among his best films. For me his weakest are ‘The Lost World’ and ‘1941’, and also had mixed feelings on ‘Kingdom of the Crystal Skull’ and ‘The BFG’.

‘Munich’ is not quite up there with his very best, but it’s from personal opinion one of his best since ‘Schindler’s List’. There is a sense at times of hasty production about it, not visually or directorially (on both counts the film’s top-notch) but more to do with occasional parts in the storytelling that feel a little muddled and not as well developed as they could have been in how some things are resolved.

On the other hand ‘Munich’ does look absolutely great, love the very gritty and somewhat stark look to how everything’s shot and lit (the restless camera proves to be atmosphere-enhancing) which felt evocative to the mood and the subject matter. Spielberg’s direction is some of his best of his later films, under him pacing is deliberate but tight and he gives plenty of unnerving intensity without resorting to the schmaltz that he can be criticised for.

John Williams’ score is understated but also haunting, even if not having themes as unforgettable as the likes of those for ‘Jaws’, ‘ET’, ‘Schindler’s List’, ‘Raiders’ and ‘Jurassic Park’, adding a good deal to the atmosphere while not making the mistake of over-emphasising (like in ‘Amistad’). The script is thought-provoking and with the right amount of nuances and avoiding the traps of cheese and schmaltz, while boasting many genuinely powerful and poignant moments. The story is continually compelling, with it being particularly strong when the doubts appear with the urgency and emotional power being maximised. The action scenes are pretty electrifying also.

Not ending ‘Munich’ with a pat and too conveniently wrapped up conclusion was a brave choice, and honestly can’t imagine the film ending as effectively if it had done. The characters are interesting, having strengths but also flaws and conflicts and to me the film didn’t feel at all one-sided.

The acting is terrific, Eric Bana heads the cast in one of his better performances, here he’s charismatic but stoic. Even better are the support, with both sides of Bana’s Avner’s troubled conscience being superbly played by Daniel Craig and Ciaran Hinds. Mathieu Kassivitz, Michael Lonsdale and Geoffrey Rush register strongly also.

Overall, a great film and one of Spielberg’s better later efforts (since ‘Schindler’s List’). 9/10 Bethany Cox

One of Spielberg’s best

A reminder that Spielberg can make strong, mature films for adult viewers when he knuckles down to it, in comparison to the usually sentimental and twee offerings he makes for kiddie audiences. MUNICH is an often gripping world-hopping thriller that outdoes the likes of Ridley Scott’s SPY GAME in terms of international espionage.

It helps that the central narrative is strong and ever-moving: a team of assassins are set up by the Israeli government to kill the Palestinian terrorists responsible for the murder of Israeli athletes during the Munich Olympics. Violent death, condemnation and retribution are the central themes here, dealt with a more subtle approach than you might have expected.

Spielberg’s cinematography is impressive, as it avoids flashiness and super-fast editing to instead provide an old-fashioned, ’70s-style piece of tense filmmaking. The script is strong and the cast stronger; Eric Bana gives a reminder of why he was once leading man material back in the day, Daniel Craig shines in a supporting role, Ciaran Hind is splendid, as ever, and Mathieu Amalric steals all of his scenes. MUNICH is a great film and clearly one of the director’s best.

Coldly efficient

In 1972, nine Israelis are killed at the Munich Olympics. Prime Minister Golda Meir approves a covert operation to assassinate the eleven deemed responsible for the act. Avner (Eric Bana) is low level Mossad tasked to lead the secret mission. He was Golda Meir’s bodyguard some two years ago, and he must leave his pregnant wife for an unknown length of time. Ephraim (Geoffrey Rush) is his case handler. The four men on his team are Steve (Daniel Craig), Carl (Ciarán Hinds) the cleaner, Robert (Mathieu Kassovitz) the bomb maker and Hans (Hanns Zischler) the documents guy. They are expendable and must deal with questionable people like Louis (Mathieu Amalric) who tracks down their targets and provide them with material.

There is a calculated coldness to the movie and Eric Bana contributes to that. I think Spielberg should have made this more emotional. The audience is detached from the characters. The action is coldly efficient without being exciting. This is not a thriller like a Bond movie. Neither is it a psychological study since Bana can’t portray a tortured soul. It is very well made but I feel nothing watching it.