Wednesday, November 18, 2009

One Day in September

One Day in September

"The 1972 Munich Olympics were interrupted by Palestinian terrorists taking Israeli athletes hostage. Besides footage taken at the time, we see interviews with the surviving terrorist, Jamal Al Gashey, and various officials detailing exactly how the police, lacking an anti-terrorist squad and turning down help from the Israelis, botched the operation."

4 stars

For those of you who don't know, this film is an Academy Award winning documentary of the horrifying events of the 1972 Summer Olympic Games. If you've seen Munich, these are the actual events that caused to the retaliatory Jewish team to hunt down the responsible Palestinians.

The story is just sad and tragic because so many things could have prevented the deaths of these athletes. The German government was actually intentionally lax on their security around the Olympic Village because they were still trying to shake the infamy of the Nazi regime that had misused the Berlin Olympics four decades earlier. In a cruel twist of fate, some American athletes actually helped the terrorists climb the wall to the village because they themselves were sneaking back in after a night out on the town. Even after the kidnapping began, the German government basically botched every possible decision they could even allowing the games to go on while the police were negotiating.

The event also marked an important turning point in broadcast journalism that really can't be fully understood by anyone who is younger than 45 years old. This was really the first time that a major international event had gone down live on 24 hour television. Today we take that for granted because there are a plethora of 24 hour cable networks, but this was something completely new to the world. The gathering of information, however, doesn't seem to have changed in 37 years because everyone seemed to stumble through the same kind of misinformation and false reports that cause so much confusion today. Even the broadcast itself stalled one rescue attempt by a German police squad because, yes, the terrorists were actually able to see the planned attack on the television they had in the hostages' apartment. The younger of us have still probably seen the chilling footage when the late Jim McKay, anchor for ABC news, looks into the camera and somberly says, "They're all gone."

The documentarian did a great job and some unbelievably exhaustive research. He was even able to get an interview with the sole remaining terrorist who had to give the interview with a blurred face and altered voice. The movie doesn't hold back either. It is very matter-of-fact with what happened minute by minute and is able to convey the simultaneous fear of the people who knew what was going on and the obliviousness of the surrounding athletes who still had no idea. He also makes some good selection with the music that keeps the pace moving pretty well. You need to be prepared though, because a few scenes contain some pretty graphic images. In the end, you are really just left scratching your head at how an event meant to be so peaceful and politically neutral could turn into such a scene of hate and violence.

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