Anyone my age or older will probably remember the event, and how horrific it was at the time. One of those world events you never completely forget. It's all well documented now, so it's easy to read up on what happened to the terrorists and their victims.
But this film takes a new slant on what happened. This was the first time that a terrorist event was able to be covered live on satellite TV, meaning the events in Munich found their way around the world immediately. A team of sports broadcasters, from the American ABC network, suddenly found themselves in groundbreaking broadcast territory, and a sudden deluge of unfamiliar moral decisions to make. If a hostage was murdered live on camera, should that be broadcast or not?
While the politics of the situation are touched on, it's largely in the context of how it determines the team's decisions. This is about the human beings behind the cameras, and the strains it put on them. The filming is claustrophobic, largely confined to the control studio, and using contemporary (grainy!) footage to show the unfolding drama being covered. The tech is very much from the pre-digital era, and there's a lot of improvisation required. Younger viewers will be shocked at how primitive it will all seem, but this was the cutting edge of TV sports broadcasting in 1972.
The focus is on the moral and emotional issues. The mistakes made in a situation where the world is watcvhing through their lens. The instincts of journalists wanting to pursue the story (and having to fight off the views of their own management who wanted a news team to take over - but the sports guys were the only ones actually there, on the scene). Versus the moral responsibilities of playing their part in trying to achieve a safe ensding for all involved. They even find themselves being invaded by German police at one pojnt, for hampering the efforts fo the authorities. Are they reporters or voyeurs or accomplices. The lines are sometimes blurred.
The style is often cinema verite, following characters rushing from one moment to another. The messiness and confusion and need to make decisions comes across well. There are some excellent performances, notably from John Magara as Geoff, the studio dierctor trying to hold it all together, and Leonie Benesch as Marianne, a (fictional) young German assistant, reflecting the mortification of her generation at the sins of their elders.
It's a strong drama, worth watching for the tension alone. But the film also provides useful insights into the moral demands on journalists in life or death situations, and a the sesne of global trauma that came with those terrible events.
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