Добавить новость

На Павелецком вокзале, 1999 год, Москва

Банки ОАЭ удлинили срок проведения платежей с РФ - российские предприниматели недовольны

Цветы и игрушки начали нести к месту гибели ребенка в Новой Москве

Один человек погиб и четверо пострадали в ДТП в Ленобласти

News in English


Новости сегодня

Новости от TheMoneytizer

I Was There: Rex Reed on ‘September 5’ and the Munich Olympics Tragedy

The massacre in Munich—when 11 Israeli athletes were held hostage and murdered by a group of Palestinian terrorists called Black September while the world looked on—may be 52 years old now, but thanks to September 5, the meticulously researched, imaginatively directed, tightly edited and unbearably suspenseful new film about the 1972 Olympics, it lives again. Technically, you can’t label September 5 a documentary because it is scripted, and actors play the roles of actual people. But despite the new technology that allows us to view the issues in Munich that made international headlines, changed the way news was covered on live television and swayed the path of history, I can tell you everything in this fantastic movie seems totally accurate and looks exactly the same as it did on September 5, 1972. I should know. I was there. 


SEPTEMBER 5 ★★★★ (4/4 stars)
Directed by: Tim Fehlbaum
Written by: Moritz Binder, Tim Fehlbaum, Alex David
Starring: Peter Sarsgaard, John Magaro, Ben Chaplin
Running time: 94 mins.


It started, for me, as a routine assignment. On my way home from the Venice Film Festival, I stopped off at the Olympics at the invitation of renowned, prize-winning producer David L. Wolper, who made such memorable films as The Hellstrom Chronicles and The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. In Munich, he had invited eight of the world’s most illustrious and industrious film directors to each contribute ten-minute segments about the different aspects of the games that interested them most for a film to be entitled Visions of Eight. With the aid of ace British cameraman Walter (Tom Jones) Lassally, Arthur (Bonnie and Clyde) Penn was preparing a highly personal birds-eye view of the pole-vaulting event. From Czechoslovakia, Milos Forman was structuring a humor piece, blending the decathlon with the high C in an operatic aria. Japanese genius Kon Ichikawa chose the world’s fastest humans, filming the 10-second, 100-meter dash with 35 different cameras, using a Japanese haiku poem for his script. Claude Lelouch, famous for his intimate love stories, trained his sights on 86,000 spectators in the Olympic stadium for the opening-day ceremonies. John (Midnight Cowboy) Schlesinger focused on the 26-mile marathon race through the city of Munich, using 45 camera units operating 65 cameras from electric trucks because no gas fumes were allowed on the streets of the marathon course. Yuri Ozerov, the Russian director of Liberation, showed the pre-game warm-ups when the parents and coaches were gone, leaving the athletes alone with their fears, anxieties and prayers. Germany’s Michael Pfleghar chose the subject of women, and Sweden’s Mia Zetterling shocked everybody when she chose weightlifters and musclemen. “Because I’m a woman, they thought I’d choose the segment about the female athletes,” Zetterling told me. “But this will be different from anything you expect to see.” 

I remember following her to the Olympic Village restaurant, where she copied down the day’s recipe for the super-heavyweights’ menu: 1.2 million eggs for 12,000 sportsmen, four steaks per meal, and 42 pints of milk per day. “I have shot four hours of film to get my ten minutes,” she said, “but I can assure you it will be very exciting.”

It was all very exciting, and Mr. Wolper made it more so by pinning on my lapel the official badge that got me a room in the Olympic Village Hotel and access to all of the events. I had just watched Mark Spitz win his seventh gold medal (at a spot so close to the Olympic swimming pool that he splashed water on my pants) when we all heard the shots ring out. The word reached the ears of David Wolper’s 180-man staff. Two Israeli athletes had been killed, nine more were being held captive in their rooms, tragedy paralyzed the tradition of peace and safe conduct that always defined the Olympic competitions in the past, and Munich was a shambles. This is where September 5 takes up the story. Everything else is electrifying.

Every angle is covered, from the ABC-TV control room to the inside of the Israeli athletes’ apartment. All three networks were there, but the main focus is on ABC, where the rivalry between the news and sports divisions erupted into a contest behind the scenes to see who would take credit for calling the shots. More viewers watched than the number of people who sat glued to their sets when Neil Armstrong walked on the moon. Director Tim Fehlbaum does a masterful job of hopping from one highlight to the next, capturing the essence of what I saw in person. Throughout the day, the vigil continued as ransom notes were sent out and demands were made while the German police became more and more hysterical, drawing guns even on the ABC reporters in the control room. Despite press reports about the tightest security on the planet, I was able to re-enter the Olympic Village by taking a simple passageway through the hotel kitchen and climbing onto the roof of Building 31, where the Israelis were being held as prisoners. There, I watched terrorists, their faces concealed in Ku Klux Klan-like masks, moving silently behind the windows. At 10 p.m., I watched from my hotel window with reporters while the terrorists and the hostages left Building 31, entered the bus that unloaded them in front of the hotel and boarded the three waiting helicopters that transported them to their final bloody, floodlit carnage at Fürstenfeldbruck Air Base, past signs marked, to everyone’s horror, “This way to Dachau.”

It was a terrifying thing to live through, and even when I was watching it unfold from my hotel room in the Olympic Village, I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. It’s all there again to see, hair-raisingly recreated in September 5. The movie is about the hostages, of course, and one of the most heinous events in sports history. But it’s also about the technical difficulties, 52 years ago, of covering an international event via satellite when each network was only allowed a few minutes on the air, as well as the moral question: how much tragedy can you show within the parameters of good taste? The issues the film raises about journalistic integrity and broadcast morality make September 5 the most rivetingly responsible film about journalism since Steven Spielberg’s The Post. Not to mention the obvious fact that in light of the current political climate, this is a film of gravity that screams relevance and is one of the best achievements of the year. 

Читайте на 123ru.net


Новости 24/7 DirectAdvert - доход для вашего сайта



Частные объявления в Вашем городе, в Вашем регионе и в России



Smi24.net — ежеминутные новости с ежедневным архивом. Только у нас — все главные новости дня без политической цензуры. "123 Новости" — абсолютно все точки зрения, трезвая аналитика, цивилизованные споры и обсуждения без взаимных обвинений и оскорблений. Помните, что не у всех точка зрения совпадает с Вашей. Уважайте мнение других, даже если Вы отстаиваете свой взгляд и свою позицию. Smi24.net — облегчённая версия старейшего обозревателя новостей 123ru.net. Мы не навязываем Вам своё видение, мы даём Вам срез событий дня без цензуры и без купюр. Новости, какие они есть —онлайн с поминутным архивом по всем городам и регионам России, Украины, Белоруссии и Абхазии. Smi24.net — живые новости в живом эфире! Быстрый поиск от Smi24.net — это не только возможность первым узнать, но и преимущество сообщить срочные новости мгновенно на любом языке мира и быть услышанным тут же. В любую минуту Вы можете добавить свою новость - здесь.




Новости от наших партнёров в Вашем городе

Ria.city

В США задержали человека, пытавшегося перелезть через ограду Белого дома

На Павелецком вокзале, 1999 год, Москва

Владислав Шапша — на съезде партии «Единая Россия»

В Москве задержали разыскиваемого Интерполом бизнесмена из США

Музыкальные новости

«Мировые рок - хиты» прозвучат в «Колизей – Арене»

Экс-игрок сборной СССР назвал Соболева «дурачком» за переход в «Зенит»: «Лучшая команда у него была «Спартак»

Концерт «Времена года» Антонио Вивальди прозвучит в Эрмитаже

Самолет SSJ-100 Санкт-Петербург — Москва вынужденно вернулся в Пулково

Новости России

Сразу несколько массовых ДТП произошли на платной трассе М-4

Один человек погиб и четверо пострадали в ДТП в Ленобласти

В Госдуме снова заговорили о необходимости внедрения программы социального найма жилья

Аномальные холода обещаны Москве на следующей неделе

Экология в России и мире

Международный конкурс искусства «Сокровища нации» 2024

10 стыдных вопросов о питании: отвечает нутрициолог Мария Кардакова

Международный конкурс искусства «Сокровища нации» 2024

Концерт «Времена года» Антонио Вивальди прозвучит в Эрмитаже

Спорт в России и мире

«Начало заката». Янчук о следующем сезоне Даниила Медведева

Полина Кудерметова проиграла в первом круге турнира WTA-125 в Лиможе

Мпетши Перрикар получил награду ATP «Прогресс года»

Президент Федерации тенниса Италии сравнил Янника Синнера с Винус Уильямс

Moscow.media

• Dusil Photography • https://dusil.org

В 2025 году в Коми планируют завершить ремонт двух участков федеральной трассы А-123

Россияне осваивают внутренний туризм: турпотоки в некоторые регионы выросли на 57%

Утвержден обвинительный акт в отношении жителя Санкт-Петербурга обвиняемого в контрабанде в Литовскую Республику культурных ценностей – черепа вымершего животного











Топ новостей на этот час

Rss.plus






Музей Победы пригласил на концерты конкурса «Журавли Победы» в выходные

На Павелецком вокзале, 1999 год, Москва

Аномальные холода обещаны Москве на следующей неделе

Стартовал прием вопросов к пресс-конференции Игоря Маковского