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Munich [Blu-ray]
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Genre | Drama, Mystery & Suspense/Thrillers, Mystery & Suspense |
Format | Blu-ray, Widescreen |
Contributor | Michael Lonsdale, Ciarán Hinds, Eric Bana, Hanns Zischler, Barry Mendel, Mathieu Kassovitz, Kathleen Kennedy, Steven Spielberg, Ayelet Zurer, Geoffrey Rush, Colin Wilson, Daniel Craig See more |
Initial release date | 2015-05-05 |
Language | English |
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Product Description
Inspired by real events, Munich reveals the intense story of the secret Israeli squad assigned to track down and assassinate the 11 Palestinians believed to have planned the 1972 Munich massacre of 11 Israeli athletes—and the personal toll this mission of revenge takes on the team and the man who led it. Hailed as "tremendously exciting" (Peter Travers, Rolling Stone), Steven Spielberg's explosive suspense thriller garnered five Academy Award® nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best Screenplay.
Bonus Content:
- Introduction by Director Steven Spielberg
- The Mission, the Team
- Memories of the Event
- Portrait of an Era
- The On-Set Experience
- The International Cast
- Editing, Sound and Music
Product details
- Aspect Ratio : 2.35:1
- Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
- MPAA rating : R (Restricted)
- Product Dimensions : 0.7 x 7.5 x 5.4 inches; 2.4 ounces
- Item model number : 33679126
- Director : Steven Spielberg
- Media Format : Blu-ray, Widescreen
- Run time : 2 hours and 44 minutes
- Release date : May 5, 2015
- Actors : Eric Bana, Geoffrey Rush, Daniel Craig, Ciarán Hinds, Mathieu Kassovitz
- Subtitles: : French, Spanish
- Producers : Kathleen Kennedy, Steven Spielberg, Barry Mendel, Colin Wilson
- Language : English (DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1)
- Studio : Universal Pictures Home Entertainment
- ASIN : B00TF7KZ54
- Country of Origin : USA
- Number of discs : 1
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,286 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- #181 in Drama Blu-ray Discs
- Customer Reviews:
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2006One of the greatest ironies of international politics in the wake of World War II is that you can make an argument that the most fascist nation on the face of the planet is the state of Israel. This will strike most people as an oxymoronic claim because they will associate fascism with Nazi Germany, which means the Holocaust and the attempted extermination of every Jew in Europe. But as a political ideology that existed outside Hitler's Third Reich such as Mussolini's Italy, Franco's Spain, and Peron's Argentina, fascism had a specific dynamic that viewed life as an ongoing "struggle" for "order." Mussolini was always proclaiming a struggle for wheat or whatnot, and we all know about his ability to get the trains to run on time. This dynamic stands in remarked contrast to the Whig-Liberal dynamic of "liberty" and "property," but if you recall the Cold War then you can appreciate how fascist elements worked there way in American politics as well. In Israel, where everybody considers themself to be soldiers, life is indeed such a struggle more so than any other nation you can name.
The argument that in its struggle to survive the state of Israel has become more like its enemy than it would wish to be in a better world is at the core of Steven Spielberg's "Munich." The massacre of the Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics in Munich is presented as the opening act on the modern age of terrorism, and you do not need the camera's final shot to show the World Trade Center in the distance to know that this drama is still ongoing. Ultimately, the film is not about what happened at Munich but how the Israeli government responded. There is no small degree of symbolism in which some athletes innocently help the Palestinian members of Black September into the Olympic village. Actually footage of the coverage of the hostage drama, including Jim McCay's unforgettable announcement to the world that "they're all gone" is mixed with shots of what the terrorists are doing. But the actual deaths of the terrorists and their hostages comes later in the film, as the main character keeps recalling the events as justification for what he has to do and later for what he has done.
Fulfilling the injunction of an eye for an eye in the Torah, the Israeli government comes up with a list of eleven Palestinians to die for the eleven Israelis murdered in Munich. Avner (Eric Bana), a former bodyguard to Prime Minister Golda Meir (Lynn Cohen) is made the leader of a secret and unofficial group that will track down the Palestinians and kill them. His only link to the government is Ephraim (Geoffrey Rush), who will make sure there is enough money to get the job done. Working with Avner are Hans (Hanns Zischler), who can forge necessary documents, Steve (Daniel Craig), who is always eager to pull the trigger, Robert (Mathieu Kassovitz), who has gone from making toys to building bombs, and Carl (Ciaran Hinds), who cleans up the evidence and who is the only member of the group to question what they are doing.
We question because like the characters in the film we have to take at face value that these men need to be killed. But the first has translated "The Arabian Nights" into Italian. The second asks the world to note how many Palestinians have been killed by Israelis since Munich. They are not the terrorists, but they do share their ethnicity and perhaps their politics. But what about a man kissing his daughter goodbye makes him a terrorist? Avner gets information about where to find his targets from Louis (Mathieu Amalric), a Frenchman who could be connected to anybody from the C.I.A. to Mossad for all Avner knows. Meanwhile, as Avner and his men cross more names off of their list Black September is escalating its attacks, and there comes a point at which the hunters become the hunted, not that this stops them from pushing on with their missions.
"Munich" is inspired by real events rather than an attempt to document what the Israelis did in response to the Olympic massacre. What I know about the true history is that they succeeded in killing many of their targets, who may or may not have been directly involved in Munich. The screenplay by Tony Kushner and Eric Roth, based on the book "Vengeance" by George Jonas, goes out of its way to make the attendant ironies of this endeavor palatable. While they use the same weapons in an effort to terrorize the terrorists, what separates Avner's group from their targets is their avoidance of collateral damage, which becomes impossible. But the pivotal scene in the film becomes not an assassination attempt but an moment of black comedy when Avner's team is forced by circumstances to share a safe house with a group of PLO members. Avner has a conversation with a man who is clearly himself as a Palestenian, doing what he is doing in the hope for a home. Devoid of specific reference to ethnicity or religion, the words could be said (and have been said) by those on both sides.
I am reminded of Lincoln's words during his Second Inaugural where he observed that both sides had prayed to the same God, because Arabs and Israelis do not believe that they pray to the same God. Each believes God has promised this dispute territory to them and them along, and the difference between these mirror beliefs that makes us think it will never be resolved in anything other than blood and death is that each holds that there God IS God. The judgment of Spielberg and this film is that the path taken by Avren and his men did not make things better. It is pointed out that those who replaced the dead escalated the violence and the Twin Towers remind us where this road has taken us without an end in sight. The great tragedy could well be that there is no end and suggesting that a particular course of action has made things worse is not a retroactive argument for having done nothing. What is happening could well be as foreordained as any Greek tragedy and those who feel "Munich" attacks them are projecting what they know in their souls onto what they see on the screen.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2025Graphic, feeling, extraordinary script. This event in our history was a tragedy in every sense of the word, for every party involved.
Steven Spielberg was criticized in some circles, but in my opinion, he had the moral authority to make this film because he had made Schindler’s List before he made Munich. All so very tragic.
This is a spectacular film. If you can, watch it on a big screen with good sound.
- Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2025This film is the perfect This film is the perfect sequel after you watch "September 5th" only drawback is sexual scenes which have absolutely NO BEARING to the film. Shame on Spielberg.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 10, 2025In this excellent Spielberg film, the moral comes wrapped in a gripping script and nonstop action: "Violence begets violence" is always true, no matter how tragically justified the circumstances.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 3, 2006It is poignantly fitting that the man who directed Schindler's List should book-end that tale of Jewish pain with MUNICH, a film that tells another side of this people's struggle to survive in a period when the Jews have a state and the ability to answer with something more than simple suffering.
Spielberg claims that the good storyteller exercises 'empathy in every single direction', a project that raises howls whenever it is applied to the Israel-Arab conflict. Or, as this film styles it with historical accuracy, the Israeli-Palestinian dispute over the same dry grove of the fathers' olive trees.
Supported by star turns from Eric Bana, Moshe Ivgy, and Michael Lonsdale and a haunting sequence in which Lynn Cohen plays an anguished Golda Meir - forced to the conclusion that 'every civilization finds it necessary to negotiate compromises with its own values' - Spielberg's MUNICH manages to focus on the human drama played out by the soul of avengers everywhere. In the wake of the massacre of eleven Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics, Bana's Avner is drafted as the unlikely lead agent of Meir's decision to prove that Israel must 'forget peace for now ... we have to show them that we are strong.'
Avner carries out his role with taciturn determination, yet his eyes go moister and home calls the more compellingly as he scratches names off the list of eleven Palestinians who must be eliminated in order to show just how costly it is to mess with Israel.
That 'family matters' is an affirmation of relative priorities kept by all parties in this film is a theme that Spielberg returns to at measured intervals. In the meantime, Avner and his team of avengers find themselves increasingly struggling with 'the mice inside your skull'. Resolution comes in the end through family itself. But it is a resolution that leaves stained, limping men, not the 'neat, durable men' whom Prime Minister Meir confesses to admiring in the film's early minutes.
This is a film that must be seen by those who care about those conflicts that are fought in memory of the fathers, not least the one that still rages and promises to rage on in a small slice of land just to the east of the Mediterranean Sea.
Spielberg has told the tale with astonishing evenness, though it is possible that this conclusion can only be reached from the more or less comfortable distance of this reviewer. Empathy - even that which the director claims to have exercised 'from ever single angle' - hardly seems a virtue to the true-to-life antagonists of this particular conflict. For some considerable time more, blood will continue to flow in the name of the fathers. Avengers who rise up to even the score will themselves come to know the salt of their own tears, and trudge home to find comfort in family.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2025Great film
- Reviewed in the United States on August 17, 2024This Spielberg reflection on vengeance was nominated for five Oscars, including Best Picture and Best Director. Even with that, it seems an under-heralded masterpiece, and ready to be rediscovered and reevaluated. It is every bit as violent and stylish as a Scorcese flick, and more morally complex. Mossad hitmen out to kill Palestinian political leaders living in Europe. Spielberg, a full fledged humanist, provides a complex, compelling story of never-ending violence.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 20, 2024Really did not like it. Eric Bana is one of my favorite actors.
Top reviews from other countries
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AsbornyReviewed in Spain on November 5, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Otro clasicazo de Spielberg para la colección
No es mi preferida pero si quería tenerla en mi estantería con el resto de sus pelis
- AnthonyReviewed in Australia on February 4, 2019
4.0 out of 5 stars Honest and disturbing
A fair documentation of history
- SparklzReviewed in Canada on April 8, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Based on a true story. Revenge movie.
This movie is excellent. I loved it.
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Honeybal LektorReviewed in Germany on January 21, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Der Mossad auf Rachefeldzug nach dem Olympia-Attentat 1972
Steven Spielbergs „München“ basiert auf dem realen Hintergrund des Anschlags auf die isrealische Mannschaft während der Olympischen Spiele 1972 in München durch die palästinensische Gruppe „Schwarzer September“ und die anschließende Jagd des israelischen Auslandsgeheimdienstes Mossad und die Liquidierung der verantwortlichen palästinensischen Hintermänner.
Vor dem Hintergrund dieser tatsächlichen Ereignisse entwickelt sich ein spannender und intensiver Agenten-Actionthriller rund um ein 5-Mann-Hit-Team, das vom Mossad ausgesendet wird, um führende Köpfe des „Schwarzen September“ in ganz Westeuropa aufzuspüren und auszuschalten. Wie die Morde ausgeführt werden, entspricht den historischen Tatsachen, die ganze Story drumherum wird mit künstlerischer Freiheit und der nötigen Dramaturgie eines Hollywood-Filmes ausgestattet. Wie nah der Film an der Realität ist, könnte letztlich nur der Mossad selbst beantworten.
Schauspielerisch ist der Film insgesamt wirklich überzeugend und glaubwürdig umgesetzt worden und durch die verschiedenen Charaktere, kann er auch die moralischen Implikationen der Handlung wunderbar in Szene setzen.
Denn der Film beinhaltet auch durchaus reichhaltigen Stoff zum Nachdenken, denn er thematisiert die moralischen Bedenken einiger Protagonisten und deren innere Konflikte zwischem dem Wunsch nach Rache auf der einen Seite und dem Wunsch nach wirklicher Gerechtigkeit auf der anderen Seite. Ebenso thematisiert der Film die Komplexität, die unüberschaubaren Verflechtungen, die sich immer schneller drehende Gewaltspirale sowie die unklaren Loyalitäten in der Welt der Geheimdienste, Informanten und terroristischen Gruppierungen, wo schließlich auch die Jäger zu Gejagten werden und in ihrer Anspannung und ihrem Misstrauen kurz davor stehen, paranoid zu werden.
Letztlich ist die Kernfrage des Filmes so aktuell wie eh und je, denn es ist in der Tat eine schwierige Frage, wie weit ein Rechtsstaat bei der Bekämpfung von Terrorismus gehen und welche Mittel er dabei einsetzen darf – aktuell beispielsweise die Frage um die Rechtmäßigkeit von Drohnenangriffen auf Anführer jihadistischer Gruppen.
Somit ein überzeugender und spannender Agenten-Actionthriller, vor dem Hintergrund realer historischer Ereignisse, der auch reichlich Stoff zum Nachdenken liefert. Meiner Meinung nach überzeugend gespielt und filmisch umgesetzt.
Von mir 5 Sterne und Empfehlung.
- larry goldReviewed in the United Kingdom on April 24, 2025
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb Picture
Brilliant film, it was Craig's audition for James Bond. some extras on the disc. superb picture