I'm not sure how to start the review on this movie. Perhaps I'll let Roger Ebert sum it up this way: "Steven Spielberg's "Munich" is an act of courage and conscience. The director of "Schindler's List," the founder of the Shoah Foundation, the most successful and visible Jew in the world of film, has placed himself between Israel and the Palestinians, looked at decades of terrorism and reprisal, and had one of his characters conclude, "There is no peace at the end of this." Spielberg's film has been called an attack on the Palestinians and he has been rebuked as "no friend of Israel." By not taking sides, he has taken both sides." My friend Ernie said Spielberg was gutsy to make a movie like this. Well it was deep and dark, but we didn't really like it. I wondered constantly how close to the real story it was. So it probably isn't even a good documentary of the facts. On the plus side it's message seems to be that violence just begets more violence, which most of us already know, but it continues none the less. I suspect Spielberg didn't intend this to be a feel good movie and it isn't. It was a well made movie, just not an enjoyable one. Unless the events are of significant interest to you, pass on it. Ernie's final comment was, "next time let's go see a comedy".
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Storyline From Yahoo: Set in the aftermath of the massacre of 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics, story follows a secret Israeli squad assigned to track down and kill the 11 Palestinians suspected to have planned the Munich attack--and the personal toll this mission of revenge takes on the team and the man who led it.
Ratings: Critics A- Users B+
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