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Itโs not cozy Christmas fare, but if you want to see a movie that gets the past half-century of Palestinian terror right, go to a movie theater and see โSeptember 5.โ
This compact Paramount release, covering the 1972 Summer Olympics massacre of Israeli athletes in Munich, has a refreshingly simple โ but not simplistic โ take: Kidnapping and murdering civilians is bad, and thereย isย no context in which to justify it.
Swiss-born Tim Fehlbaum, the director, isnโt known for ideology; his previous features were science fiction and horror.
Itโs theย absenceย of ideology here that works.
We see the Munich terror attack unfold through the eyes of journalists at ABC Sports โ people who are competent at their job, covering the pre-attack Games, but who arenโt foreign-policy โexperts.โ
So when the ABC team, guided by rookie producer Geoffrey Mason (actor John Magaro), hears gunshots from the athletesโ housing compound that September dawn, the reaction is natural, in an era before reporters came to associate global events with terror risk: shock and perplexity.
When the terrorists reveal themselves as they peer out of the Israeli athletesโ apartment theyโve taken over, the American journalists reflexively see them as bad people.ย
There is no backstory to explain why the terrorists are doing what they are doing, no tales of supposed Israeli oppression.
The terrorists are fully masked. They brandish guns that they have already used, to kill wrestling coach Moshe Weinberg and weightlifter Yossef Romano. They are silent and scary.
They donโt get to tell their โsideโ in the film, because they have no โside.โ
It is so obvious that there is no excuse for such depraved action that no one even thinks toย sayย there is no excuse.
The sports team keeps the story, beating back an attempt by ABC News to take it over.
The reportersโ first dilemma: What to call the killers on air?
Disregarding an argument that the issue is too complex for a descriptive term, they call them what the Germans are calling them โ terrorists.
It is clear, too, who the victims are, as the sports team crafts a poster for broadcast, with the nine remaining Israeli hostagesโ photos and biographies.
In decades since, weโve seen countless similar visualizations of the victims of Islamist terror, including victims of 9/11 and, more recently, Oct. 7. Here, the power is the newness.
Another now-regular feature of terror attacks that surprises the naรฏve reporters: government ineffectuality.
The Munich Olympics were supposed to showcase a reformed, enlightened Germany, and the attack happened partly because West Germany so poorly secured the Games: Elected officials didnโt want visuals of armed German officers.
But it also happened partly because of a post-war innocence โ people didnโt think itย couldย happen.
This was a time before people had to go through body scanners to see a pop star perform, when athletes entering their housing complex could, and would, just hold the door open for strangers.
When the German governmentย doesย figure out what to do, it acts with what the film implies was an impure motive.
Acceding to terroristsโ demands to take the hostages to an airfield for an escape to Cairo also conveniently moves the bloody incidentย awayย from the Olympics siteโs concentration of news coverage.
And not having to evacuate the Olympics housing altogether means retaining the option, later exercised, to resume the Games.
Itโs here that the ABC Sports team screws up, prematurely reporting rumors, encouraged by the German government, that the hostages are all free.
But Germanyโs rescue attempt at the Fรผrstenfeldbruck military base fails, and the terrorists kill all nine remaining hostages.
Sportscaster Jim McKay, via archival footage, somberly corrects the mistake on air: โTheyโre all gone.โ
The mistake points up the lack of familiarity with evil โ the reporters err partly because they canโt conceive of a reality in which the Israelis suffer such a horrific loss.
America was used to happy endings.
The ABC team in the film doesnโt know it, but we do: Sept. 5 was lodged halfway between the end of World War II, 27 years earlier, and 9/11, 29 years later. Twenty-two years after that, we got Oct. 7.
The joltingly novel aspect of โSeptember 5โ the film is that, for the sportscasters, itย wasย so new.
Over more than five decades, weโve normalized the inconceivable.
Nicole Gelinas is a contributing editor to the Manhattan Instituteโs City Journal.