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The Forum > Article Comments > Spielberg's 'Munich' - everything but the truth > Comments

Spielberg's 'Munich' - everything but the truth : Comments

By Ted Lapkin, published 16/2/2006

Steven Spielberg's new film 'Munich' jumbles truth to obscure the realities of terrorism.

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I haven't seen the film.... so perhaps I can analyse things from a distance.

So a retired Mossad agent said something "anonomously" and so it must be true? Mossad agents never fib ... that is one of the tests when you are a secret agent... you must never tell a fib to anyone, especially newspaper interviewers when you retire... Secret Agents never deal in propoganda, they never mislead ... I have all this from a retired anonomous source close to the family...lol

Give us a break...

Whether Spielberg has it 0% correct or 100% correct (which I doubt) it is the role of the secret services of any country to put their country in the best light. Sheesh!

As someone said earlier... It's a film.... told in a documentary style... for the bucks.... but like many films there are probably a few bits that might be true... Some of it occurs in the Middle East I believe ... so that's a start.. that's true.

Did the Mossad agents sneek a look at the script before it came out, mini cameras clicking, or did they get a freebie showing as well to allow them to criticise it before it came out? They must have been the ones in the hoods & black clothes in the cutting room that day...lol

Can a Mossad agent please tell us which bits are true and which bits aren't... You can sign in under a code name anonomously if you want.... Ha!

And it looks like Ted will believe everything you say...
Posted by Opinionated2, Thursday, 16 February 2006 11:48:49 PM
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The movie Munich was ridiculous. I had always been under the impression that Mossad was an extremely efficient organisation. In this movie the bomb maker could dismantle bombs but not build them properly. The team of assassins supposedly in deep cover trotted around Europe together in full sight of KGB agents, shared a safe house with Palestinians and out sourced the job of tracking down Black September members to a dodgy French company. The scene in Amsterdam when they rode up on bicycles to a houseboat, went on board and proceeded to assemble their bicycle pump guns was laughable.
Rather than be offended by the movie I would have thought Mossad would see it as a comedy.
Posted by joana, Friday, 17 February 2006 9:18:06 AM
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I can only partially argree with Ted Lapkin's point of view.

If moviemakers wish to produce storylines based upon real events,(especially where they include actual newsreel footages as part of the plot) they must be either historically accurate, or add a disclaimer at the start of the movie that the storyline is entirely fiction. (Like they used to do)

Audiences unfamiliar with historical events may regard the fiction as historical fact, because people tend to believe what they see. The power of the media to promote causes, propagate lies, endorse products, generate approval, champion causes, endorse opinions, promote ideas, cause contoversies and arouse emotions is well understood.

I can wholly agree that Mossad would be as disgusted at the totally inaccurate portrayal of that particular incident, as I was about the propaganda movie "Rabbit Proof Fence", which had the effrontery to proclaim at the movies beginning. "This is a true story."

On the other hand, movies can be more than just entertainment. Movies which make us look at moral issues from different points of view do have a serious social role. It is by constantly re appraising our moral values, as different times alter the fundamental attitudes upon which our current culture is based, that our society has evolved. If such movies are entertaining at the same time, then so much the better. They are the ones that are considered great movies.

I think that "Munich" deserves that laural.
Posted by redneck, Saturday, 18 February 2006 6:16:56 AM
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To Opinionated2 (I have no comment on the film itself but...)

Re: did they have a special screening for Mossad?

Answer: yes

I read in a national Australian newspaper that Spielberg organised a pre-release screening for Mossad where several hundred reps got to see the film. Apparently it didnt go down too well and Spielberg didnt get the reception he had been anticipating

A case of gap in perception?
Posted by the4ems, Wednesday, 22 February 2006 5:26:41 PM
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I do agree, but when I prompted my self with the thought: If “Michael Moore” had compiled and directed the movie: then it would have been said by Arabs to be a CIA and a George Bush plot. Come to think of it, our ABC would have come up with the same story line. I did say it was a horrifying thought. So which would be the worst presentation: “Moore or Spielberg? Yep, History and reality have sunk that low.
Posted by All-, Saturday, 11 March 2006 11:54:45 AM
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