September 5, 1972. The darkest day in sports history. Some 900 million sports fans tune in to watchthe Olympics on TV. Instead, they see the most shocking scenes unfold... Academy AwardÂ(r) winner William Holden (Best Actor 1953, Stalag 17) and Academy AwardÂ(r) nominee Shirley Knight (Best Supporting Actress Nominee 1962, Sweet Bird of Youth) turn this real-life catastrophic event into a mesmerizing story of suspense, anger and disbelief. The perpetrators wear tracksuits, but they are anything but athletes. Known as Black September, these Arab terrorists storm the Olympic village before dawn andtake the Israeli team hostage. They make their demands as the minutes tick by. But from this point on, it isn't about who takes home the gold. It's about who comes home at all.
Product Details:
Actors:
William Holden, Shirley Knight, Franco Nero, Richard Basehart, Anthony Quayle
Format:
Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Full Screen, Subtitled, NTSC
Average Customer Review:
( 6 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 35 found the following review helpful:
A solid television movie on the Munich massacre of 1972Feb 05, 2006
By Lawrance M. Bernabo I can tell you up front that "21 Hours at Munich" is a much more detailed look at that Olympic massacre in 1972 than you will find in Steven Spielberg's film "Munich." In point of fact, Spielberg is not telling the story of what happened on September 5, 1972 in his film but exploring its aftermath. This made for television movie aired in 1976 (in November, so it was after the Montreal Summer Olympics that year). The release of the film two decades later was certainly motivated by the impending release of Spielberg's Oscar nominated film, but since it is an earnest dramatization of the events of that day, it will make an appropriate counterpart to the theatrical film.
The screenplay by Howard Fast (writer of the novel "Spartacus") and Edward Hume ("The Day After") is based on Serge Groussard's book "The Blood of Israel and focuses on what happened in Munich, part of what was then West Germany, that day in September when a group of Palestinian terrorists calling themselves Black September invaded the dormitory rooms of the Israeli athletes, killing two of them and taking another nine hostage. Issa (Franco Nero), the leader of the terrorists, demands the release of 250 Palestinian prisoners being held by Israel, but Prime Minister Golda Meir (Else Quecke) flatly refused to deal with the terrorists. This left it to the German government to try and rescue the hostages. Chief of Police Manfred Schreiber (William Holden) became the point man for their efforts, although Chancellor Willy Brandt (Richard Basehart) and Interior Minister Bruno Merk (Noel Willman) are involved in the fatal decisions as the lives of Jewish men are once again in the hands of the German government, this time with the whole world watching. Having Holden take the lead role certainly invests the German effort with a level of competence, but this is not a story where the best intentions come to mean anything in the end.
If you were alive in 1972 then you probably still have a vivid memory of learning from ABC's sports anchor Jim McKay that despite early reports to the contrary all of the hostages were killed. So it is given that when you watch this television movie that you know what is going to happen in the end. At the time of the actual 21 hours of hostage drama we were only getting bits and pieces of what was actually happening, so "21 Hours at Munich" puts together the details in a vivid fashion. But there is also a sense in which we watch this film trying to pick the key moments where things could have been different and all these deaths avoided. I saw "Munich" today, and the first preview was for "Flight 93," about the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania on September 11th. I saw a television movie about the flight on cable last week and I found myself doing the same thing I did with "21 Hours at Munich," trying to find a moment when if the passengers had acted the outcome might have been different (they waited until the plane was over rural country before making their move, sealing their fates while saving others, which is certainly their legacy).
A film that shows a group of men with their hands and feet tied being murdered by other men with machine guns and grenades obviously takes sides. The film limits itself to this 21-hour period without getting into the politics that came before or after it. Director William A. Graham ("Guyana Tragedy: The Story of Jim Jones") also takes sides by allow Issa to explain the goals and objectives of his group and people to the point that they become irrelevant because we can no longer get past the obvious fact that he and the other members of Black September are holding guns on hostages. Then again, knowing that all of the hostages will be dead effectively poisons the pool. But ultimately, "21 Hours at Munich" is a rather clinical record of what happened at that time and place, leaving the rhetoric and public debate to other films and other venues.
4 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Very interesting and very informativeNov 11, 2008
By Sgt. E. This was a good movie that showed what happened in the Olympics and to the Israeli team.
Great True HappeningsMay 28, 2011
By Irvan E. Johnson
"Irvan E.Johnson"
This Movie was a Remake of the 21 hours at Munich it will show you what actually took place during the 21 Hours.The stars in it are very good actors and do their acting Well.
4 of 7 found the following review helpful:
21 Hours At Munich.Nov 25, 2009
By Jose Lopez
"Jose Lopez"
21 Hours at Munich:
I was able to see this film, the tragic True story it tells of those Horrible events that took place In Munich, I have heard of Speilberg's Version of Events in his "Munich" and I have not seen nor do I plan to from what I hear Is His revisionist take on it. As A Conservative and A Roman Catholic, No matter where you are from, there was and there IS no Excuse for these barbaric acts. Israel had and Has every right to defend Herself,and the Actions she Took after should be a good lesson in response to such heinous crimes.Terrorism is wrong.
0 of 1 found the following review helpful:
Terrible, terrible film!May 09, 2011
By David S. Moore I cannot believe the reviewers who claim this is a good and historically accurate film. Anyone who knows anything about what happened at Munich in 1972 will realize instantly that this film is a cheap dramatization designed to capitalize on interest in the recent terrorist attack at the Olympics. This film absolutely sucks. If you want the real story, read and then watch the book and film One Day In September. Even the scenes in Steven Spielberg's Munich get parts of the story wrong. Why? I have no idea. As if the real story wasn't dramatic enough that they had to change it.