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Revisiting Munich: Steven Spielberg Explores a Definitive Moment in History "Our worst fears have been realized tonight." With those words, uttered on September 6, 1972, television announcer Jim McKay brought the overwhelming news that the 11 Israeli athletes, coaches and sporting officials taken hostage by Palestinian kidnappers in the Olympic Village at Munich were all dead, most of them killed on the tarmac of Furstenfeldbruck Airport on the outskirts of Munich in the midst of the German authorities' final botched rescue attempt. A shock wave rippled across a world already engulfed by conflict. With turmoil raging in Vietnam, Northern Ireland and the Middle East, not to mention protest and unrest in the streets of America and Europe, these Olympics had been seen as a much-needed reminder of global unity and a brief oasis of peace. But it was not to be. The world soon learned that the men who had broken into the Olympic Village wearing tracksuits, armed with Kaleshnikov rifles and bearing hand grenades were Palestinian fedayeen (literally "men of sacrifice"). Many of them had been recruited from refugee camps in Jordan, Syria and Lebanon; their aim was to bring the Palestinian cause to worldwide attention and exchange their hostages for the release of 234 Palestinian prisoners, as well as the notorious German terrorist leaders Andreas Baader and Ulrike Meinhof. From the beginning, the staunch Israeli government of Golda Meir refused any negotiations, and Germany refused to allow an Israeli special-forces team to operate in Munich. Instead, the German police launched their own series of ill-fated hostage rescues. It began pre-dawn on September 5 and continued for 21 hours--involving several hastily aborted plans and ultimately resulting in a chaotic shoot-out in which the hostages, five of their kidnappers and a German police officer died. German police took the remaining three kidnappers alive. Weeks later, in what many believe was a staged event based upon a deal struck between the Palestinians and the German government, the three surviving fedayeen would be released from German prison when hijackers of a Lufthansa plane demanded their release. The Olympic games continued after a memorial service, despite the somber, stricken mood. In the media and around the world, there was an attempt to return to some pretense of normalcy. What happened next never made the evening news. Publicly, Israel responded to the terrorist act on September 9 when its Air Force bombed PLO bases in Syria and Lebanon. At the same time, Prime Minister Golda Meir and the Israeli cabinet's top-secret "Committee X" authorized another mission that would never be spoken about. They devised a deep undercover effort designed to strike fear into the hearts of all terrorists threatening Israel--the elimination of 11 suspected Black September operatives by any means necessary. This was "Operation Wrath of God," the still controversial and heavily debated targeted assassination program that, according to several published sources, would ultimately kill at least 13 men without prosecution or trial. The international team of anonymous, but skilled, assassins that Israel created came to have a resounding impact that continues to echo today. Though neither the Israeli government nor the Israeli secret intelligence agency--the Mossad--have ever officially acknowledged the existence of these hit squads, a number of books and documentaries utilizing inside sources have since provided details of how and why "Wrath of God" carried out its aims. Two Israeli generals have also publicly confirmed that the targeted assassination squads did indeed exist: General Aharon Yariv in a 1993 BBC documentary and General Zvi Zamir in a 2001 60 Minutes interview. For film producer Barry Mendel, the events of Munich 1972 were always a vivid, harrowing memory--and the more he learned about them, the more they haunted him, which is why he began to envision a thought-provoking suspense thriller about the most unknown and contentious part of the unforgettable story. Mendel has strong recollections of the tragic day it all started and the feeling that something in the world had changed for all time. "I remember Mark Spitz winning all those medals, and the next morning we woke up, turned on the Olympics, and there was Jim McKay telling everyone what had happened," recalls Mendel. "And that was it. My whole family was suddenly riveted to the TV. We spent the whole day together watching the events unfold, and it was something I knew the world would never forget." Mendel developed the project for four years. Kathleen Kennedy heard about the project from Mendel, with whom she had previously worked on the innovative mystery-thriller The Sixth Sense. She, in turn, brought the story to director Steven Spielberg, who finally decided to go forward with the project on the heels of his apocalyptic blockbuster War of the Worlds, based on H.G. Wells' classic science fiction novel. Kennedy felt the story was an ideal match for Spielberg's eclectic, but always keenly focused, storytelling sensibilities from the minute she heard the idea. "Steven has the facility to be such a great storyteller, and with a piece of material like this and a subject matter that carries so much importance, I became very excited by the possibilities," she says. "I couldn't think of anybody better suited to this story." Kennedy continues, "Today, we're bombarded with so much information and there are so many events happening on a daily basis, I think that to really go back in history and get perspective is something that storytellers and filmmakers can do--in order to make sure that we don't forget where we have been. I think that's an important reason why Steven decided to do this movie. It's an event that sheds light on a lot of current events and it allows us to step back and ask what happened 33 years ago and what did we learn from it? At the same time, it is an edge-of-your-seat thriller that would be compelling, even it weren't based on truth." Spielberg has previously explored resonant moments in history with such epic films as Empire of the Sun, Schindler's List and Saving Private Ryan. The story of Munich also seemed to raise imminently vital questions about the world in 2005 and beyond, which is partly what drew Spielberg to explore the 33-year-old event in more human detail than previously seen. Spielberg has his own intense memories of 1972. "I remember exactly where I was, the television set I was watching it on, and how I was watching--like everybody else, Wide World of Sports, when this incident took place," he says. "It made an indelible impression on me, and I think that impression was redoubled years later when I saw the documentary One Day in September." The director's immediate way into the story lay in the realms of suspense and human emotion. Spielberg became intrigued by a question that had never been publicly addressed: How did this covert mission affect the men assigned to carry it out? To explore that question, Spielberg and Kennedy brought in Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner to work on the screenplay after Eric Roth (Forrest Gump, The Insider) wrote a draft inspired by the book Vengeance by Canadian journalist George Jonas. Kushner's internationally lauded play Angels in America had brought forth a multi-layered examination of the social, political, sexual, racial and religious questions facing the nation at the end of the 20th century, but he had never written a screenplay. Kushner met with Kathleen Kennedy and was intrigued by the probing concept for Munich she presented to him. "I saw that what they were proposing was a very murky, problematic and complicated story not about the massacre itself, but about the aftermath and about the policy of targeted assassination, and I became very interested," he recalls. At first Kushner simply wrote notes for Spielberg on the existing screenplay, declining to try his hand at a feature film. Spielberg relentlessly pursued him, however, and Kushner accepted the challenge. For Spielberg, Kushner's participation was key. "I wasn't really sure I was going to make Munich until I began reading Tony's words, and then everything immediately coalesced for me," says the director. Adds Kennedy, "I think Steven felt he was now in a creative partnership with someone who really understood the complexity of these issues. He knew he was on the way to having a screenplay he would feel comfortable shooting." Kushner distinctly recalls his own experience of the 1972 Olympics, a memory he drew upon as he began his exploration. "It was a transformative moment," he says. "I was 17 years old and it was a very stark thing for me and my family. It was heartbreaking, devastating. I remember a lot of anger in America and especially a great deal of rage that the situation had been blown so badly." Yet Kushner hoped to approach the story with as blank a slate as possible, coming at it without any singular point of view and aiming more at baring provocative questions than providing any pretense of black-and-white answers. "It's a story filled with paradoxes and contradictions," he notes. "It's also a story about a covert operation, so nothing is entirely known for sure and most likely nothing ever will be. So, we gave ourselves some permission to invent and to deal with these characters on a more human level. I feel we have created a very scrupulous piece of what I would call 'historical fiction.'" Forging these characters on a deeper, more humanized level brought a myriad of challenges. "I always like to do difficult things," admits Kushner. "And the big difficulty of writing this story--as was made clear from the beginning--is that our main dramatic agents, our protagonists, are five guys who are assassinating people. They had to be plausible as secret agents, not in the James Bond sense, but in the sense of real field operatives working for an intelligence agency--and at the same time, there is this question of, 'Who are these guys really?' So what was fascinating for me was calibrating these characters, especially Avner." He continues, "Avner is the leader of the group, although not in any conventional sense. But how does his conscience become unsettled? How does this sort of intersection of his own internal ethics and his sense of survival come into play? It became more and more the story of a man whose decency just won't let him off the hook." For a long time, the project remained untitled, but as Kushner wrote, he became enamored with Munich, which also struck Spielberg as taking precisely the right understated tone for a film that presents a singular event that evolves into a persistent moral conundrum. "I like the simplicity of it because I think this is a film that starts with a stark, historical fact and then it shows that there's nothing simple about it at all and that all the certainties that might seem to surround it can also be questioned," Kushner explains. "There's also an immense resonance to the name Munich. It's the birthplace of Nazism and of the Munich of 1972, all at once. It has a kind of iron ring that seems appropriate to the relevance of the story." Even with all the intense collaboration on the screenplay, Kushner was excited to see where Spielberg would take the story once the cameras were rolling. "No one does suspense better than Steven," he comments. "In all of his films you know you will be put directly in the middle of what's happening. The interesting thing is that inside this suspense thriller, you also get pulled intellectually into questions that lead into even more questions. I think he found a way to blend an amalgam of various forms that will make for a very interesting film." Spielberg's vision and confidence, borne out of a combination of his love for cinema and his years of experience, allowed him to direct Munich with a somewhat different approach from his other films. While he had a definitively clear vision of the story, there were no storyboards on this film. He worked in an acutely spontaneous and organic manner, intuiting the needs of each scene as they unfolded before him. The experience on set, therefore, was deeply collaborative for both cast and crew. Summarizes Daniel Craig, who plays one of the hit men, "Steven was absolutely fluid in his directing style. He would see something happening and immediately try to take advantage of it--which is a very exciting way to work. It's also very scary. But if you're going to be in that situation, it's good to be doing it with Steven Spielberg, because he brings such a wealth of knowledge about every aspect of cinema to the process."
Casting Munich: A Global Cadre of 200 Actors Joins the Production The making of Munich began with an exhaustive international search for actors to play the nearly 200 parts in the intricate screenplay, parts ranging from famous political figures to covert agents who work in the shadows. Armed with only a general description of the film's story and the promise of working with Steven Spielberg, casting director Jina Jay traveled the globe looking for fresh and interesting faces. Throughout her search, the focus was on carving out viscerally real characters, rather than relying on star power to drive the film's story. Explains Spielberg, "There are more speaking parts in this film than any I've ever directed, including Catch Me If You Can. Having this many characters in a multi-layered story that spans a couple of years and numerous countries, it was very important to me that even the smallest character be as interesting as the most central character. This story portrays a very painful and tragic part of our collective history, and I wanted to have an amazing ensemble to tell it." "We were helped and facilitated by wonderful casting contacts all over the world," says casting director Jay, whose work would ultimately bring together actors from such diverse places as Algeria, Egypt, Greece, Iraq, Iran, Israel, Jordan, Lebanon, Morocco, Syria, Tunisia, Yemen, Albania, Austria, France, Germany, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden, the U.K., the U.S., Canada and Japan, as well as local actors from both Malta and Hungary, where the film was primarily shot. The core of the casting lay in finding the hit squad itself--the five utterly diverse men who, in the wake of the hostage massacre at the 1972 Olympics, agree to upend their personal lives, give up their former identities and take on an unimaginably perilous undercover mission on behalf of Israel. Spielberg had a very complete vision of what he was looking for in each of them. "I felt it was very important not just to find different looks for each of the five men, but also to find five different acting styles, five different accents, five very unique personalities," says the director. The unlikely leader of the group, Avner, is also its youngest member and the only native Israeli. Avner is intensely devoted to his country, but has never had to kill someone before this mission. To play Avner, Spielberg always had in mind Eric Bana, whom he had seen in Ang Lee's adaptation of The Hulk. "When I saw him in The Hulk, I saw a warmth and a strength and even a little trickle of fear behind his eyes, which I think makes him very human. I was very determined that I was going to humanize the character of Avner in this story, so Eric was my first choice from the outset," states Spielberg. Bana was in Los Angeles finishing his role in Troy in fall 2003 when he got the call saying that Steven Spielberg would like to see him. After meeting Spielberg on the cavernous set of The Terminal, Bana was taken aback to learn that Spielberg wanted him to take the lead role in an intense thriller about the highly controversial Israeli hit squads. "I was shocked and surprised and thrilled and scared, of course," says Bana. Even though he was born and raised in Australia, like many of the cast and crew Bana had his own very personal recollections of the Munich Olympics. He notes, "I was only four or five at the time, but I always remembered some of the images, and it was a story that became very familiar to me through the years. It's an event that keeps coming back at you, because it still seems so current." Bana began to research the role intensively, reading not only about the incident in Munich and life as a Mossad agent, but also the complex history of the Middle East conflict. As he did so, he became intrigued by Avner's personal crisis as the mission begins to shake his very foundations. "Avner goes through a real evolution," Bana observes. "He starts out as someone who is obviously very angry about what occurred in Munich. Then he becomes a young man who is given a truly overwhelming task and has to learn very quickly how to lead. He initially questions what the team is doing, but then something interesting happens: he hardens. As the rest of the group is softening in their resolve, we see Avner do the opposite. But by the end of the movie, we see him becoming more and more torn about the journey he's been on and what he's allowed himself to become." Bana enjoyed the close friendships that developed on the set between the five actors playing the members of the assassination squad. The five stars, each hailing from different countries and backgrounds, arrived together early in Malta and soon formed a tight-knit connection that surprised even them. "I hope that unique camaraderie really comes across, because it was 100 percent genuine," Bana says. "We all came from different parts of the world and had very different points of view and we'd get into all kinds of amazing discussions, but we also really respected one another. It was really cool to experience this." British actor Daniel Craig--who recently made global headlines when he was announced as the fresh new face of the legendary Agent 007, James Bond--joined the cast as Steve, the South African-born recruit who appears to be the group's toughest, bravest and most unwavering member. "Steve is a character who, on face value, seems to be very strong and very in control of his destiny," says Craig. "Like all the guys, he believes in this job because he believes in Israel. He believes some action has to be taken because of this terrible act at Munich. And he's someone who has always dealt with life like a bull in a china shop--he just dives in headfirst and deals with the consequences later. So Steve at first is very gung ho, but as the movie goes on, he suffers because of the terrible acts that they commit. And that's what interested me so much about doing the film; he's a flawed character, and he doesn't expect to feel the emotional turmoil he starts feeling." Craig was too young to remember watching the 1972 Olympics, but he has been aware of the events that took place there for a long time. "I think the repercussions of that time have really molded all of our lives," he says. "It was a kind of worldwide end of innocence--and we're still dealing with the consequences of that. It's one of the most significant events of the 20th century, and I think Munich finally puts a human face onto it." While Craig is an Englishman playing a South African, French actor and filmmaker Mathieu Kassovitz plays Robert, the Belgian member of the team. A talented toymaker, Robert is equally skilled at building deadly explosive devices. An accomplished director, Kassovitz had supposedly retired from acting, famously telling his agent not to call him about acting jobs unless it was for Spielberg. Now he had his chance, and once he saw the script, it was a done deal. He comments, "I was blown away by the screenplay…by the structure of it, by the subtlety, by the intelligence, by the power and the guts. I think it's a very smart movie about the concept of vengeance itself." Kassovitz was also intrigued by his character Robert's unique journey as the most reluctant member of the assassination squad. "Robert is an interesting character, because like all the characters in the group, he is not a trained killer," the actor explains. "He's more somebody who is committed to the cause of Israel and therefore believes he is ready to fight for his land and his beliefs. He joined the army during the Six Day War, and because he's a toymaker and very good with tiny mechanics, he became a bomb dismantler. But it isn't easy for him." Indeed, Robert becomes more emotionally unhinged than the others by the brutal nature of the job facing them. "He is a little more sensitive," Kassovitz observes. "He can't always cope with the violence. Even if he's part of the mission, there are things he can't quite bring himself to do." Each squad member has his own series of dilemmas and internal divisions. Prolific German actor Hanns Zischler takes on the role of Hans, a transplanted German Jew who poses as a quiet antiques dealer, but is really a Mossad agent with a rare gift for forging documents. Playing a German Jew working for Israeli intelligence after the Munich incident was particularly interesting to Zischler--in all its emotional complications. Continued… Read more
Shooting Munich: Steven Spielberg and Janusz Kaminski Update the Gritty '70s Thriller Designing Munich: Bringing a Hidden World to Light
Read more about STEVEN SPIELBERG (Director) TONY KUSHNER's (Screenplay by) ERIC ROTH (Screenplay by) GEORGE JONAS (Based on the Book Vengeance by)
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