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Anasazi
12-27-2005, 02:18 PM
A brain is a terrible thing to waste on megalomania - Hollywood is as nuts as George Soros.

http://www.worldnetdaily.com/news/printer-friendly.asp?ARTICLE_ID=48083

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Brokeback Munich



By Jack Cashill


"Everybody is sort of saying they wish I would be silent," so claims an embattled Steven Spielberg, director of the controversial new film, "Munich."

Spielberg, however, willfully misinterprets what his critics are telling him. What they are really saying is that they wish he would be truthful. Although not as flagrantly dishonest as "Syriana," a terrorist-friendly film that finesses a Clinton finance scandal into a Bush-era Big Oil scam, "Munich" fully betrays its audience.

And although Spielberg, an activist Democrat, would never admit as much, this betrayal has everything to do with the fact that Al Gore was not elected president in 2000. This lingering bitterness has poisoned the Hollywood well and turned the sheepish film community against the American-Israel alliance.

This is a shame. One had hoped for more from Spielberg, arguably America's best filmmaker and, at least, a sunshine patriot. But as is apparent, telling the truth about Islamo-fascism in real time takes considerably more courage or conscience than telling the truth about German fascism 50 years after the fact.


In a nutshell, "Munich" recounts the massacre of 11 Israeli athletes by Black September terrorists at the 1972 Munich Olympics and the consequent pursuit of the terrorist leaders by Israeli's secret service, the Mossad. Spielberg based the movie squarely on the 1984 book by George Jonas's much disputed but fair-minded book, "Vengeance." With a few telling exceptions, the movie tracks with the book scene by scene, and rather artlessly at that.

Both movie and book unfold through the eyes of "Avner," a 20-something Mossad agent and Israeli Army veteran, chosen to lead a select team of five agents on a clandestine campaign of retributive justice. In the book, Avner and his team are resourceful, competent, focused and entirely committed to their mission. They debate tactics and sometimes question the efficacy of their pursuit, but they never doubt the justice of killing the Black September leaders.

"If I had it to do all over again," says Avner in the foreword to the 2005 edition of the book, "I would make the same choice I made when Golda Meir approached me more than 30 years ago." Although he questions whether his actions had any lasting effect on terrorism, he remains "proud that I was able to serve my country in this way."

The movie, however, subtly sucks the justice out of Avner's heroic tale. For reasons known only to him, [COLOR=Red]Spielberg turned the script over to Tony Kushner, a hard-core leftist, homosexual activist, self-hating Jew, and avowed enemy of Israel. Kushner's wildly over-esteemed AIDS play, "Angels in America," poked a nasty little thumb in America's eye. In "Munich," although he takes a few cheap shots at America, his obvious target is Israel – "a historical, moral, political calamity," as he has claimed elsewhere.[/COLOR]

Kushner's Mossad spend an improbable amount of time eating gourmet meals together and kvetching about their repeated screw-ups. Indeed, this bitchy and self-doubting bunch of incompetents more closely resemble the partygoers in "Boys in the Band" than they do anyone's idea of professional assassins. At times, the movie flirts with self-parody.

The movie deviates from the book not for the sake of cinematic art, but rather for the sake of moral sabotage. In one provocative scene in the book, Avner asks his Mossad handler which of the five had been trained to do the actual killings.

"Trained to do a hit?" the handler answers. "Who's trained for that? You know a place in Israel they train people for it? It's news to me." No, as citizen-soldiers, they were all expected to shoulder that responsibility. That scene was critical and memorable, and it is gone.

Also gone is the scene in which the handler reinforces the ground rules on civilian casualties. "Zero risk," he tells the agents. "That's part of your job. You're not terrorists throwing hand grenades at buses or machine-gunning people in a theater lobby." So central is this imperative that it drives the plot of the book. In the movie, the agents seem to ignore this understanding as the action progresses.

Absent entirely from the movie is the extended section in which Avner temporarily quits his mission to go fight in the Yom Kippur war a year after Munich. As the narrative on the war made clear, Israel was not the Goliath in this fight, but the David. The Palestinians were not hapless Israeli victims, but useful pawns in a pan-Arabic attempt to wipe Israel off the map – an attempt that might well have succeeded in 1973 were it not for the timely aid of the United States.

The newly invented scenes betray the soul of Avner's story more fully than do the subtractions. In the movie, for instance, the group's whiny bombmaker renounces the group's mission altogether and commences to dismantle the bombs that he had constructed. This did not happen in the book.

Even more insidious is an added scene in which Avner meets a would-be terrorist, who makes a case for a Palestinian homeland more persuasive than Avner is capable of refuting. Without that exchange, says Spielberg, "I would have been making a Charles Bronson movie – good guys vs. bad guys and Jews killing Arabs without any context. And I was never going to make that picture."

Instead, Spielberg does to the heroic action genre what Ang Lee is now doing to the western with "Brokeback Mountain" – he subverts it and the values it has come to represent. One way Spielberg does so is by humanizing the intended targets of the Mossad to the point where the audience doubts their very guilt.

"I think the thing I'm very proud of," Spielberg tells Time Magazine, "is that Tony Kushner and I and the actors did not demonize anyone in the film. We don't demonize our targets. They're individuals. They have families." So, of course, did the Nazis, but this bought them no sympathy in "Schindler's List," nor should it have.

"How can we possibly consider turning the other cheek," asks Avner in 2005, "to adversaries who are willing to commit crimes on the order of Munich or 9-11 – or, for that matter, the Holocaust?"

"Understanding is a very muscular act," answers Spielberg. "If I'm endorsing understanding and being attacked for that, then I am almost flattered."


The Jewish Press calls Spielberg's rationales "liberal psychobabble at its gaudiest." The Jewish Press is being too kind. There is nothing "liberal" about apologizing for Islamo-fascism, nothing liberal about using Israel as a proxy to attack President Bush, nothing liberal about slander.

If Spielberg and his Hollywood chums showed half the "understanding" for the Israeli military and the American forces in Iraq that they did for terrorists, this would be a safer world.

Antlurz
12-27-2005, 08:49 PM
Spielberg should stick with dinosaur movies. His crap and the other fruitbasket self aggrandizers of hollywood are the reason I have virtually total distain for the film making industry.

"Actors". One needs to ponder the true meaning of that word for a while... Phantasy.

Ron

Anasazi
12-27-2005, 09:21 PM
The sole exception I made this year was Peter Jackson's Politically Incorrect 'King Kong' (they shot the :zulu: :zulu: :zulu: ) which I enjoyed immensely.

I'm gonna buy the DVD. :wink: :redneck:

Anasazi
12-27-2005, 10:40 PM
This is how Spielbergs bliss ninny opium dream is playing out in Gaza - :arab:

http://today.reuters.com/news/newsarticle.aspx?type=entertainmentNews&storyid=2005-12-27T144659Z_01_HAR753199_RTRUKOC_0_US-ARTS-SPIELBERG-PALESTINIAN.xml&rpc=22

Munich mastermind spurns Spielberg's peace appeal
Tue Dec 27, 2005 9:47 AM ET



By Nidal al-Mughrabi

GAZA (Reuters) - The Palestinian mastermind of the Munich Olympics attack in which 11 Israeli athletes died said on Tuesday he had no regrets and that Steven Spielberg's new film about the incident would not deliver reconciliation.

The Hollywood director has called "Munich", which dramatizes the 1972 raid and Israel's reprisals against members of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), his "prayer for peace".

Mohammed Daoud planned the Munich attack on behalf of PLO splinter group Black September, but did not take part and does not feature in the film.

He voiced outrage at not being consulted for the thriller and accused Spielberg of pandering to the Jewish state.

"If he really wanted to make it a prayer for peace he should have listened to both sides of the story and reflected reality, rather than serving the Zionist side alone," Daoud told Reuters by telephone from the Syrian capital, Damascus.

Daoud said he had not seen the film, which will only reach most screens outside the United States next month.

But he noted that Spielberg arranged previews in Israel, where some have accused "Munich" of lacking historical accuracy.

Several Israeli historians have also complained about what they see as a moral symmetry in the film between slain Olympians and the Palestinians assassinated by the Mossad spy service.

"Spielberg showed the movie to widows of the Israeli victims, but he neglected the families of Palestinian victims," said Daoud. "How many Palestinian civilians were killed before and after Munich?"

MOSSAD ASSASSINS

The Munich attack was "one of the pivotal moments of modern terrorism" he told Los Angeles Times in rare interview last week.

Daoud used different terms.

"We did not target Israeli civilians," he said.

"Some of them (the athletes) had taken part in wars and killed many Palestinians. Whether a pianist or an athlete, any Israeli is a soldier."

Spielberg's producer, Kathleen Kennedy, told a preview audience at Princeton University that a Palestinian consultant was used for "Munich". She did not say who it was.

"I do feel that we spent an enormous amount of time in discussion and put effort into exploring a fair and balanced look at the Palestinians that were involved in the story," she said, according to an official transcript of the event.

Historians noted that "Munich" presents Mossad assassins as having hunted 11 members of the PLO, while other accounts put the final Palestinian toll at as many as 18.

Daoud survived a 1981 shooting in Poland that he blamed on a Mossad mole in the rival Palestinian faction of Abu Nidal.

Though Israel allowed him to visit the occupied West Bank after 1993 peace accords, and Mossad veterans say the reprisals are over, Daoud said he feels he could still be targeted.

"When I chose a long time ago to be a revolutionary fighter I prepared to be a martyr. I am not afraid, because people's souls are in God's hands, not Israel's," he said.

pato
12-28-2005, 12:16 AM
Too bad.
I was hoping for something along the lines of "Private Ryan"--a movie that I thought was well done and relatively accurate--although it was a work of fiction.

pato

Antlurz
12-28-2005, 05:40 AM
He's getting mega shit from both sides of the fence.

Anasazi
12-28-2005, 11:59 AM
Yeah, the 'Moses' suit doesn't fit him too well - somebody ought to change his meds, or maybe he just ought to go on Oprah with Tom Cruise and they can jump up and down on her couch togeather.

What a conceited putz. :rolleye:

pato
12-29-2005, 10:21 PM
Just got back from seeing the movie.
All in all, it was a very good film and not nearly as charged or as cheap as depicted in the above articles.

I read "Vengeance" 20 years ago--the movie does it justice with some artistic license.

pato

Anasazi
12-30-2005, 12:15 AM
Spielberg is like Elwood Blues - he's on a mission from God. I haven't seen the movie so I'm really in no position to comment. However, Hollywood has made no bones about their intent to prosylatize their POV through their art and since I view the entertainment industry as a source of 'entertainment' I'll leave the parts that aren't entertaining on the shelves - fair enough, they can preach to whoever is in the market for their product.

pato
12-30-2005, 12:34 AM
I am willing to accept the fact that others might have different political views than I have and still perform a service or make a product that I will like, buy, and use.

I went into the theatre poised to not like this film. I decided to see it because the premise seemed interesting, I am a history buff, my wife wanted to see it, and it was our first opportunity to get out and be adults, alone, since the birth of our son 2 months ago.

I was surprised. The movie was very good. Eric Bana did his typical excellent job of acting, the subject matter was handled well and appropriately--I believe. I certainly didn't walk away thinking it was sympathetic to the Palestinian cause at all. I did think it treated the subject of how men hold up to the terrible jobs they are assigned to do quite well. When it comes down to it--the men they were tasked to kill were indeed human--with families, etc--just as the men (Israeli Olympians) that had been targeted and killed.

pato

Anasazi
12-30-2005, 06:38 PM
Okay ..... I gotta ask

Spielberg did say he had an intent to break up the "cycle of violence" with this movie ..... pretentious sod, says I, but none the less - his directorship himself said he was on some kind of peace-making mission. So did you feel drawn to any kind of 'soul' searching vis the rationality of hunting down homicidal vermin for being homicidal vermin or did you just go along for the cinematic ride ? I'd rather believe you'd be more inclined to make up your own mind about such issues but Speilberg is nothing if not an master emotional manipulator so it leaves me wondering.

Personally, I think the air is just a bit too thin up there on Mt. Olympus and I think his brain cells are suffering for it - the last thing I expect to see is suicide bombers and international vigilante's standing in a circle, holding hands singing "We are the world." You just couldn't pitch that crap down at the Feed & Seed in Cornville !

:redneck:

pato
12-30-2005, 11:35 PM
If he was intending to break up the cycle of violence--you sure couldn't tell it from this movie. It had many violent scenes, some gruesome, but well done and necessary.

I didn't feel, or felt I was been made to feel anything other than what I thought I might if I was placed in the shoes of those tasked with hunting down the Black September terrorists. Killing isn't fun, death is pretty, and soon enough you miss your family, miss being human, and you just want it to end.
Did the terrorists get what they deserved? Absolutely--and the characters tasked with killing them seemed quite assured that what they were doing was right and just. They went out of their way--and it was illustrated amply in the film--to not kill or injure innocents.

Regardless of his political views--I think Spielberg made a good film again. Of course, I go to the movies to be entertained, not to be preached to--exactly the reason I didn't and won't see drivel by Michael Moore. On that note--I also refuse to watch anything with Jane Fonda in it--my father was flying aircraft in Vietnam when she went there and became a traitor.

pato

Anasazi
12-31-2005, 12:00 PM
That's just a little baffling as I read that Spielberg himself had intended that film to break the cycle of violence in the land of historic emnities. It would have been one thing if critics and reviewers had said it but this came down from Sinai from the 'man' himself.

Maybe as he Hollywood types themselves say, maybe it was too 'high concept', maybe? Maybe it was just pre-release hype. :tippy:

And just to widen the discussion out into a related direction - I find this movie very interesting: http://firstrunfeatures.com/forgivingdrmengele.html especially after having read 'Children Of The Flames' about Mengela's experiments with children at Auschwitz. It intrigues me that when you put these kinds of stresses on individuals you have a chance to discover whether or not people can act deliberatively or do they merely react ? ie: what are the dimentions and potencial of the species ?