<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?><?xml-stylesheet type='text/xsl' href='http://one-village.spaces.live.com/mmm2008-07-24_12.50/rsspretty.aspx?rssquery=en-US;http%3a%2f%2fone-village.spaces.live.com%2fcategory%2fMovies%2ffeed.rss' version='1.0'?><rss version="2.0" xmlns:slash="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" xmlns:msn="http://schemas.microsoft.com/msn/spaces/2005/rss" xmlns:live="http://schemas.microsoft.com/live/spaces/2006/rss" xmlns:dcterms="http://purl.org/dc/terms/" xmlns:cf="http://www.microsoft.com/schemas/rss/core/2005" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/"><channel><title>Avraham's One Village - JEWISH &amp; benei Noach's ONE VILLAGE  ***Barukh haba***: Movies</title><description /><link>http://one-village.spaces.live.com/?_c11_BlogPart_BlogPart=blogview&amp;_c=BlogPart&amp;partqs=catMovies</link><language>en-US</language><pubDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2008 00:43:04 GMT</pubDate><lastBuildDate>Thu, 21 Aug 2008 00:43:04 GMT</lastBuildDate><generator>Microsoft Spaces v1.1</generator><docs>http://www.rssboard.org/rss-specification</docs><ttl>60</ttl><cf:parentRSS>http://one-village.spaces.live.com/blog/feed.rss</cf:parentRSS><live:type>blogcategory</live:type><live:identity><live:id>-4871701762749004248</live:id><live:alias>one-village</live:alias></live:identity><cf:listinfo><cf:group ns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/live/spaces/2006/rss" element="typelabel" label="Type" /><cf:group ns="http://schemas.microsoft.com/live/spaces/2006/rss" element="tag" label="Tag" /><cf:group element="category" label="Category" /><cf:sort element="pubDate" label="Date" data-type="date" default="true" /><cf:sort element="title" label="Title" data-type="string" /><cf:sort ns="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/slash/" element="comments" label="Comments" data-type="number" /></cf:listinfo><item><title>What's Right With 'Munich'</title><link>http://one-village.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!BC643D0EE3B38628!430.entry</link><description>&lt;div&gt;&lt;strong&gt;&lt;font size=3&gt;What's Right With 'Munich'&lt;/font&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;br&gt;I'm a Zionist, and I liked Spielberg's film.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;BY HEATHER ROBINSON&lt;br&gt;Wednesday, February 8, 2006 12:01 a.m.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Avner Kaufmann, the reluctant warrior and protagonist of Steven Spielberg's &lt;br&gt;movie &amp;quot;Munich,&amp;quot; is honorable, strong, a family man--that is, a typical &lt;br&gt;Israeli. That is why &amp;quot;Munich,&amp;quot; although intensely criticized by pro-Israel &lt;br&gt;commentators, ultimately does Israel and the civilized world at least one &lt;br&gt;service: At a time when anti-Semitism is all-too-often repackaged and sold &lt;br&gt;in politically correct form as &amp;quot;anti-Zionism,&amp;quot; &amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; offers mass &lt;br&gt;audiences a compelling portrait of an Israeli struggling courageously to &lt;br&gt;confront evil. Despite its lapses, &amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; still has value for illuminating &lt;br&gt;Israel's position--and that of all civilized people confronting terrorism.&lt;br&gt;The film's opening sequence juxtaposes images of the scene inside the &lt;br&gt;Israeli athletes' quarters during the Munich massacre with actual TV news &lt;br&gt;coverage of the event in 1972, including footage of a masked Palestinian &lt;br&gt;terrorist outside on the athletes' balcony. We see and hear commentary from &lt;br&gt;ABC's Jim McKay and Howard Cosell, then witness dramatization of the &lt;br&gt;horrors, right down to the gunshot in the face of Moshe Weinberger, the &lt;br&gt;Israeli wrestling coach who, after being shot in the face, managed to knock &lt;br&gt;one terrorist unconscious, and to knock out another one after being shot &lt;br&gt;numerous times in the chest.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;This interspersion of actual televised footage with carefully reconstructed &lt;br&gt;dramatization is one of the film's strengths. In an age rampant with &lt;br&gt;historical duplicity, sometimes extending to Holocaust denial, there is &lt;br&gt;value in providing a mass audience with incontrovertible evidence of &lt;br&gt;historical events.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The early sections of the film also communicate an important point about &lt;br&gt;terrorism: that it is conceived for the cameras, designed not only to &lt;br&gt;devastate its immediate victims but to manipulate public opinion and bully &lt;br&gt;the world. At one point, the Israeli assassination team members find &lt;br&gt;themselves watching a televised interview of several of the terrorists who &lt;br&gt;carried out the massacre. One of the terrorists, when asked if he feels they &lt;br&gt;accomplished anything by murdering the athletes, says, &amp;quot;[We] have made [our] &lt;br&gt;voice heard by the . . . world who has not been hearing before.&amp;quot; (Here &lt;br&gt;again, Mr. Spielberg uses actual news footage.) To which Steve, the most &lt;br&gt;militant of the Israeli assassination team, says with disgust, &amp;quot;Look at &lt;br&gt;them. They're movie stars.&amp;quot;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Indeed. Here the film provides a sobering reminder of the ways in which much &lt;br&gt;of the world in 1972 allowed terrorism to be legitimized as political &lt;br&gt;expression, accepting the notion that a cause could justify such crime, and &lt;br&gt;has paid dearly ever since.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The bulk of the film tells the story of the hunt for the architects of the &lt;br&gt;Munich massacre. Avner and his team travels to European and Middle Eastern &lt;br&gt;cities including Rome, Paris, Athens, Cyprus and Beirut to assassinate their &lt;br&gt;marks, whom Avner locates via Louis, an &amp;quot;ideologically promiscuous&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;Frenchman whose family business is providing intelligence at steep prices. &lt;br&gt;This part of the story is drawn from George Jonas's 1984 book, &amp;quot;Vengeance,&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;which was supposedly true but has since been discredited.&lt;br&gt;Yet even if the story is fiction, &amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; may be, to paraphrase Picasso, a &lt;br&gt;lie that tells several truths. The first is that Israelis do not target &lt;br&gt;civilians, and in fact go to exhaustive lengths to avoid hurting them. The &lt;br&gt;Israeli assassination team's second hit is Mahmoud Hamshari, a Palestine &lt;br&gt;Liberation Organization spokesman who is also a terrorist recruiter. The &lt;br&gt;Israelis wire his phone with explosives that can detonate only by remote, so &lt;br&gt;that they can control the exact timing of the explosion.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;To ensure the safety of Hamshari's wife and daughter, the team waits until &lt;br&gt;the two have left the apartment. The ill-timed arrival of a truck prevents &lt;br&gt;the Israeli team from seeing that the wife and daughter, having forgotten &lt;br&gt;something, have returned to the apartment. When one team member, Carl, hears &lt;br&gt;the daughter pick up the phone, his panic--and that of Avner--is palpable. &lt;br&gt;They race to abort the mission and avoid killing the child as if their own &lt;br&gt;lives depend on it. Mr. Spielberg has done a service in presenting a mass &lt;br&gt;audience with this scene, as it is consistent with the attitudes of most &lt;br&gt;Israelis and reflects the policies of the Israel Defense Forces, which go to &lt;br&gt;great lengths to avoid harming civilians.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Second, this portion of the film illuminates the different ways Israelis and &lt;br&gt;Palestinians value the lives of their children. Avner's concern for the &lt;br&gt;safety of his own wife and baby daughter is paramount in the film. In &lt;br&gt;contrast, while predicting the ultimate destruction of Israel, the &lt;br&gt;Palestinian character Ali says that it doesn't matter if it takes hundreds &lt;br&gt;of years, because &amp;quot;we have a lot of children, and they'll have children,&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;who can be sacrificed to the cause. This attitude that one's children's &lt;br&gt;lives aren't worth the price of compromise is one of the major stumbling &lt;br&gt;blocks to peace in the Middle East, and one of the major differences, at &lt;br&gt;present, between Israelis and many Palestinian Arabs.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Finally, Avner, the film's protagonist, kills not for the sake of glory or &lt;br&gt;to destroy, but to punish the athletes' murderers and to deter future &lt;br&gt;terrorism. He kills not with exultation, but with simple determination to do &lt;br&gt;what must be done. Eventually, he suffers psychologically. The film does &lt;br&gt;raise questions about the efficacy and morality of a violent response to the &lt;br&gt;Munich atrocity. But contrary to the claims of some pundits, to discerning &lt;br&gt;viewers it does not suggest a simplistic &amp;quot;moral equivalency&amp;quot; between &lt;br&gt;Palestinian terrorist masterminds and Israeli counterterrorism agents.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;And while &amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; respects Palestinians' quest for self-determination, it &lt;br&gt;does not imply terrorism is ever a legitimate or effective means of &lt;br&gt;achieving it. Because for all their self-doubt, the Israeli team members do &lt;br&gt;carry out their mission--and they are the film's heroes.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; has relevance for Americans as well. The Munich massacre can be &lt;br&gt;viewed as a precursor to September 11. Both were acts of mass murder as part &lt;br&gt;of a psychological war. The enemy understands that Americans and Israelis &lt;br&gt;have a deep reverence for individual life and that the world is increasingly &lt;br&gt;connected via media. Thus they conceived their monstrous crimes as media &lt;br&gt;events that would be viewed world-wide in an effort to demoralize the West.&lt;br&gt;Avner's psychological distress in the film is a metaphor for the distress of &lt;br&gt;any civilized society forced into violent confrontation with a brutal enemy. &lt;br&gt;Many critics of &amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; think the film promotes the idea that the response &lt;br&gt;to terrorism should not be violent, because &amp;quot;violence begets violence.&amp;quot; That &lt;br&gt;naive view is definitely present in the film, but what many critics have &lt;br&gt;glossed over are the ways &amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; aptly dramatizes the real differences &lt;br&gt;between terrorism and counterterrorism--differences that apply to America's &lt;br&gt;war on terror as much as to Israel's.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;In the scene with Hamshari's daughter, and also in a later scene in which &lt;br&gt;Avner, at some risk to his own safety, shields the teenage son of a &lt;br&gt;terrorist, the film dramatizes the stark difference between terrorists and &lt;br&gt;those who fight them: While terrorists target innocents, counterterrorists &lt;br&gt;do their best to protect them. These scenes reflect civilized nations' &lt;br&gt;commitment to protect innocent life, and never to stoop to the enemy's &lt;br&gt;level.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;The film also makes clear that Israeli counterterrorism agents do not kill &lt;br&gt;for glory or pleasure, or to expand an empire. Like Americans today, they &lt;br&gt;fight fairly and honorably against vicious enemies who deliberately inflict &lt;br&gt;horrors on civilians as a means of psychological manipulation. &amp;quot;Munich&amp;quot; &lt;br&gt;depicts civilized, decent men who can--and do--give the terrorists what they &lt;br&gt;have coming. Now more than ever, that's a good image for the world to see.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Ms. Robinson has written for The Wall Street Journal, New York Post, Los &lt;br&gt;Angeles Daily News and Philadelphia Inquirer.&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;&lt;br&gt;Copyright © 2006 Dow Jones &amp;amp; Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.&lt;/div&gt;
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