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One Day in September
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Directed by Kevin MacDonald.
In 1972, athletes from around the globe gathered in Munich, Germany for the Olympic Games. However, the Olympic spirit of brotherhood and peaceful competition was shattered when eight Palestinian terrorists invaded the athletes' quarters to take the Israeli team hostage, resulting in the violent deaths of eleven athletes. In One Day in September, director Kevin Macdonald mixes newsreel coverage of the tragedy with interviews of witnesses and participants (including Jamil Al Gashey, the only surviving member of the terrorist cadre Black September who were responsible for the killings), as they discuss what happened, and how a dangerous situation turned tragic and deadly . Produced by two-time Oscar winner Arthur Cohn,One Day in September earned Cohn another trophy when it received an Academy Award as Best Documentary Feature. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide
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SpoutBlogSpoutBlog The Children of Huang Shi Trailer
by SpoutBlog in SpoutBlog on spout.com
hasn't rated it.
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"Don’t be fooled, now. This film may look like a beautiful, epic piece of cinema, but that’s likely only because it was shot by Xiaoding Zhao, whose relatively short cinematography resume includes Zhang Yimou’s House of Flying Daggers (for which Xiaoding received an Oscar nomination), Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles and Curse of the Golden Flower (he was also a cameraman for Yimou’s Hero). So yeah, The Children of Huang Shi will certainly be a good looking film, but notice who the director is. That’s right, Roger Spottiswoode, a guy whose worst film is difficult to decide upon. I’d say it’s a toss up between The 6th Day and Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot. I’ve never seen Terror Train, though. That one sounds like a contender. Another thing this film does have going for it is the Oscar-winning producing skills of now-81-year-old Arthur Cohn. He’s had a pretty great career, having partnered with De Sica on his later films, including the The Garden of the Finzi-Continis, and having had ... " [More]
billhrbillhr The Road to Guantanamo (2006) - ...
by billhr in Movies on appliedthinking
liked it.
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"I finally got to catch The Road to Guantanamo last night. This docu-drama was directed by Michael Winterbottom (24 Hour Party People, Wonderland and 9 Songs) and Mat Whitecross. The film tells the story of 3 young men from England (but of Pakistani descent) who find themselves in the middle of Kondoz, Afghanistan (a Taliban stronghold) in the midst o the American attachs in 2001. As a result, they spent years in the prisons of Sheberghan and Guantanamo and were subjected to most of the now infamous interrogation techniques. What I found most interesting about this film was the use of a wide range of story-telling elements. From reenactments to interviews to news footage, Winterbottom and Whitecross are able to capture the entirety of these men's ordeal...and most of the emotion behind it all. An amazing job of filmmaking, certainly reminiscent of One Day in September...although a much more personal telling of a highly politicized story. Originally posted on:appliedthinking " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
liked it.
This recounting of the worst 24 hours in the history of the Olympics makes it clear how naïve much of the world was in 1972 when it came to dealing with the brand of ruthless terrorism that has haunted Americans since their own September tragedy 29 years later. Much of the blame for the Olympics disaster, the film makes clear, should fall on German officials. Happy to host an Olympiad, the first in their country since the infamous 1936 Berlin Games, they discouraged tight security at the Olympic Village, allowing the terrorists to walk in unchallenged with a group of athletes returning from a night of carousing. At the air force base where the hostages were to be rescued, a disorganized assault led to their deaths, and the government subsequently dealt away the three terrorists it did manage to capture in a hijacking hostage swap. The film is an exciting blend of pertinent TV news coverage and contemporary interviews, all of which add a sense of perspective; none more so than the one with the lone surviving terrorist, whose two companions have been assassinated by Israeli intelligence commandos. ~ Tom Wiener, All Movie Guide
 



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