The Prague Post - Taut Munich Olympics thriller explores media and terror

EUR -
AED 4.188101
AFN 72.985627
ALL 93.797598
AMD 419.060732
ANG 2.041765
AOA 1046.308474
ARS 1701.490502
AUD 1.646767
AWG 2.055561
AZN 1.94172
BAM 1.95042
BBD 2.296565
BDT 140.533566
BGN 1.92827
BHD 0.429898
BIF 3402.936244
BMD 1.140394
BND 1.472744
BOB 7.895899
BRL 5.899482
BSD 1.140265
BTN 108.231389
BWP 15.400517
BYN 3.25693
BYR 22351.725998
BZD 2.293274
CAD 1.619628
CDF 2571.58913
CHF 0.922607
CLF 0.02686
CLP 1057.133979
CNY 7.748009
CNH 7.760039
COP 3808.802534
CRC 519.467032
CUC 1.140394
CUP 30.220446
CVE 110.475653
CZK 24.232226
DJF 202.670799
DKK 7.475307
DOP 67.140679
DZD 151.715182
EGP 55.663441
ERN 17.105913
ETB 181.493967
FJD 2.557049
FKP 0.853106
GBP 0.854389
GEL 3.016387
GGP 0.853106
GHS 13.0176
GIP 0.853106
GMD 83.819127
GNF 10012.661372
GTQ 8.700077
GYD 238.515185
HKD 8.942943
HNL 30.523069
HRK 7.534816
HTG 149.169818
HUF 355.560655
IDR 20531.656881
ILS 3.463321
IMP 0.853106
INR 109.014443
IQD 1494.486578
IRR 1568042.002407
ISK 143.598441
JEP 0.853106
JMD 179.58461
JOD 0.808572
JPY 185.103655
KES 147.407473
KGS 99.727543
KHR 4572.980799
KMF 491.510019
KPW 1026.355164
KRW 1732.304504
KWD 0.353249
KYD 0.950183
KZT 535.048742
LAK 25687.379025
LBP 101770.777092
LKR 381.760249
LRD 207.249541
LSL 18.520094
LTL 3.367288
LVL 0.689813
LYD 7.309855
MAD 10.679781
MDL 20.062656
MGA 4892.290974
MKD 61.631175
MMK 2394.164037
MNT 4089.003332
MOP 9.210293
MRU 45.684205
MUR 53.690057
MVR 17.630566
MWK 1980.86414
MXN 19.986665
MYR 4.655771
MZN 72.882779
NAD 18.519721
NGN 1563.845572
NIO 41.96079
NOK 11.184952
NPR 173.168309
NZD 2.008354
OMR 0.438487
PAB 1.140265
PEN 3.875634
PGK 4.994641
PHP 70.203237
PKR 317.256486
PLN 4.302565
PYG 6941.850667
QAR 4.155027
RON 5.234185
RSD 117.355711
RUB 87.236748
RWF 1671.247676
SAR 4.362304
SBD 9.234112
SCR 15.060202
SDG 684.804209
SEK 11.065359
SGD 1.474969
SHP 0.851419
SLE 27.797099
SLL 23913.500012
SOS 651.734337
SRD 42.863978
STD 23603.857154
STN 24.746554
SVC 9.977608
SYP 126.050161
SZL 18.55425
THB 38.122807
TJS 10.541559
TMT 4.002784
TND 3.364183
TOP 2.745796
TRY 53.43082
TTD 7.738653
TWD 36.664697
TZS 2993.532442
UAH 50.743767
UGX 4173.487292
USD 1.140394
UYU 45.893401
UZS 13724.644552
VES 768.724723
VND 29983.243875
VUV 137.012776
WST 3.156359
XAF 654.152498
XAG 0.01908
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.081972
XCG 2.054931
XDR 0.813318
XOF 652.305415
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.330294
ZAR 18.613696
ZMK 10264.922001
ZMW 21.00923
ZWL 367.206462
  • RBGPF

    0.1700

    68.32

    +0.25%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    21.98

    -0.36%

  • RELX

    0.5400

    32.81

    +1.65%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.4

    -2.56%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6600

    19.43

    -3.4%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    83.11

    +0.63%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    13.05

    -0.23%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.19

    -0.18%

  • RIO

    -2.3300

    91.25

    -2.55%

  • BCE

    0.5300

    21.4

    +2.48%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.1

    -0.08%

  • GSK

    0.2300

    53.32

    +0.43%

  • AZN

    2.9600

    193.12

    +1.53%

  • BP

    1.2200

    38.61

    +3.16%

  • BTI

    0.3400

    61.8

    +0.55%

Taut Munich Olympics thriller explores media and terror
Taut Munich Olympics thriller explores media and terror / Photo: Etienne Laurent - AFP

Taut Munich Olympics thriller explores media and terror

A new thriller set in the newsroom of US broadcaster ABC during the 1972 Munich Olympics explores how their journalists were among the first to cover a terror attack on TV in real time, "a turning point" in media history, its director Tim Fehlbaum told AFP.

Text size:

"September 5", which was nominated for best drama at the Golden Globes, had a limited release in the United States in December and will hit screens internationally in the coming weeks.

It recounts the struggles and ethical dilemmas faced by the ABC news crew as they find themselves switching from athletics and boxing to covering an attack on the Israeli Olympic team by Palestinian militants.

One of the most infamous moments in Olympics history came just as live television was taking off, but was still several years before the advent of rolling news channels and decades from the social media livestreaming of today.

"The Munich Olympic Games were a turning point in media history, in terms of the media apparatus for broadcasting," Fehlbaum told AFP during an interview in Paris.

"The point that we wanted to make is how technology has an influence on the media, and in that way, also has an influence on how we perceive news events."

"September 5" depicts a media landscape far away from today's world of online disinformation and media organisations in crisis.

In the early 1970s, cameras were shooting with 16mm film, telephones used fixed lines and graphics were constructed manually -- all re-created by Fehlbaum, a self-confessed "geek", in luscious detail.

- 'Tough' decisions -

Despite the mistakes made by the ABC crew, the 42-year-old Swiss-German director said he had sympathy for them and by extension to other professional journalists making split-second decisions during breaking news coverage.

"My respect has only grown for people working in that field," he said.

"Today when I watch the news or when I watch the Olympics, I know now how gigantic the apparatus is and how many decisions are made in the background, and how tough it is to make these decisions."

Fehlbaum's cameras almost never leave the ABC gallery where sweaty news producers must decide what to broadcast, with the actors often seen in dialogue with real-world archive footage broadcast that day.

The film does not linger on the lives of the victims or explore the motives of the perpetrators, the Palestinian militant group Black September.

"We wanted to tell a story about media, about the media perspective," Fehlbaum said.

Editing for the film had already finished by the time Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas attacked Israel on October 7 last year, leaving 1,208 people dead, mostly civilians, according to an AFP tally based on official figures.

Israel's retaliatory invasion of Gaza has left around 47,000 people dead and over 110,000 people wounded, according to the Hamas-run health ministry in Gaza.

"Of course, what happened in the meantime will have an influence on how people will see this movie," Fehlbaum said, adding that it invited questions about "how we inform ourselves and how the current conflict is being reported".

Foreign news organisations have been barred from Gaza and media freedom organisation RSF said in December that journalism was in danger of "extinction" in the territory because of attacks by Israel on Palestinian reporters.

J.Marek--TPP