|
|
- NEWSLETTERS
- MOBILE APPS
-
ADD TIME NEWS
Letters: Jan. 9, 2006
Spielberg's Shot to the Heart
Our exclusive report on Steven Spielberg's new film, Munich, generated some unease: Was the director granting too much humanity to the Palestinian terrorists who murdered 11 Israeli athletes at the 1972 Olympics? But Spielberg fans eagerly anticipated the filmmaker's take on an emotionally charged topic
Your cover story on Steven Spielberg's new movie, Munich, described the film as "so sensitive it was kept under wraps" [Dec. 12]. What's so sensitive? The terrorist massacre of Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics and Israel's response were credibly addressed in the 1986 movie Sword of Gideon. Still, I look forward to seeing Spielberg's moviemaking talents brought to bear on this story of terrorism and a nation's legitimate response. Sensitive or not, the movie--if it's good--will sell itself.
CHRIS KRISINGER COLONEL, U.S.A.F. Burke, Va.
I hope Munich is a big success. The story of the Israeli athletes who were murdered should never be forgotten. I wish there were more brave people like Spielberg. He is willing to tell the truth in his movies and make a difference.
ELENA SHUMSKY Orlando, Fla.
I was disappointed to learn that Spielberg considered the heart of his movie to be a fictionalized incident in which a Palestinian terrorist engages in a civil discussion with an Israeli. By rewriting history to humanize the terrorists, Spielberg misses the whole point of the Munich massacre. If the terrorists had been inclined to make their case rationally, the all-too-real atrocities perpetrated against the Israeli national team at the 1972 Olympics would not have occurred.
AHARON SHIFRON-RONNIE Concord, Calif.
Spielberg said he and screenwriter Tony Kushner didn't "demonize" the terrorist characters in Munich, and he felt that "many of them [were] reasonable and civilized." If Spielberg were making a film about Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler and Adolf Eichmann--another gang that slaughtered Jews--would he portray them with the same degree of generosity and tolerance?
AL RAMRUS Pacific Palisades, Calif.
I was a student at Hebrew University in Jerusalem during and after the Munich massacre. Also, I remember in later years the accounts in Israeli newspapers of the Israelis involved in the sanctioned killings. Those were people who did not enjoy killing but who felt no particular guilt about what they were ordered to do. They understood that it was about justice, not revenge.
RAFAEL GUBER Los Angeles
In TIME's interview with Spielberg, he said, "I cannot tell you how many people come over to me on the street and repeat almost verbatim the line the Martians say to Woody Allen in Stardust Memories: 'You know, we like your earlier, funnier films.'" It's no surprise that Spielberg quoted Allen; the two great filmmakers breathe the same ether. My living room is graced with two film posters, one for Spielberg's Schindler's List, the other for Allen's Shadows and Fog. I look at them to remind myself of the hope and magic that great directors can bring to an audience.
REGINA MORIN San Diego
Showing Gays the Door
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- The End of Audacity
- The Man Behind Russia's Deadly Train Blast
- Hate Your Job? Here's How to Reshape It
- Where Did Health Care Reform Go?
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- The Pakistani Taliban's War on Schoolchildren
- The Toughest Diet
- Toyota's Big Recall Unlikely to Quiet Critics
- Why Congress is Furious at the Fed
- World's Most Shocking Apology: Oprah to James Frey
- Where China Goes Next
- For Churches, Beefed-Up Security Is a Mixed Blessing
- New Legal Protections for the Elderly
- Is the Dollar Dying a Slow Death?
- A Brush with Gauguin
- Is There Really a Credit Crunch?
- To Help the Kids, Parents Go Back to School
- Should Students Be Paid to Do Well in School?
- The Philippines' Disappearing Dissidents
- The Road on Film: Beautiful, Bleak





RSS