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The new thriller ‘September 5’ looks back at the 1972 Munich Olympics tragedy through the lens of ABC’s coverage, exploring the ethical dilemmas of crisis reporting.
September 5, which was directed and co-written by Swiss filmmaker Tim Fehlbaum, stars Peter Sarsgaard, John Magaro and others as the ABC journalists and production team working out of a studio ...
September 5 sets out to tell the story of the ABC Sports broadcast crew at the 1972 Munich Olympics on the day when a Palestinian terrorist organization called Black September took 11 Israeli ...
Spoiler alert! We're discussing details from the movie "September 5" (in theaters now), which tells the story of the hostage crisis at the 1972 Munich Summer Games. Beware if you haven't seen it ...
Tim Fehlbaum’s September 5 is an emotionally throttling cinematic experience. At one moment, your pulse is pounding and you are thrilled watching a team of journalists rising to the task in ...
A tense ethical showdown with the racing pulse of a thriller, “September 5” revisits the day in 1972 when the Munich Olympics became a very different kind of international spectacle.
“September 5,” which probably should’ve been a four-hour limited series, doesn’t attempt to fathom those stakes, either. It takes a different route, and as a procedural, it works.
“September 5” is arriving in theaters after more than a year of war between Israel and Hamas that has killed tens of thousands in Gaza and stoked widespread protests.
Swiss director Tim Fehlbaum’s “September 5,” which premiered on Thursday at the Venice International Film Festival, takes a story that seems to call for an expansive approach and situates it ...
September 5 is not streaming on Netflix or Prime Video, and likely will not be on Netflix any time soon, due to the fact that the film is a Paramount Pictures release in North America. Almost all ...