The view from September 5 (CREDIT: Paramount Pictures)

Starring: John Magaro, Peter Sarsgaard, Ben Chaplin, Leonie Benesch, Zinedine Soualem, Corey Johnson, Georgina Rich, Benjamin Walker, Rony Herman

Director: Tim Fehlbaum

Running Time: 94 Minutes

Rating: R for Language and Descriptions of Deadly Violence

Release Date: November 29, 2024 (Limited Theaters)/December 13, 2024 (Expansion)

What’s It About?: September 5, 1972 was one of the darkest days in international sporting competitions. That was when the Palestinian militant group Black September invaded the Olympic Village at the Munich Summer Games. Hostages from the Israeli delegation were taken and eventually killed. The new movie entitled September 5 recounts that incident from the vantage point of the ABC Sports crew that suddenly found themselves covering a terrorist attack unfolding right in front of them.

What Made an Impression?: How to Find Meaning out of Violence: September 5 is arriving at a fraught historical moment, with the conflict between Israel and Palestine currently in one of its darkest chapters ever. I’m not worried that this will inflame that tension, at least not any more so than any other piece of fiction inspired by this subject could. It actually reminded me of Civil War in terms of its reticence to make any blunt political statement. But of course, whereas that film is about a speculative future, September 5 is about an event that very much did happen, and long enough ago that we certainly could reckon with what it all meant. But co-writer/director Tim Fehlbaum instead opts for a strict docudrama approach, outlining the who, what, when, where, and how, while leaving the why up to everyone else to decide.
An Uneasy Achievement: While September 5 is hesitant to make any moral judgments, it is willing to congratulate its characters from a technical standpoint, although even then there is a deep well of uneasiness. The sports team is warned that they’re in way over their heads as their assignment turns into the hardest of hard news, though they ultimately prove to be up to the task. They congratulate themselves for a successful high-pressure broadcast, but then they’re left to wonder: what the hell just happened? What does it mean to be the hosts of global tragedy? Chances are, you’ll be feeling both a newfound respect for and a newfound existential crisis about broadcast media.

September 5 is Recommended If You Like: Television history, Subtle use of Canadian accents, Inevitable tragic endings

Grade: 3.5 out of 5 Satellite Feeds