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The Wall Street Journal responds with venom to Spielbergs
Munich
By David Walsh
4 January 2006
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Steven Spielbergs Munich is an artistic and moral
examination of the Israeli response to the tragic episode at the
Olympic Games in 1972 in which eleven Israeli athletes, held as
hostages by members of the Palestinian Black September group,
lost their lives. The Israeli government creates a squad of assassins
and sends them into the field to track down the ostensible masterminds
of the hostage-taking. As the number of corpses mounts, the teams
members, with one dishonorable exception, grow increasingly uncertain
about their mission and experience varying degrees of anguish
and remorse.
The film calls into question the morality and efficacy of such
a killing spree. Spielberg and co-screenwriter Tony Kushner have
fashioned a work that has an unmistakable relevance to the current
US war in Iraq and, more generally, the ruthless policies of the
American ruling elite.
Spielbergs film has come under sustained attack from
reactionary elements in the US. One ultra-right web site asserted
that Munich is about... not upsetting the terrorists.
And rolling over while they attack and kill us. In Steven Spielbergs
world, not going after terrorists brings peace. In the real world,
not going after terrorists brings more bloodshed.
The editorial page of the Wall Street Journal has predictably
joined the assault on the film.
The newspapers editors called on Bret Stephens, former
editor-in-chief of the Jerusalem Post (which named warmonger
Paul Wolfowitz Man of the Year in 2003) and now a
member of the Journals editorial board, to write
their comment.
Stephens piece is snide and dishonest. He first refers
to Spielbergs declaration that he made every effort in Munich
not in any way, shape or form to attack Israel. Stephens
then asks rhetorically, So why is his movie raising such
hackles among Israelis and those generally known as the pro-Israel
crowd?
Israeli reaction, one suspects, is far more complex than Stephens
would like his readers to believe, as the favorable comments by
two of the widows of murdered athletes indicate. As for angering
the pro-Israel crowd in the US, at least
its privileged and right-wing component, one can only congratulate
the filmmakers.
As his first piece of evidence of the films perfidy,
Stephens offers Spielbergs choice of screenwriter Tony Kushner,
hired to rework an initial script by Eric Roth. Kushner, Stephens
complains, believes that the creation of the state of Israel
was a historical, moral, political calamity for the
Jewish people. He believes the policy of the government of Israel
has been a systematic attempt to destroy the identity of
the Palestinian people. He believes that responsibility
for making peace between Israelis and Palestinians lies primarily
with the Israelis, inasmuch as they are far more mighty.
He believes Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon is an unindicted
war criminal.
Stephens only reproduces a portion of Kushners first
comment. These are the actual words, written as liner notes for
a CD: I want the State of Israel to exist (since
it does anyway) and I want the cave of the Patriarchs and Matriarchs
honored and I want to shokl with Jews at the Wailing Wall and
at the same time (and Im afraid this wont help sales
of your CD) I think the founding of the State of Israel was for
the Jewish people a historical, moral, political calamity.
Complexity and ambiguity, however, are not what Stephens is searching
for.
In any event, Stephens would be appalled to learn, the content
of Kushners comments are fairly well taken for granted by
much of informed world public opinioncertainly the claims
that Israel has systematically set out to destroy the identity
(and more than that!) of the Palestinian people and that Sharon
is a war criminal.
Stephens alleges that Munich contributes to anti-Semitism
(he refers to its curious use of Jewish tropes)
by its recurring references to the costs involved in the assassination
of the Palestinian targets. The author misses the point entirely.
A crucially repugnant aspect of the operation is the blood
money spent to set up the killings. When one of the squad members
comments, Killing Palestinians isnt exactly cheap,
he has more than the cash in mind, a concept apparently foreign
to Stephens.
The Journal piece repeats the allegation made in other
quarters that the film takes historical liberties
in telling its story. Stephens cites as proof the claim by Mossad
(Israeli intelligence) officials that the source of the book on
which Munich is based had no experience in intelligence
beyond working as a screener for El Al, the Israeli airline.
Since Mossad continues to deny that it ever organized the assassination
campaign against the alleged organizers of the Munich hostage-taking,
an obvious and widely recognized lie, why should they be believed
about this issue or any other? In any event, Munich is,
in the film makers words, inspired by real events,
and those events are known to have occurred. This charge is simply
a red herring intended to discredit the film.
Stephens claims, absurdly, that Israelis are depicted performing
dirty deeds by the dozen, while the Palestinian characters
are treated with kid gloves. In fact, scenes of the hostage episode
in Munich and its final bloody denouement recur throughout the
film, reminding the viewer of that horrifying episode. Stephens
claim that There is nothing wrong with depicting Palestinians...
as fully rounded human beings is simply disingenuous.
The Israelis, he alleges, are not provided with good arguments
for exacting their revenge. It never occurs to Stephens,
of course, that no such good arguments exist.
An objective examination of the tragic background to the current
situation in the Middle East, including the murder of six million
European Jews by German fascism and the expulsion of hundreds
of thousands of Palestinians from their land by the Zionists,
would preclude from the outset the politics of revenge. The presence
of a bloody-minded South African on the squad who boasts that
The only blood that matters to me is Jewish blood
rankles the Journal commentator. Unhappily, this sort of
reactionary conception, reminiscent of fascist rhetoric, has been
cultivated in Israel, and not without success.
The film, Stephens argues, establishes a false dichotomy
between Jewish ideals and Israeli actions. As evidence,
he notes that the Torah and Talmud are replete with descriptions
of the justified smiting of one enemy or another... It is Christianity,
not Judaism, that counsels turning the other cheek.
Ignoring the bind in which he has thereby placed countless
bloodthirsty Christian fundamentalists, Stephens revealingly summons
up the primitive and brutal tradition of an eye for an eye,
first formulated several thousand years ago during the early stages
of human civilization, to justify current Israeli policy.
Stephens denounces the film for presenting a character, the
son of Zionist pioneers, who grows disillusioned with Israel
and, by films end, has moved his family to Brooklyn
and convinced himself that the Mossad is targeting him for assassination.
In other words, he denounces Munich for one of its quite
deliberate and conscious themes, that Zionist policy is a moral
disaster for those called upon to enforce it. Stephens does not
tell us whether he considers such an evolution possible, he merely
makes clear that he does not like to see it artistically represented.
Finally, Stephens criticizes the filmmakers decision
to depict the actual slaughter of the Israeli athletes (bizarrely
interwoven with an especially vulgar sex scene) at the end of
the film rather than at the beginning. The effect is to jumble
cause and consequence; to make the massacre seem like a response
to Israeli atrocities.
This is obviously untrue; the hostage sequence, including quite
brutal early portions, unwinds throughout the course of the film.
If Spielberg and Kushner had included the athletes deaths
at the beginning of their film, Stephens would likely have complained
that this made audiences forget about them by its conclusion.
Citing Kushners comment that If you start with
an ax to grind, then you write a bad play or movie, Stephens
concludes with the comment: To watch Munich is to
recognize the truth of that statement.
This weak attempt at wit fails because Stephens has nowhere
proven that Munich is a bad film, or one with
an ax to grind, but merely that he disapproves of it and is unhappy
that audiences are watching it. Right-wing commentators unfailingly
assert that Marxists are unable to see beyond their politics in
art, that they are only in search of correct ideology.
In fact, genuine Marxist criticism adopts a far loftier and more
objective attitude to artistic efforts. It is entirely possible
to have wrong politics and make an honest and valuable
film; we have many disagreements, quite sharp ones, in fact, with
Spielberg and Kushner.
Stephens, however, says nothing about the films artistry,
its dramatic plausibility. His unsavory intellectual methods,
those of an ideological hatchet manuntruths, half-truths,
red herrings, smearsexpose him, above all, as a man with
an ax to grind.
Munich has unsettled portions of the political establishment
in the USto some extent because it is seen, with good reason,
as part of a disturbingly critical trend (Fahrenheit 9/11,
Good Night and Good Luck, Syriana, etc.) But Munich
sticks in the craw of the right-wing for reasons of its own.
Its critical approach to Israeli policy no doubt makes the
pro-Israel crowd uneasy, and so it should. The suppression
of such criticism is one of the more repellent features of the
media and entertainment industry in America. To suggest that the
Palestinians have been victimized and oppressed for decades, that
they have a tragic story that needs to be told, or simply that
they live and die like other human beingsthese are well-kept
secrets in the US.
However, there is an even more general concern fueling the
hostility toward the Spielberg-Kushner work.
Munich is a film with definite artistic and ideological
limitations. It does not offer anything terribly new, much less
radical, on the Israeli-Palestinian question. It adopts a generally
liberal, pacifist view. Where it genuinely contributes is in the
horrifying colors with which it paints the deaths of the squads
targets, including those who may or may not have carried out terrorist
acts.
Spielberg and Kushner are unclear about many things, but they
are not unclear about the inhumanity of state violence and murder.
The sensitivity and attention to detail that went into the depictions
of the deaths is obvious and commendable. These are real human
beings who are shot and blown up.
The film, by implication, calls into question official bipartisan
policy since September 11, 2001, and the vengeful arguments mobilized
to justify the so-called global war on terror. Beyond that, it
calls into question several decades of a culture of cruelty and
vindictiveness in American life, involving such questions as the
treatment of the poor, the death penalty and related matters.
An enormous effort has been undertaken by the American ruling
elite, its political representatives and its media, aimed at habituating
the US population to brutality at home and abroad. No expense
has been spared, no opportunity lost, whether in government or
quasi-government-sponsored propaganda (cable television networks,
blockbuster Hollywood films, etc.) or counter-cultural
efforts (films by Tarantino, Scorsese and others), as well as
video games, popular music and so forth. Callousness and coldness
about the consequences of violence have been a central motif of
American popular culture over the past several decades.
Munich, to its credit, works in another direction, toward
sensitizing the population to the implications of inflicting violence
on other human beings, including the toll it takes on the perpetrators.
This was one of our criticisms of Spielbergs Saving Private
Ryan and the claims that it was an anti-war film: What
does the phrase anti-war imply? Not simply that you
are opposed to what is done to you and your countrys army,
but that you are opposed to what is done to the enemy and what
you yourself do to the enemy. It implies a moral self-criticism.
This element is present in Munich, and it is clearly a
response to the post-September 11 policies of the ruling elite,
both its colonial-style war in Iraq and its assault on basic rights
in the US, all hypocritically and lyingly justified in the name
of the conflict with terrorists.
In November 2001, several dozen officials from Hollywoods
studios, the television networks and industry unions met for two
hours with Karl Rove, George W. Bushs chief political advisor,
to discuss how the film world might contribute to the war
on terror. By all accounts, everyone present (including
a representative or more from DreamWorks SKG, the studio co-founded
by Spielberg) enthusiastically promised to enlist in the official
war effort.
Things have not quite worked out as planned, including for
Rove personally. The disaster in Iraq is at the center of those
difficulties. While there is undoubtedly a maddened constituency
for new and greater bloodshed, for much of the population the
savagery and chaos in Iraq has had the opposite effect, a greater
sensitization to human suffering. And when such a reaction reaches
a wide public on thousands of cinema screens, this can only be
deeply troubling to Stephens and the crowd around the Wall
Street Journals editorial page.
See Also:
Art as humanization
Munich, directed by Steven Spielberg
[30 December 2005]
A comment
on the WSWS review of Steven Spielbergs Saving Private
Ryan and a reply by David Walsh
[1 September 1998]
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