A new film about the attack on Israeli athletes at the 1972 Munich Olympics explores ethical dilemmas in journalism.
Director/co-writer Tim Fehlbaum, co-writer/producer Moritz Binder and film editor Hansjörg Weissbrich gathered this week for ...
Nearly all of the new film “September 5” takes place in the darkened, smokey control room from which ABC Sports broadcast the ...
That’s the premise of “September 5” which relives how the ABC Sports crew in Munich was doing live coverage of the 1972 ...
While atching “September 5,” you can’t help but think about another 2024 film, “Saturday Night.” In the latter — director and co-writer Jason Reitman’s dramatization of the moments leading up to the ...
The events of September 5, 1972 have lingered with director Tim Fehlbaum since the start of his career: Studying film in ...
The historical thriller follows the team behind the live coverage of the 1972 Munich Olympics hostage crisis, seen globally by an estimated one billion people.
Paramount Pictures’ latest release, September 5, dives into the gripping true story of an ABC sports producer covering the ...
Whereas filmmaker Steven Spielberg’s 2015 Academy Award-nominated “Munich” dealt with the aftermath of the Munich massacre, “September 5” examines what happened that day through the lens ...
Inside the ABC control room in Munich, a shift change is occurring ... In addition to documenting the events as they happen, “September 5″ serves as a technological time capsule of what ...
Tim Fehlbaum’s “September 5” feels like a documentary ... It’s the 1972 Summer Olympics, in Munich, Germany — “Hitler’s backyard,” as one journo disparagingly says — and the ...