September 5 review – terrific, edge-of-the-seat newsroom drama about 1972 Olympics terror attack
It's the news journalist's dream: to have the scoop and a front-row seat at one of the biggest stories of the decade. But the events of 5 September 1972 – the Black September terrorist attack and hostage crisis at the Munich Olympics – were not a story that the men and women covering the Games for the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) expected to be telling. Nor was it, arguably, one that they were fully equipped to tackle. Tim Fehlbaum's gripping real-life newsroom thriller deftly cuts between the nervy dramatised events behind the scenes and actual archive footage from ABC's coverage of the tense standoff that saw two members of the Israeli team murdered and a further nine held at gunpoint in the Olympic village.
This lean media procedural, which is so tautly directed that you can practically feel the panic-sweat trickling down the back of your own neck, is a stark contrast to Steven Spielberg's rather bloated and cumbersome version of the same events and their aftermath in his 2005 picture Munich.
Brisk, jittery and predominantly filmed with hand-held cameras, September 5 features a standout performance from a laconic Peter Sarsgaard as American TV veteran Roone Arledge, as well as a tightly wound John Magaro (recently seen in Past Lives) and Leonie Benesch (who excelled last year in The Teacher's Lounge) as unflappable and resourceful German studio assistant Marianne. Led by Magaro's greenhorn producer Geoffrey Mason, the team of sports reporters wrestle with dinosaur-sized studio cameras, contested satellite broadcast slots, security lockdowns and the professional and ethical minefield of setting the news agenda. It's terrific: nail-chewing, edge-of-the-seat stuff.
In UK and Irish cinemas
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


USA Today
2 hours ago
- USA Today
The best of Swiss track star Audrey Werro in images
Audrey Werro is one of the top runners on the international scene at only 21. She set records and won numerous events in her home country of Switzerland as a teen. Recently, the holder of four national marks added the record of 1:57.25 in the 800 to her accomplishments in the homeland. One to watch when looking ahead to the LA Olympics in 2028. Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro Audrey Werro
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Matt Vautour: NFL Players in Olympics is a terrible idea and awful football
The Olympics are great. Football is great. Football in the Olympics? It's going to be awful. On Tuesday, the NFL made the news official: the league will allow its players to participate in Flag Football in the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles. Advertisement All of this is a terrible idea. For lots of reasons. 1. Flag football is a terrible spectator sport —Flag football is a terrific gym class or recreational activity. It's a great way to introduce younger kids to football skills before they're ready for the tackle variety. It's one step beyond Olympic Ultimate Frisbee. But it's not a good sport to watch. It wasn't interesting at the Pro Bowl and will be even less so at the Olympics. It eliminates all the things Americans love about football: the grit, the rugged physicality, the urgency to make a throw before getting it. The bravery of going across the middle. Advertisement This would be guys in shorts playing 5-on-5. It's middle school recess on steroids. 2. Games involving Team USA won't be competitive and games without the Americans will be really low-level — This would be bad even if it was a tournament with several elite teams, but it isn't. The United States is the only country that really plays football seriously. There are other countries that dabble, but not even at a level that would be competitive in college. Four percent of the players in the NFL in 2024 were born outside the United States and none of them played quarterback. Other than the league's attention-addicted owners, who benefits from the Americans winning 77-0? Advertisement This is not going to grow the NFL globally. It's not like these fledgling federations will leave the Olympics motivated to build up and get on the medal stand in Australia in 2032. Flag football is going to be dropped as an Olympic sport as soon as the torch is extinguished in Los Angeles. Football works as a spectator sport in three ways. High school games on Friday nights. College football on Saturdays and NFL games at any time and in any place. Every attempt to create summer football, spring football, minor league football, European football and god knows what else has been a failure because it's all substandard, gimmicky, mediocre football. The same will be true for Olympic flag football. Advertisement 3. Somebody is going to get hurt — Without line play and true blocking, extra yards are gained by planting and cutting. How are teams going to feel when Amon-Ra St. Brown sprains an ankle or Justin Jefferson tears his Achilles in the middle of an 84-6 win over Austria. It's nice that these NFL players have Olympic dreams, but these would be among the least impressive gold medals in history. RIP Norm Peterson Watching the Chevy Chase movie Fletch, the scenes on the beach are off-putting because when the drug-dealing vagrant Fat Sam, played by George Wendt, comes on the screen, it's impossible not to think 'NORRRM!' Advertisement Wendt, a well-loved TV, movie and theater actor, was forever Norm, the one-line shooting, beer-guzzling, Vera-avoiding, lovable chump at the end of the bar at Cheers. The character was beloved in Boston because he was one of us. Even when Wednt would visit Saturday Night Live to do a 'Da Bears' sketch, he was basically playing Chicago Norm. The best part about the finale of Cheers is that there was no climactic finale. Even though there were no more episodes, we're left to believe that Norm and Cliff are still sitting in those familiar stools for eternity. On Tuesday, Wendt/Norm died at home at age 76. Whatever comes next, hopefully, there was a comfortable stool and a cold beer waiting for him. Real Jeopardy! Clue Sports clues from actual editions of America's favorite quiz show. As always, mind the date Advertisement CATEGORY: COLLEGE SPORTS MASCOTS $1000: A live American bison, Ralphie is the mascot of this school at the base of the Rocky Mountains. — Answer below The Top 5 (BONUS!) Top 10 Norm Peterson lines In honor of George Wendt, here's Norm at his best: 10- Woody: What's going on, Mr. Peterson? Norm: The question is what's going in Mr. Peterson? A beer please, Woody. 9 — Sam: Hey Norm, how's the world been treating you? Norm: Like a baby treats a diaper. 8 — Coach: What's shakin' Norm? Norm: All four cheeks and a couple of chins Coach. 7 — Woody: Can I pour you a beer, Mr. Peterson? Norm: A little early isn't it, Woody? Advertisement Woody: For a beer? Norm: No, for stupid questions. 6 — Woody: 'Pour you a beer, Mr. Peterson?' Norm: 'Alright, but stop me at one... make that one-thirty." 5 — It's a dog-eat-dog world, Woody, & I'm wearing Milk Bone underwear." 4 - Coach: What's the story Norm? Norm: Boy meets beer, boy drinks beer, boy orders another beer. 3 - Coach: What can I do for you, Norm? Norm: I need something to kill time before my second beer. How about a first one? 2 - Sam: How's life treating you Norm? Norm: Like it caught me in bed with its wife. 1 - Coach: What are you up to, Norm? Norm: My ideal weight if I was 11 feet tall Today in Boston Sports History May 23 1976 — Dave Cowens had 25 points and 21 rebounds for the Celtics in Game 1 of the Finals against the Suns. The Celtics won 98-87 and eventually won the series in six games. Lightning round I'm through seven of eight episodes and Netflix's The Four Seasons remake is really good. Panthers, Stars, Thunder and Pacers in six. I genuinely like the Red Sox Green Monster City Connect uniforms. Just a few weeks ago, NBA players anonymously voted Tyrese Haliburton as the league's most overrated player. Now he might win the Bill Russell Trophy. Anyone who thinks Alex Cora shouldn't have taken a day off for his daughter's graduation has warped priorities. Real Jeopardy! Question: Who is Colorado? Headline Crystal Ball: Monday: Trying this again. Advertisement Last week: I had Celtics forcing Game 7. Spoiler alert: They didn't. Finally... If you need me, I'll be on vacation. Read the original article on MassLive.


USA Today
4 hours ago
- USA Today
College World Series finals announcers for Coastal Carolina vs. LSU
And then there were two -- just a pair of baseball teams left in the 2025 College World Series, vying for a national title. That would be Coastal Carolina and LSU -- the Chanticleers are looking for their first title since 2016, while the Tigers won most recently in 2023. There will be games on Saturday, Sunday and -- if necessary -- a third contest to decide it all on Monday, all being broadcast by ESPN and ABC. And if you're here, you may be wondering: who are the voices you're hearing on the broadcast? Fear not! We have all those answers for you. Who are the 2025 College World Series announcers on ESPN and ABC? It'll be Karl Ravech on play-by-play, Kyle Peterson and Chris Burke as analysts and Kris Budden reporting. Who's in the ESPN NCAA Men's College World Series studio? That would be Mike Monaco hosting along with Ben McDonald and Jackie Bradley Jr. breaking it all down. There you have it! Enjoy the series!