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Film

Film review: Entebbe

Anne Joseph is disappointed by the latest film about the 1976 hostage crisis

May 11, 2018 08:48
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ByAnne Joseph, Anne Joseph

1 min read

Operation Thunderbolt, the 1976 Israeli commandos’ mission to rescue passengers from a hijacked Air France flight diverted to Entebbe airport, Uganda, inspired three films, all made less than a year after the daring mission took place.

Now, Brazilian director, José Padilha (Elite Squad, Narcos and Bus 174) has added his take on this familiar, extraordinary story. In his retelling, he focuses on the two German hijackers, Wilfried Böse (Daniel Brühl) and Brigitte Kuhlmann (Rosamund Pike) left-wing radicals associated with the Baader Meinhof group, sympathetic to the Palestinian cause. To emphasise his credibility to the Palestinian terrorists, Böse, a publisher of revolutionary books, tells them that he wants to “throw bombs into the consciousness of the masses”.

The methodically paced drama unfolds using a day-by-day reconstruction narrative device with a few flashbacks and some archival footage, beginning just before the hijacking and concluding with the rescue itself. Divisions are apparent everywhere. Brigitte, the tougher and more ruthless of the two, doubts Wilfried’s abilities, although neither of them appears to be particularly up to the task.

The legacy of history hovers over them and when it comes to separating Israelis from the rest of the passengers, Böse finds the emotionally loaded task uncomfortable, stating that he is not a Nazi.