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Israel and the Palestinians: The Road to 7th October review: ‘highly recommended’

This documentary by film maker Norma Percy is proof that the BBC can make fair programmes about Israel when it wants to

March 13, 2025 17:38
Ehud Olmert credit bbc 511670
Ehud Olmert showing the map he presented to Mahmoud Abbas detailing prospective borders in 2008, and which was rejected
3 min read

If you don’t already know the names Norma Percy and Ken Burns, thank me later, after you’ve watched some of their programmes. The two great documentary makers are a byword for excellence. The latter’s The Civil War (the American version, not ours) is as gripping a nine-episode TV programme as any thriller. And his The Vietnam War (across ten episodes) is, I would argue, the greatest documentary ever made.

Norma Percy is in the same class. American born, she has lived here since studying at the LSE. Chances are you have seen one of her programmes, even if you’ve not realised it. She has a distinctive and deceptively simple style: she gets the people who made something happen to talk about it.

That’s especially rewarding when she covers something controversial; in that vein, her various series on the collapse of Yugoslavia and its aftermath have been as important as any written histories, with the likes of Slobodan Milošević and Radovan Karadžić as participants.

Getting the people who made something happen to talk about it is, of course, prone to all kinds of disaster if you’re not in Percy’s class as a film maker. The BBC’s Gaza: How to Survive a Warzone got the son of a Hamas minister to talk…and not only didn’t bother to say who he was, but actively went out of its way to present only that perspective.

Topics:

Television