One of the Me Decade’s
most startling real-life events occurred on July 4, 1976, when Israeli
commandos raided an airport in Uganda to rescue more than a hundred hostages
from Palestinians who hijacked a passenger plane. Filled with larger-than-life
individuals, notably crazed Ugandan dictator Idi Amin, the story of “Operation
Thunderbolt” helped define the era during which international terrorism first
took root. Almost inevitably, Hollywood pounced on this material, with the
first screen dramatization reaching American airwaves six months after the
rescue, and a second version airing a month later. Both telefilms feature big-name casts.
First to air was Victory at Entebbe,
a rushed and schlocky melodrama that mostly focuses on dynamics among hostages
during their tense incarceration in Uganda. Filmed by director Marvin J.
Chomsky with garish lighting and unimpressive production values, Victory at Entebbe suffers badly for the
choice to shove the biggest names possible into various roles, no matter the
results. Good luck figuring out the genetic math by which parents Kirk Douglas
and Elizabeth Taylor produce daughter Linda Blair—and have fun scratching your
head while Anthony Hopkins plays Israeli Prime Minister Ytzhak Rabin opposite
Burt Lancaster as his Minister of Defense. Helmut Berger does forgettable work
as lead terrorist Wilfried Böse, and those playing the other
hijackers stop just short of twirling moustaches.
Portraying key passengers, Theodore Bikel, Severn Darden,
Helen Hayes, Allan Miller, Jessica Walter, and others do what they can with florid dialogue and overwrought dramaturgy. Way too
much screen time is devoted to Blair’s alternately cutesy and whiny performance
as a young hostage, the Douglas/Taylor scenes feel like clips from a
bad soap opera, and Julius Harris looks cartoonish playing Amin thanks to an ill-advised fat suit. Scenes set in Israel
are better, though it’s hard to buy doughy Richard Dreyfuss as fierce
commando Yoni Netanyahu. Worse, the Israeli scenes focus on procedural matters, mostly sidelining political ramifications. A final strike against Victory at Entebbe is the use of stock footage for airplane scenes, which greatly diminishes verisimilitude.
Although the star power of Raid on Entebbe is not quite as
impressive as that of the preceding film, the performances are much better.
Martin Balsam, Charles Bronson, Horst Buchholz, Peter Finch, John Saxon, Sylvia
Sidney, Jack Warden, and others deliver restrained work, letting the story speak for itself. Only a few players—including Tige Andrews and
Stephen Macht—succumb to melodramatic excess. More importantly, Raid on Entebbe has Yaphet Kotto. He’s dazzling as Amin, conveying the madman’s grandiosity,
moodiness, and narcissism. Directed by the versatile Irvin Kershner with docudrama
simplicity and the occasional subtle flourish—a sleek camera move here, a
dramatic lighting pattern there—Raid on
Entebbe unfolds methodically. The opening scene depicts the hijacking
without sensationalizing events, and thereafter the movie cuts back and forth
between Israel, where officials plan their response, and scenes involving hostages and their captors.
Eventually, the film resolves into three parallel narratives. The first involves Rabin (Finch) rallying support
for military intervention, despite his government’s propensity for endless
debate. The second involves the hostages, of whom Daniel Cooper (Balsam) is the
unofficial spokesman, watching their fates transfer from the hands of religious
zealots to those of an unpredictable tyrant. The third involves units of the
Israeli military—under the command of Generals Gur (Warden), Peled (Saxon), and
Shomron (Bronson)—figuring how to achieve the impossible. The level of detail
in Barry Beckerman’s teleplay is extraordinary, so despite its lengthy running time (two and a
half hours), Raid on Entebbe is
interesting and thoughtful from start to finish. Better still, the presence of marquee-name actors never
eclipses the solemnity of the narrative. (Special note should be made of Finch’s
fine performance as Rabin, because this was his last project. He died a week
after Raid on Entebbe aired.)
Yet
another dramatization of these historic events emerged soon after the dual
telefilms, this time from Israel. Directed by Menaham Golan, Operation Thunderbolt features a mostly
Israeli cast, although the intense German actor Klaus Kinski plays Böse and the
voluptuous Austrian starlet Sybil Danning costars. Operation Thunderbolt received an Oscar nomination as Best Foreign
Film.
Victory at Entebbe: FUNKY
Raid on Entebbe: GROOVY
"it’s hard to buy doughy, middle-aged Richard Dreyfuss as fierce commando Yoni Netanyahu."
ReplyDeleteRichard Dreyfuss was only 29 years old in 1976.
I remember these. Raid is the better one.
ReplyDelete