Munich: The Edge of War (2021) Poster

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7/10
Enjoyed the acting
deltta829 March 2022
The final lines of the movie, saying that the time won by Chamberlain enabled the allies to prepare for the war and defeat Germany, spoiled a bit an impression of the film. The fascism was stopped at the cost of millions and millions of Russians killed (incommensurable losses: they were practically cannon fodder) in the first place. Nowadays it's convenient to forget it.

Overall, the movie is produced very well. The leading actors were great.
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6/10
A gripping but mostly fictional drama
wrxsti5427 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I gave Munich: Edge of War a 6 mostly because it is a fictional drama as opposed to a true historical record of the events in and around the Munich Peace Conference in 1938. The broad outline of the events are well covered and are accurate, the sets, costumes and street scenes are wonderfully intricate and authentic. But the story of the key participants, Hugh Legat (George MacKay) as Private Secretary to Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain (Jeremy Irons) and Paul van Hartmann (Jannis Niewhöner) as a part of the German diplomatic delegation, who draw on their college years together at Oxford to collude in trying to reign in Hitler's rampant ambition, is an improbable fictional fantasy.

As a gripping fictional drama, it was good theatre but there were a series of quite implausible plot lines. In 1930's Whitehall (the heart of Britain's bureaucracy), there is no way a mid/late 20's recent graduate who read (majored in) German at Oxford would be a PM's Private Secretary. A role like that would go to a significantly older experienced civil servant. Ditto for the character of van Hartmann. The likelihood of Chamberlain agreeing to meet a young, low level German diplomat over a document that did not come through official intelligence channels was slim to none.

Running the risk of down votes, I want to express frustration at the modern trend of ploughing over historical accuracy to create roles for people of colour. In 1930's Britain, there was a minute (as in fractions of 1%) percentage of the population that was black or south Asian and yet Chamberlain's butler and valet in No. 10 Downing St is a black man. Similarly, fictional MI6 operative Colonel Menzies' daughter Joan, planted in the typing pool to protect Legat's mission, is an equally improbable character. First off, despite her crucial undercover role, no lowly typist in WW2 era Britain would ever challenge a senior ranked Downing St official in the manner she does and the likelihood of a senior MI6 officer being married to a migrant from India producing a daughter of south Asian descent, zero. Such affectations make the producers of the movie look like virtue signalers extraordinaire especially given the superb attention to detail and authenticity everywhere else in the movie.
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7/10
A Failed Attempt To Re-Write History
douglasmcbroom22 January 2022
I read Robert Harris's novel, about the 1938 Munich Agreement, and I loved it. Harris is a very good writer and I love historical fiction. Of course, I was well aware that Harris was trying to alter and improve Chamberlain's image and place in history, with which I vehemently disagreed. Chamberlain's egotism and stubbornness blinded him to the fact that you cannot appease or negotiate with a madman, as Churchill intuitively and correctly realized.

I read the book a second time and thought it would make an excellent film. Of course, I thought, the film makers should not make Chamberlin the hero of the piece in any way, shape or form. I even cast Jeremy Irons, as Chamberlain, in my head.

Irons is, of course, excellent, as are the two young leads played by George MacKay and Jannis Niewöhner. Niewöhner is especially one to watch. The film has enhanced the roll of Helen Winter (Sandra Hüller) I suppose for woke purposes of having a women in a central supporting role. I thought Hitler was miscast. Again, when I cast the film in my minds eye, after reading the book, I thought Steve Buscemi would make a great Hitler.

I said to myself, when I read the book, that the scene they must cut, if the make a film, is the midnight drive to see the old girlfriend. My instincts were 100% correct as it kills all the tension that has been building. They could have trimmed the running time and improved the film.

The film, as does the book, completely downplays the very inconvenient declaration, by Chamberlain at the airport, of "peace in our time." The film also posits, as does the book, that Chamberlain bought time to properly prepare for war when it did come and this contributed to the German defeat. This is an absolute lie. When Churchill took over, as PM, the army was woefully underprepared and under equipped. In fact, had the Allied Forces acted forcefully in 1938, Hitler might have been stopped by an internal coup from the German Army.

"An appeaser is one who feeds the crocodile, hoping it will eat him last." -Winston Churchill.
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Leave history to historians, not novelists. Chamberlin was weak and was duped
random-7077823 January 2022
I am all for revising understanding of history for the better as we learn more. But this film, like the novel it is based on, is not that at all, but rather an apologia and whitewash of Chamberlin's very real, naïve and ghastly mistake at Munich.

Robert's Harris' novel, Munich, on which this film is based isn't simply somewhat wrong, it is totally wrong. In fact Chamberlin was not thoughtful, and was NOT a skilled diplomat. He was a vain, pompous and petty dupe. The idea that he somehow outsmarted Hitler is ludicrous, Hitler got everything he wanted.

We even see in the crawl text at the of the film the claim that "The extra time bought by the Munich agreement enabled Great Britain and her allies to prepare for the war and ultimately led to Germany's defeat." Errr.. no. That is completely wrong. All the data on industrial capacity trends, submarine production, armored vehicle and aircraft production tends, as well as oil and other fuel reserves, shows that the UK and France were in a stronger position in 1938 than in 1939. The Munich agreement also had a massively deleterious effect on both strategic and popular views in the US and the USSR. It convinced Stalin to ally with Hitler. Which was the only way Hitler could invade Poland. The delay of the inevitable war resulted in the annihilation of Poland, the actualization of Japan's closer and more effective alliance with the Nazi's, and by all analysis made the holocaust 3x more effective by allowing the Germans to ally with the Soviets giving the Nazi more control of more of E. Europe where they mass murdered the Jewish populations. American isolationists got a massive boost from the blunder at Munich as well.

We know from Hitler's "second book" (go to youtube and search "Gerhard Weinberg Hitler's second book. For an excellent panel talk on it) we know that Hitler for considered the United States as the ultimate enemy of Nazis. He thought Great Britain would fold (and it initially did due to Chamberlin), that France would be easy to defeat if the war with them started in 1939 instead of 1938 (and it was), that he could fool the Soviets (and he he did for several key years). He thought the non-racial based nationalism of the US, which is to say the US's people's love of democracy, was the ultimate threat to the Nazis.

So in "Edge of War" we are left with a film that has some nice period elements, certainly fine acting, but is also severe disinformation on what went on at Munich. We know for a fact that Goering wrote the agreement, that no British changes were accepted, and that Chamberlin signed off without an argument which stunned even the Nazis.
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6/10
what coulda been
ferguson-620 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Greetings again from the darkness. It seems reasonable to ask why someone didn't take it upon themselves to stop Hitler before things went so far. Of course we now have 80 years of hindsight to benefit our thoughts, but surely there were those who recognized the reign of terror brewing. The 2017 international best-selling novel, "Munich", by Robert Harris, has been adapted for the screen by writer Ben Powers, and is directed by Christian Schwochow. It has the look and feel of a political spy thriller, right down to the clandestine meetings, smoking jackets, and heavy mahogany furniture in the conference rooms.

George Mackay (WOLF, 2021) stars as Hugh Legat, and Jannis Niewohner co-stars as Paul von Hartman. We first see them as 1932 Oxford classmates with their mutual friend, Lenya (Liv Lisa Fries) ... one English, one German, and one Jewish. A ferocious disagreement over Hitler sent the three friends off in different directions. It's not until late in the film that we discover what happened to Lenya, but the bulk of the story features Hugh as an attaché to British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain (Oscar winner Jeremy Irons), and Paul as a German diplomat under the Fuhrer (Hitler is played by Ulrich Matthes who was Goebbels in DOWNFALL).

The timeline revolves around the build-up to the 1938 Munich agreement, just on the brink of WWII. Chamberlain remains focused on avoiding war, while Paul has secured documentation proving Hitler's plan goes far beyond taking on the Sudetenland area of Czechoslovakia. Paul remains loyal to his homeland, but understands Hitler must be stopped. Working with Helen Winter (played by Sandra Huller), his co-conspirator and paramour, they devise a plan to get the documents to Paul's old friend Hugh, in hopes that he will deliver to Chamberlain so that Hitler's vision of domination can be stopped.

This is a dramatized and fictionalized version of what transpired, and Chamberlain's legacy is still debated to this day. Did Hitler outmaneuver him or was Chamberlain buying needed time to build up the military and garner strength with allies? It's great fun to watch Mr. Irons jump into this role, even if this is a favorable and somewhat forgiving view of Chamberlain's approach. The tension is created as old pals Paul and Hugh secretly unite in cause, and is especially present in a scene where Paul is alone with Hitler. Unlike Chamberlain, the goal of the former classmates is to stop Hitler, not just stop or delay a war.

History buffs may cringe a few times, but for an entertaining political drama inspired by history, the film delivers enough to keep us interested. The weakest links involve Hugh's struggles at home with his wife Pamela (Jessica Brown Findlay), who doesn't understand why her husband can't explain to her what's happening at work. Performances from Mr. Irons and Mr. Niewohner are quite interesting, as is the provided quote, "Hoping is waiting for someone else to do it".

Available on Netflix beginning January 21, 2022.
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6/10
Good political thriller
malcolmgsw19 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I have read many books on this period and on the individuals involved. I have also visited the building where the agreement was signed. I believe that it is is now a music school. The room where the discussions took place was Hitlers Office,and this was kept shut.

Firstly two gripes. I found the handheld camera to be extremely annoying. The subtitles seemed to flash up on the screen and disappear before i had a chance to read them.

The fictional part of this film is entertaining,without generating much tension. After all we know how history played out.

The circumstances relating to the signing of the agreement were concertined,there were two trips to Germany.

The influence of Horace Wilson,the Cabinet Secretary,was slightly glossed over. He controlled policy and Chamberlain entirely. Chamberlain himself was an autocrat. He decided policy without consulting colleagues. As is shown in the film he left his Foreign Secretary,Lord Halifax,at home. He wanted nobody to argue or challenge his views. He had this solid belief in his own judgment,which might be ok if you are Lord Mayor of Birmingham but not if you are Prime Minister.

At no time did he understand that Hitler actually wanted to go to war and that he regarded the declaration as worthless.

One can only conjecture how the history of Europe and the world would have played out if Chamberlain had stood up to Hitler in 1938.

Incidentally the German Generals tried to arrange a meeting with Chamberlain some time before Munich but were rebuffed by Horace Wilson.
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7/10
Was Dunkirk part of the British plan?
dierregi22 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
The movie is more of a historical drama than a spy story since the main characters involved are very amateurish at the spying game. They're two 1932 Oxford students, Paul the German and Hugh the British, who six years later find themselves involved with the 1938 signing of the Munich treaty. Jeremy Irons plays flawlessly British PM Chamberlain, the man who sort of gave in to Hitler, thinking he could preserve peace in Europe, when he actually just bought one year before the beginning of WWII.

The theory presented by the movie is that Chamberlain did not make a big mistake, as history proved, but he wisely "bought time" to allow Britain to get ready for the war (and then, also Germany...). It might have escape the author's notice that Britain's preparation somehow did not stretch so far as avoiding the massive defeat and retreat at Dunkirk, not to mention the Blitz.

Politics and wishful thinking aside, the movie is actually quite well structured, with the two main characters believable as ex-classmates and friends, neither too heroic but both willing to do something to stop the impending catastrophe. The atmosphere is tense and there is a sense of urgency throughout the movie that covers only a couple of days in 1938, with some flashbacks to the happier times of 1932. One can foresee the tragedy that will soon hit the two friends, even if it's only suggested, and because of that, it is more poignant.
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7/10
Well written and acted but with a fatal flaw
cwebb23272 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Draws you into the tension of the times from the beginning. Wonderfully cast and cinematography beautifully captures the period. The one flaw lies in the predicate of the plot by following the novelist Robert Harris' speculation that Chamberlain gave Czechoslovakia to the Nazis not to appease but to buy time for UK and European allies time to prepare for war that came only a year later. Nothing in history supports such nonsense. That spoiled an otherwise terrific movie for me.
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7/10
Very good ensemble acting
Waedliman27 June 2022
I realise that historical events can only be reflected to a limited extent in feature films, especially when real people are brought to life by actors 80 years later. The question then is, do I play this person as he was or do I create my own character? In the case of "Munich", however, I didn't care, because I was enthusiastic about the ensemble performance as a whole, more than about the script, but that's why I give it this rather high rating. Jannis Niewöhner and George MacKay as friends on different sides grabbed me right at the beginning because they are very different actors and I have to admit that I have been a fan of Niewöhner for a long time. Ulrich Matthes Hitler scared even me. I know Matthes from the stage and like him a lot, his portrayal here gives you an idea why so many Germans were fascinated by him. Jeremy Irons may have played Chamberlain too positively, but that doesn't detract from his performance. And yes - while watching I was also preoccupied with the current Ukraine war and the parallels to Hitler's war preparations, which are very clear. Let's hope that it will turn out better this time...
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8/10
History repeating itself (not)
kosmasp19 February 2022
Well hopefully not - I did not think of the Russia/Ukraine conflict when I watched this (a few days ago), but thinking about it now ... and it is quite eerie to be honest. Let's hope there is not really a connection there or a repeat to be more to the point.

Having said that and while I reckon we can argue about how one feels about Putin (and a comparison to Hitler that I sort of did above), the second world war and certain things that led up to it ... seem almost inevitable. Or are they? If you know history, you know what transpired overall and where or rather how the movie ends. So there should not be a big surprise there. Still the movie is tension filled and even when you know that certain things could not have happened ... you kind of still expect (hope?) for something different to happen ... don't hold your breath though.

The acting is more than solid and you see historical figures doing their thing ... trying their best to be either as diplomatic as they can or hammering a point across (warning or whatever one wants to call it). There are other comparisons one can draw here - but I'll leave them up to you. I'll just tell you that this movie is very well made ... although I guess you kind of expected that anyway.
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6/10
Garbage
toneybrooks200321 January 2022
Seems there are many "studio inspired" positive reviews here. This is certainly no 10! First, the film should have carried a "historical fiction" disclaimer as most of the events depicted never happened. Second, the Munich agreement didn't "buy time," in fact after Poland was invaded and Britain declared war on Germany, there was no war. The peaceful interlude, called the "phony war," bought time to prepare for war, not Munich. I suppose this propaganda was made to rehabilitate Chamberlain's image. Meh.

For a truly historical account of these events watch Darkest Hour (2017).
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8/10
Engaging & Gripping WWII Espionage Film. Jeremy Irons Is Flawless
Instant_Palmer23 January 2022
George MacKay earns praise as does Jannis Niewohner. Jeremy Irons is flawless in a supporting role as Prime Minister Neville Chamberlin (deserving of BAFTA and Oscar nods).

Highly recommended under-the-radar historical fiction film that should gain momentum in viewing after awards nominations announced. It would be disappointing to see this film and its actors snubbed.

👍👍
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7/10
Good acting, interesting story.
deloudelouvain4 April 2022
Munich: The Edge of War is an entertaining movie to watch. Just don't get mislead by the title though. It's not really a war movie, more of a drama. You won't see any shooting or killing, just political conversations about going to war or not. Sounds boring but it isn't. It's an interesting story based on a novel, certainly not accurate to what really happened, something we will never really know. The cast was excellent, good acting from all of them. Nice cinematography as well, it's all quality. Just don't expect action because there isn't any.
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4/10
The "Great Appeaser" meets a "Good German" in this contrived tale of historical fiction
Turfseer26 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Munich - Edge of War is a co-British/German production directed by German director Christian Schwochow. It's a work of historical fiction that attempts to explore the legacy of British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain (Jeremy Irons) and his ill-fated negotiations with Hitler in 1938 Munich over the fate of the Sudetenland, a territory in Czechoslovakia inhabited primarily by people of German ancestry.

The fictional aspect of the narrative concerns two former Oxford University friends (Hugh Legat, a Brit played by George Mackay and a German, Paul von Hartmann, played by Jennis Niewohner), who attended the school six years earlier. Now both are involved in the foreign service with Legat as personal assistant to Prime Minister Chamberlain and Von Hartmann, a translator in the foreign office in Berlin.

The two had a falling out right after graduation over von Hartmann's embrace of Hitler but now he sees the error of his ways and is bent on stopping the dictator at all costs.

There's a MacGuffin here-a report stolen by a female friend of von Hartmann's which supposedly chronicles Hitler's plan for world conquest. The idea is for von Hartmann to get the report to the British to persuade Chamberlain that Hitler's demands to annex the Sudetenland as his last territorial demand, is a pipe dream and that he is a "madman" (in von Hartmann's words) who has no intention of seeking peace.

Hitler's plans for world conquest were already drawn up in his autobiography Mein Kampf so for anyone to believe that some kind of general report would convince the British of Hitler's true intentions seems completely far-fetched.

What's more, a diplomat such as von Hartmann would not be so naïve to believe that Chamberlain would change his mind about negotiating with Hitler as it was quite clear that British public opinion demanded that the Prime Minister seek peace at any price.

Finally I question whether such a MacGuffin would have ever been drawn up in the first place. The upper echelons of the Nazi hierarchy were notorious for not committing any explicit (or even general) plans to paper-especially attributing those plans to "Der Fuhrer" who would never have had any of his subordinates suggest in writing that he was a warmonger and planning a campaign of worldwide aggression.

The mechanics of how von Hartmann goes about passing the secret report on to Legat seem utterly contrived. Why does he take him on that little trip through the streets of Munich, where the two could easily be spotted and end up in a bustling café full of chattering Nazis who could also notice something awry (especially when the two are occasionally speaking English)?

The actor playing Hitler, Ulrich Matthes, is 20 years too old for the part and is depicted as unpleasant and arrogant, in contrast to the charm the Hitler of history exuded when he was often in public. Hitler's vituperative antics-notable during the behind-the-scenes negotiations at Munich-are not dealt with at all here as the Munich Conference (which actually took place over a number of weeks in three different locations) ends up being depicted as a perfunctory one-time meeting.

The film also suffers from not having a significantly developed antagonist to keep things interesting. It's von Hartmann's childhood friend, the now SS officer Franz Sauer (August Diehl), who has a small part rummaging through the foreign officer translator's papers looking for the secret report as well as engaging in a short wrestling match with Legat, who manages to escape detection as a spy.

The narrative's contrivance extends to the nonsensical idea that a low-level foreign service officer such as von Hartmann would be left alone with Hitler while carrying a gun. What's more the two principals are not found out all due to the miracle intervention of typist Joan Menzies (Angli Mohindra), daughter of the British army colonel, tasked with looking after such an espionage neophyte (she saves the day by extracting the MacGuffin from Legat's hotel room).

More egregious is the focus on the sole redeemed German von Hartmann who somehow not only is presciently aware of what will happen in the future but is bent on being the one to kill Hitler himself. This is the usual trope often found in German cinema-the presence of the "good" German who is inevitably thrown in to counterbalance the reality of the mass complicity of the overwhelming majority of German citizens during the Nazi years.

If there's anything good about this film it's Jeremy Irons in the role of Neville Chamberlain. Not only is Irons a dead ringer for Chamberlain but he's completely believable as the "Great Appeaser" of history who naively believed that he could contain a criminal such as Hitler through offering him one ineffectual concession after another.

Director Schwochow attempts to rehabilitate Chamberlain's image somewhat by suggesting that the now universally condemned Prime Minister was aware that Hitler was a "gangster" and that he could only play the "cards that he was dealt with." He has Chamberlain state that even if his diplomatic efforts failed history would have judged him favorably as more time was bought for Britain to prepare for the coming conflict.

Schwochow seems to suggest that this idea of "buying time" was what happened. Of course he ignores the fact that Britain hardly was prepared at all and almost lost the war at Dunkirk along with all the "Blitz" bombings it endured. It was actually Hitler's ill-informed decision to invade Russia that turned the tide in the war for the Allies.

"Munich" is worth a look to watch Iron's performance. Otherwise the historical fiction leaves a great deal to be desired.
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6/10
Who knew that Neville Chamberlain practiced diversity hiring?
210west22 January 2022
Warning: Spoilers
Aware that this was a Netflix production, I made a bet with myself about how long it would take before a Person of Color conspicuously and inappropriately showed up in what was, in reality, an all-white milieu.

It took less than ten minutes. (It turns out, according to this film, that one of Prime Minister Chamberlain's top staff members at 10 Downing Street -- in fact, the one who gives the orders to the film's hero - was a black man. Who knew?)

The other most egregious departure from reality is that the Munich conference is depicted as a one-off -- a sudden dramatic last-ditch last-minute get-together -- whereas in fact it was the third of three meetings in different German settings over the course of two weeks, during which Hitler scarily and humiliatingly increased his demands.

In other respects, the film is just a dumbed-down, truncated retelling of the actual history, with an insignificant little side plot grafted on -- an attempt to warn Chamberlain that Hitler can't be trusted -- that in the end doesn't count for much. It seems to me, after reading the genuinely thrilling accounts by William Shirer, David Faber, Tim Bouverie, and others, that the real story would have been fascinating enough.

A few random notes:

Jeremy Irons, as Chamberlain, really is the best thing in the movie.

It's amusing -- as someone here has pointed out -- that Ulrich Matthes, who plays Hitler, played Goebbels 18 years ago in "Downfall." Unfortunately, he still looks more like Goebbels. (With that moustache, he also bears a strange resemblance to, of all people, George Orwell.)

I hated the pointlessly quivering camera trying to create false tension with that cliched "handheld camera look." It's permissible when it's following rapid action; it's ridiculous when someone is sitting quietly in a chair and the camera is deliberately shaking.

In one key scene in the ultimately inconsequential spy plot, the young German spy has to pass a stolen top-secret document to his British friend. He dashes away from the conference, leading the Brit on a complicated chase through the city, even, at one point, leaving a card for him on a deserted park bench, the camera wavering and weaving like crazy... and the Brit finally catches up with him and the two sit down to talk in, of all places, a crowded cafe filled with Nazi soldiers. Honestly, the transfer takes place in a crowded cafe where, in fact, one of the Nazi soldiers -- someone we know is hostile and suspicious -- recognizes the young German, thus jeopardizing the entire plot. (Is the Robert Harris novel really that stupid?)

P. S. The top-secret document itself is basically just confirmation of the things Hitler has already said quite publicly in "Mein Kampf."

There actually were anti-Nazi plotters in the German military, but I'm not sure the film makes clear enough what their plan was. They didn't want Hitler to succeed at his game of chicken against the British and the French; they knew that if his gamble paid off and he was able to acquire part of Czechoslovakia without a fight, his triumph would further cement his power -- whereas if he were forced to back down, he might be overthrown.

As in so many films -- too many -- the hero is given a nagging wife who doesn't want him to go off and put himself in danger. (Her part is usually, and correctly, described as "thankless.") In this one, the hero is about to accompany the Prime Minister to a conference on which hangs the fate of the entire world -- Britain is already preparing for war, trenches are being dug, gas masks are being distributed, etc. -- and she berates her husband for not staying home with his family. This sort of thing is really tiresome.

This film requires Chamberlain and Hitler -- powerful leaders who were normally surrounded by various underlings and advisors -- to be alone with, respectively, the young Brit and the young German, to express a fond interest in these young men, and even to open up their souls to them. I get why it's necessary for dramatic reasons, but it's never convincing.

The film also makes Chamberlain's famous "piece of paper" -- on which he got Hitler to affirm that their two nations would never again go to war -- the result NOT of Chamberlain's own long cherished hope for peace and his attempt to justify his capitulation at Munich, but rather the result of his enlightening encounter with the film's young hero. Well, okay.

As David Faber makes clear in the opening of his book, there were so many thousands of grateful Britons streaming to Heston Aerodrome outside London to greet Chamberlain on his return that the roads were blocked for miles and people abandoned their cars and simply walked. In this film, you get maybe 20 or 30 people waving flags.

Unlike the many films celebrating Churchill for his determined opposition to appeasement, this one gives Chamberlain the last word. He not only gets to explain himself; the film ends with the explicit onscreen claim that by giving Britain an extra year to prepare for war, he essentially saved the country. It's an issue that's still debated by historians - especially because, while Britain had another year to prepare, so did Germany.
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6/10
Confused historical narrative
gring07 May 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I teach History outside Dachau and have been involved with the memorial site and give tours around Munich. So I know the history behind this adaptation of the book. Seeing the trailer, I was excited to see familiar buildings such as the former Führerbau (where I met the author, Robert Harris) even if there was the disquieting knowledge that the city (as well as Berlin I noted) allowed once again to have American money justify decking the town in Nazi flags.

I don't want to get into the historical aspects too much- it's impossible to do justice to the period within the confines of a two hour drama and books have been written concerning the real Chamberlain and the type of characterisation employed here. So a few observations: 1. I don't understand the tension. Will war be avoided or not? Well, we know it was... for about a year. Given it took place regardless, what's the point about being worked up about Munich?

2. The Macguffin in the form of the document outlining Hitler's real plans. Why does it have to be hand-delivered to Chamberlain personally? How was it even possible? OK- Hitler's really planning for war. We knew that! Why rely on some document when we had Mein Kampf published back in 1925? We knew he'd eventually turn on the Soviets; that's why we took Stalin's support for granted. I just don't get it. Chamberlain is expected not to sign the Munich agreement within the next couple of hours- against the most profound wishes of the vast majority of his country- because of some German document he can't read (he never brought any German speakers to the conference!), has no idea where it comes from, who produced it, how legitimate it is... Meanwhile the Germans themselves are showing no interest in getting rid of Hitler- they'd just taken Austria!

3. All the tension seems to be artificial to create it.

I) So the German protagonist somehow gets a private interview with Hitler in his Prinzregentplatz apartment. Able to smuggle a gun in. Will he shoot Hitler or not? The tension... What tension? Why is this guy even against Hitler in the first place? The show makes such a big deal about how this guy was a Nazi fanatic. He's even shown out of control in a restaurant openly expressing loudly his Hitler support (in a restaurant he didn't want to go to because I assume he thought it wasn't Nazi enough?). Hitler never changed. His views never changed. He wasn't a libertarian at first and then woke up and came up with this diabolical plan. So how does this guy completely change? And given how eccentric he is depicted as being, how does he ever get into a position of such responsibility in the first place?

Ii) His SD mate attacks the hero in his hotel. Huh? This is a guy who is one of, what, six guys in the British delegation officially representing the UK. Some guy breaks into his room and then beats him up in uniform! Does that even make any sense?

Iii) The female characters are unfortunately two dimensional. This is understandable given the period of time, but because they have no power, influence, role, they're reduced to being emotional, self-absorbed people. The hero's wife is more concerned that her husband isn't spending enough time on her rather than him successfully help prevent a second world war. They have a son- isn't she concerned that he'll grow up in a much more dangerous world that may require him to fight and die? Seriously- what is her problem? Why is she even involved in the story besides create a sense of artificial tension (or, for an excuse to give role for women and minorities)? If anything, it just emasculates the hero so much (I forget his name he's so forgettable) that one is embarrassed to be British.

3. Roles created for minorities are reduced to token characters. The secretary is now an East Indian albeit actually from Nottingham. Why the need to turn her into a minority- an even greater one in 1938? The actress involved stated that she was inspired to take on the role (a colourblind white role played by an ethnic minority) by the story of real-life heroines like Noor Inayat Khan who was was murdered near where I live, bravely fighting in the resistance against Nazism whilst at the same time being bitterly opposed to British control of her country. That's what inspired her understanding of her character who happens to be nothing more than a typist? I find that insulting.

Nevertheless she's of course sassy and opinionated and just the sort of person to entrust the Prime Minister's planned speech for secret transmission.

A top ranking British official has to be black. This is 1938 nearly two decades before immigration from the Caribbean. This historical revisionism is dangerous given the message it sends. The British are portrayed as, if not multicultural, at least open at the time to colonials when we still had India and 1/4 of Africa. There was no reason given- such a character is not fleshed out but exists simply to present a black face. Besides my criticism about the need nowadays to create superfluous, token roles by which to reduce actual humans into mere memes, this is important for such a show- the British and Americans were plenty racist at the time. Brits for the most part weren't going on about the Jews as they are made to do here- the Evian conference showed that. They took part in the 1936 Games despite the violence directed against Jews (and others). And yet here the British are told at one point that they're not in any position to take a moral stand without any reason ever given.

4. And finally, in terms of characters. Whilst I thought Irons did a good job as Chamberlain such as the part created for him, Hitler was just strange. Gaunt within an oversized uniform, it finally struck me- the actor had earlier payed Göbbels in Der Untergang. Talk about being typecast.
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7/10
Very interesting
TheLittleSongbird31 January 2023
The subject is a fascinating one and part of me was intrigued in seeing what 'Munich: The Edge of War' would do with the much maligned Neville Chamberlain, here given a more sympathetic treatment than what is often said and written about him. Robert Harris' book is a hugely compelling read, George McKay impressed me hugely in '1917' (one of 2019's best films) and Jeremy Irons is one of my all time favourite actors and has been ever since his iconic voice work in 'The Lion King'.

Watching 'Munich: The Edge of War' earlier last year (am behind with reviewing so it's taken a while to get round to talking about films seen last year), it turned out to be very interesting and well done. It did have potential to be better than it was, as not all the storytelling is there and there is a major casting blunder. But it does well with maintaining the book's intrigue and tension and there is one performance in particular that one could spend all night raving about. 'Munich: The Edge of War' was good if not great, but is one of those films that should be taken on its own terms for anybody expecting historical truth will be disappointed.

'Munich: The Edge of War' has many good things. The best aspect being the phenomenal performance of Irons in one of his best ever performances as Chamberlain (who he bears an uncanny resemblance to here), he brings wit, nuance and gravitas to an interestingly sympathetically written interpretation of a maligned figure in history. In the film though, it and the book do make a good case for him not being as bad as reputed in my view (something that won't be shared by others). One of my favourite performances of the year actually and that it didn't get any awards attention is a crime. McKay carries the film very commandingly, loved his increasingly tense chemistry with Jannis Niewohner.

Also thought that the costumes and sets/scenery were handsome and atmospheric, with a good sense of period. The music is haunting and doesn't over emphasise the mood. The film is very intelligently scripted (apart from some anachronistic language), especially Chamberlain's dialogue and had no problem with the German or the subtitles. Everything with the agreement has intrigue and tension and all of Chamberlain's scenes are a delight, both when more eventful and in smaller moments.

It's not a perfect film though. The camera work is rather dizzying and had a very feeling sick on a ship feel to it in some of the second half. All the female roles are severely underwritten, as is the too brief and not that necessary family/romance subplot that could have been excised.

Do have to agree with everybody panning Ulrich Matthes, whose casting as Hitler is one big catastrophic miscast. Too old, too thin/gaunt and nowhere near sinister enough, perfect for Goebbels but completely wrong for Hitler.

Overall, interesting and well done, with Irons being reason alone to see it, but it could have been more. 7/10.
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6/10
Not all Germans were Nazis. There were also good anti-Nazi Germans.
fzulkadiroglu28 May 2022
In the autumn of 1938 Europe was on the brink of war. As Adolf Hitler prepares to invade Czechoslovakia, Neville Chamberlain's government desperately seeks a peaceful solution. As the pressure mounts, British civil servant Hugh Legat and German diplomat Paul von Hartmann travel to Munich for an emergency conference. As negotiations begin, these two old friends find themselves in the middle of a web of political deception and a very real danger. With the whole world watching them, can war be avoided, and at what cost?
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7/10
Brief opinion
Mira_NH18 July 2022
Watched this movie and truly enjoyed the brilliant acting and thrills. It did an amazing job in maintaining intensity even though the historical outcome was already known. Also, amazing soundtracks that goes with the scenes.
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8/10
Gripping
irisxyp5 November 2022
This movie did not disappoint.

The story kept me at the edge of my seat, the unraveling of the events was gripping and full of suspense. I saw it a week ago but it's still on my mind.

Jeremy Irons, was great and he shined a bright light on the prime minister that was later overshadowed by his successor (fairly, but still it was the first time I got to appreciate Chamberlain's passion).

I had never seen a movie with any of the two main actors starring before, but from now on i will definitely keep my eye on any other work they may do.

The subtle tension between the two lead men that shifts to different notions as the story evolves is very intriguing and i love the fact that words are mostly left unsaid about that relationship between them, but the emotions flow effortlessly from their eyes.

This is a movie i would gladly rewatch.
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6/10
A Good Drama, with a Gloss-Over
se_mac7 May 2022
This was not a bad drama, but it seems to be a rehab of Chamberlain's reputation. Glossed over was the fact that the Sudetenland was given away...literally given over to Hitler to prevent war. (And, it didn't work)
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9/10
A stylish production
euroGary18 October 2021
Neville Chamberlain is one of history's losers. Had Hitler kept his word - given in the 1938 Munich Agreement - the UK's then-Prime Minister would have delivered peace to his country. But Hitler's duplicity resulted in Chamberlain being seen - even to this day - as a naïve fool. This film adaptation of Robert Harris' novel may cause some re-evaluation of that opinion, as it gives Chamberlain a voice with which to express the reasons for his great desire for peace, as well as to admit war is inevitable - appeasing Hitler will at least give the country a chance to build up its forces in preparation for the delayed conflict.

The 2021 London Film Festival described the film as a 'thriller', but I think 'political drama' would have been more accurate. There are thriller elements - principally the efforts of young German diplomat Paul (Jannis Niewöhner) to smuggle a document to his fellow former Oxford University student Hugh (George MacKay), now Private Secretary to Chamberlain - but the majority of the film is political to-ing and fro-ing, as well as a couple of flashbacks to Paul and Hugh's not-so-distant youth with fellow student Lenya (Liv Lisa Fries - looking so similar to Jessica Brown Findlay in the role of Hugh's discontented wife that for a while I confused the two).

It is a sumptuous production: as well as the plot, the viewer can enjoy the late-1930s' clothes and set dressing! (At least, such things can be admired if you can ignore the annoying hand-held camera - entirely unnecessary for a production such as this.) As for the acting, it is uniformly good: many of the actors - British as well as German - are required to deliver lines in languages not their mother tongue and do so convincingly. The actor playing Hitler (I regret I do not know his name) especially deserves credit for adding a little more depth to a role so easy to play as a cartoon villain; and I am sure, come awards season, that Jeremy Irons, as Chamberlain, will be nominated for many statuettes.
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7/10
[7.4] The smell of his breath, the touch of the metal
cjonesas11 June 2022
Warning: Spoilers
A mild and ineffective production depicting the Munich agreement (pact).

It is just well in cinematography, some thought out development and to some extent acting, especially Paul.

The ending is as fictional as is the movie's alternate reality.

  • Screenplay/story: 7
  • Development: 8
  • Realism: 7
  • Entertainment: 8
  • Acting: 8
  • Filming/cinematography: 8.5
  • Visual/special effects: 8
  • Music/score: 8.5
  • Depth: 7
  • Logic: 6
  • Flow: 8
  • Biography/drama/history: 6
  • Ending/closure: 6.
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1/10
Haven't you read any historical books at all?
michelschmidt-4288626 January 2022
The directors conclusion: The extra time bought by the Munich agreement enabled Britain and her allies to prepare for war and ultimately led to Germany's defeat."

Haven't you read any historical books at all? I mean the one you just put on screen would have sufficed...
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7/10
A questionable adaptation
mike-39051 August 2022
Starts off well and the journey seems exciting. Gets stodgy in the middle due to lack of story; the drama becomes overcooked, with lots of glaring. Gets a bit silly towards the end. And then sillier.

The thing to remember is this is a Robert Harris adaption. The book is probably better. The fantasy element was neglected.
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