Fri, Sept 6 / 7 pm
Sat, Sept 7 / 3 pm
Directed by Francine Zuckerman
2019, Canada, 78 min
September 5th 1972, the Palestinian terrorist group Black September stormed the Israeli athletes’ quarters at the Munich Olympics. The world watched live on television. For the first time, this story is told through the eyes of four women. It’s a story of intrigue; secret identities; it’s about love and death; conflict and reconciliation; war and peace. Their fates redirected. Their well-being and views impacted by the trauma. These four women’s lives are changed forever. But they weren’t the only ones.
Francine Zuckerman has made several documentaries and short films. Her work includes the documentary Exposure: environmental links to breast cancer with singer/actor Olivia Newton-John; the dramatic anthology The Atwood Stories and dramatic short, Passengers which premiered at TIFF. Her short drama Mr. Bernstein won ‘Best Drama’ at the Toronto International Short Film Festival. She is in development on a TV adaptation of celebrated writer Margaret Atwood’s novel The Edible Woman.