The Olympic media dossier
1972: Munich
26 August-11 September
Television
US network ABC again won the television rights, which cost £7.5m for 63
hours. (NBC took the Winter Olympics in Sapporo for $6.4m—for 37 hours.
Japan's public service broadcaster NHK provided coverage for eight hours a day
in colour, working in temperatures as low as -10 degrees C.)
The Games were totally overshadowed
by the so-called 'Black September' taking and killing of Israeli hostages in the Olympic
village, events that were shown extensively on live television.
Film
The official film was Visions of
Eight, the title referring to the fact that it was made in eight sections
by different directors, assembled by Wolper Productions into a 108-minute
feature with music by Henry Mancini. This was the first time that the official
film was not made by a team from the country of the host city.
The sections in sequence were The
Beginning (Juri Ozerov, USSR), The Strongest (Mai Zetterling, Sweden), The
Highest (Arthur Penn, US), The Women (Michael Pfleghar, Germany), The Fastest (Kon
Ichikawa, Japan), The Decathlon (Milos Forman, Czechoslovakia), The Losers (Claude
Lelouch, France) and The Longest (John Schlesinger, UK). It was released on
video by Columbia Pictures Home Entertainment.