Bioscop | Release Date: March 16, 2018
5.7
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Mixed or average reviews based on 43 Ratings
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17
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19
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7
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5
TVJerryMar 18, 2018
This film is based on the 1976 hijacking when 248 passengers of an Air France flight were taken hostage and forced to land in Uganda. The narrative unfolds from both sides: the effort by 2 of the hijackers to maintain control of the hostagesThis film is based on the 1976 hijacking when 248 passengers of an Air France flight were taken hostage and forced to land in Uganda. The narrative unfolds from both sides: the effort by 2 of the hijackers to maintain control of the hostages and the plans by the Israeli government to handle the situation. There's a lot of doubt and concern on one side and repetitive political discussion on the other. The natural potential for tension is never realized. Even the ultimate showdown, which is intercut with a contemporary dance number, is more frustrating than thrilling. The result is a listless encounter that will only be of interest only as a historical re-staging. Expand
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4
CineAutoctonoSep 15, 2018
"7 Days in Entebbe" was a film with a good premise, but with very little action, from time to time it brings something different, but the truth is that the story was boring and not very consistent and the performances were lazy and bad.
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6
MarkTakayamaOct 8, 2019
This is a good movie.I didn't know anything about the hijacking.It was well-written plot about Israeli politicians and the president Amin.If you don't know the story, you should watch it.
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5
BroyaxAug 3, 2021
Incroyable détournement d’un avion d’Air France en 1976 par des terroristes allemands d’extrême-gauche en cheville avec d’autres terroristes, des Palestiniens évidemment ! l’avion a finalement atterri en Ouganda, ce pays d’Afrique sous leIncroyable détournement d’un avion d’Air France en 1976 par des terroristes allemands d’extrême-gauche en cheville avec d’autres terroristes, des Palestiniens évidemment ! l’avion a finalement atterri en Ouganda, ce pays d’Afrique sous le joug du tristement célèbre Amin Dada, psychopathe dictateur qui espérait tirer les marrons du feu de cette sinistre affaire…

L’opération tentée par les Israéliens pour sauver une centaine de leurs ressortissants dépasse de loin toute fiction imaginable ou imaginée… et pourtant ! Relativement réaliste, le film retrace fort bien cette situation inextricable pour les dirigeants israéliens totalement pris au dépourvu… or, fidèles à leur politique, il n’était pas question de négocier avec des terroristes…

La préparation de l’opération mais surtout la montée en tension progressive sont bien restituées et le duo Brühl-Pike s’en tire bien dans l’ensemble mais le scénario qui tente d’humaniser les terroristes fanatiques et communistes nous la fait à l’envers ! ce n’était certainement pas des enfants de choeur, non, non… égarés à leur insu dans ce détournement international d’une ampleur inégalée à cette époque ! bref, ils nous prennent un peu pour des cons ici.

L’autre gros souci concerne l’assaut lui-même, étonnamment expédié et bâclé, monté en parallèle avec le spectacle de danse contemporaine que l’on voit tout au début en guise d’intro… mais qu’est-ce que ça vient faire là, franchement ? Enfin, le message anachronique plus ou moins sous-jacent et fréquemment repris et répété : négocier avec les Palestiniens, car sinon ce « conflit » ne s’arrêtera jamais… eh bé, ils avaient une boule de cristal en ce temps-là ou quoi ?

Cela étant, on ne s’ennuie pas du tout -le contraire eut été étonnant avec un tel sujet- mais on peut regretter que le potentiel d’un tel film n’ait pas été réalisé, hélas. Sans doute parce que le réalisateur est un gauchiste refoulé. Et le producteur aussi.
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6
Bertaut1Dec 30, 2018
Lacks insight, but is well made

Written by Gregory Burke and directed by José Padilha, Entebbe [released in North America as 7 Days in Entebbe] has met with near universally bad reviews (22% approval on Rotten Tomatoes at the time of
Lacks insight, but is well made

Written by Gregory Burke and directed by José Padilha, Entebbe [released in North America as 7 Days in Entebbe] has met with near universally bad reviews (22% approval on Rotten Tomatoes at the time of writing), and while it is without doubt flawed, it's not nearly as bad as has been made out. Telling the story of the 1976 AirFrance hijacking by Palestinian and German revolutionaries, and the subsequent Israeli Defence Force rescue mission (Operation Thunderbolt), the film is presented from multiple points of view; Revolutionäre Zellen members Brigitte Kuhlmann (Rosamond Pike) and Wilfried Böse (Daniel Brühl), Israeli Minister for Defence Shimon Peres (Eddie Marsan), Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin (an excellent Lior Ashkenazi), IDF Pvt. Zeev Hirsch (Ben Schnetzer), AirFrance 1st Engineer Jacques Le Moine (Denis Ménochet), IDF Lt. Col. Yoni Netanyahu (Angel Bonanni), and Ugandan President Idi Amin (Nonso Anozie).

The problem is obvious; the film covers every point of view except the most important one; the Palestinian. Indeed, the only Palestinian given any kind of development is a fictional character played by Omar Berdouni, who talks of Israeli tanks driving over a car in which his family were trapped. And there are other strange omissions; the death of Dora Bloch (Trudy Weiss), murdered on Amin's orders after she was released in Kampala, is never mentioned, and Wadie Haddad is nowhere to be found. Additionally, the film doesn't have much of contemporaneous relevance to say in relation to the Arab-Israeli Conflict, other than alluding melancholically to the self-propagating nature of the violence, and the unlikelihood of peace (the closing legend points out that after he pushed for negotiations in 1995, Rabin was assassinated by a Jewish extremist).

However, it's aesthetically very well put together, and the juxtaposition of Thunderbolt with a Jewish dance number works much better than it has any right to. True, it doesn't get to the heart of the matter by any stretch of the imagination, and it could be accused of taking a pro-Israeli stance, but it's enjoyable enough, and worth a look.
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