The Guardian deletes review of Oct. 7 doc after backlash for complaining film depicts Hamas too negatively

The outlet's review slammed the film for portraying 'Hamas terrorists' as 'generalized menace' while sympathizing with Israelis

Thousands of anti-Israel protesters rage in NYC on anniversary of Oct. 7 massacre

Jewish Barnard College student Eliana Birman joined 'Fox & Friends' to discuss why she felt compelled to speak out one year after the terror attack and the importance of acknowledging the significance of the day.  

British outlet The Guardian removed a film review of an Oct. 7 documentary from its website after it was slammed for arguing that the film is unfair to those who perpetrated the Hamas massacre in Israel.   

The website posted a notice on Monday announcing that it had removed its review of "One Day in October" on its website because of the "unacceptable" way it went on to criticize the film.

"But the unacceptable terms in which it went on to criticize the documentary were inconsistent with our editorial standards. This was a collective failure of process and we apologize for any offense caused," The Guardian declared.

ISRAELI FORCES SEIZE DOCUMENTS THAT REVEAL HAMAS PLAN FOR MORE ELABORATE ATTACKS: REPORT 

Pro-Palestinian demonstrators protesting the Israel-Hamas war

The Guardian deleted a recent review of an Oct. 7 documentary after it was trashed online for seeking more sympathy for Hamas and the Palestinian people.  (Getty Images)

The original review, written by reporter Stuart Jeffries on Oct. 9, slammed the Channel 4 documentary for "demonizing Gazans as killers or looters" and sympathizing with Israelis following the Oct. 7 attack, during which Hamas brutally murdered over 1,200 people in Israel.

The Jewish Chronicle detailed the contents of the now-deleted review, which said, "If you want to understand why Hamas murdered civilians, though, One Day in October won’t help." 

Jeffries’ review continued, "All our sympathies are with relatable Israelis... By contrast, Hamas terrorists are a generalized menace on CCTV, their motives beyond One Day in October’s remit."

The Guardian’s review caused an uproar on social media shortly after it was published for condemning the lack of sympathy for the massacre’s perpetrators.

Commentator Amit Schandillia posted a sarcastic response to the review, stating, "This is The @Guardian, a brave torchbearer of honest journalism, reporting on the October 7 atrocities. This is what they call ‘truth to power’ these days, I guess."

Hadley Freeman, a columnist for British outlet, The Times, shared a screenshot from the review and asked, "Does the Guardian understand this was a documentary?"

Feminist author and journalist Julie Bindel shared Freeman’s post and torched the outlet, writing, "Look at the STATE of this. Shameful, horrendous, disgusting."

ISRAEL REVEALS HEZBOLLAH SPECIAL FORCES TERRORIST ‘BUNKER’ LOCATED UNDER HOME WITH WEAPONS, MOTORCYCLES 

nyc-palestine-protest-2

Anti-Israel protesters demonstrate in NYC on Oct. 5, 2024, ahead of the anniversary of the Oct. 7 Hamas attack. (Adam Gray for Fox News Digital)

The Guardian removed the article on Oct. 10 and published a statement explaining why in the "Corrections and clarifications" section on its website. 

"A review of One Day in October, a documentary shown on Channel 4 about the Hamas massacre at the Be’eri kibbutz, was published on 10 October 2024 (G2, p10). The Guardian considers the article did convey the harrowing footage and powerful survivor interviews and condemned the attack’s perpetrators," it read, though it admitted how it criticized the film was "inconsistent with our editorial standards."

It acknowledged that the review was published due to a "failure of process," and told readers, "The article has been removed from our website."

The Guardian did not immediately reply to Fox News Digital's request for comment. 

Gabriel Hays is an associate editor for Fox News Digital. 

Authored by Gabriel Hays via FoxNews October 15th 2024