Munich was good but Crash was pretty good too.
For Crash, that movie shouted every thing that a good movie whispers.
jdogg - seems like we generally agree on movies. Munich was a very good movie. Crash just didn't have anything new to say. People are racist? No, really? LA cops have issues? Hmmm, I gathered that from seeing Colors back in the 80s. That said, I thought Crash was a solid movie - but nowhere NEAR deserving of an Oscar. This is what the Oscars have come to - movies (and actors) selected almost purely based on political/social issues. The truly great films are typically overlooked or underappreciated.
It made me physically nauseous when Gump in 1995. Look at the list of films it beat: Shawshank Redemption, Quiz Show, Pulp Fiction, Four Weddings and a Funeral. ALL of those movies are far superior to a feel good piece of fluff.
Let's skip forward to 1998 when Titanic wins against: As Good As It Gets, The Full Monty, Good Will Hunting, LA Confidential. Again, are you ****ing kidding me? Ok, we can debate the 1st couple, but Good Will Hunting and LA Confidential are so far head & shoulders above Titanic, it's an embarrassment that those 3 movies are even on a list together.
Let's go back in time to 1991: Dances With Wolves beats Goodfellas.

At least Ghost didn't win.
1990: Driving Miss Daisy over Dead Poets Society, Field of Dreams, My Left Foot, and even Born on the 4th of July (which I personally didn't care for, but Driving Miss Daisy sucked)
2002: A Beautiful Mind over Gosford Park and In the Bedroom. Not even close. I'm probably biased by the book, but the movie simply was not interesting. Certainly not compared to the book. In contrast, Gosford Park and In the Bedroom were very good movies (though in a "good" year neither would have been nominated, perhaps)
2004: Lord of the Rings: Return of the King over Lost in Translation and Mystic River. Absurd. Beyond moronic. Lost in Translation is in the top-3 movies I've seen in the past decade. Mystic River was so well done, gripping, difficult to watch (in a good way), etc. LOTR was very good, but please, what was the big deal? [and yes, I'm a huge fan of the books, so this isn't a slam on the story]
2006: Crash over Good Night and Good Luck, Brokeback Mountain, Capote, Munich. Unreal.
So what does this rather lengthy list of examples tell us? The Academy repeatedly makes horrible decisions. At this point, your best option for finding a great movie is to wait for the award show, then watch every movie that does NOT win the Oscar.