Innocent Voices: Difference between revisions
Innocent Voices: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Innocent Voices: Difference between revisions
(Undo revision 1638552 by VolkNet (talk) "It's" is short for "it is", this is incorrect for this sentence. Adding a comma would also make this an unnecessarily long run-on sentence.)
Some soldiers and guerrilla fighters are armed with [[M16A2]] assault rifles, it's appearance in the hands of the Salvadoran Army and FMLN guerillas is highly anachronistic; the M16A2 was not exported to El Salvador during the Civil War (by 1986, the M16A2 had only just been adopted by the US Army and Marine Corps), and the Salvadoran Army did not adopt the M16A2 for service until 2007.
Some soldiers and guerrilla fighters are armed with [[M16A2]] assault rifles. Its appearance in the hands of the Salvadoran Army and FMLN guerillas is highly anachronistic; the M16A2 was not exported to El Salvador during the Civil War (by 1986, the M16A2 had only just been adopted by the US Army and Marine Corps), and the Salvadoran Army did not adopt the M16A2 for service until 2007.
[[File:Voces inocentes-M16A2-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|In the opening scene one of the soldiers, escorting arrested boys, holds an M16A2, note the extended magazine.]]
[[File:Voces inocentes-M16A2-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|In the opening scene one of the soldiers, escorting arrested boys, holds an M16A2, note the extended magazine.]]
Lawrence Bender Productions MUVI Films Organizacion Santo Domingo
Distributor
Lionsgate 20th Century Fox Polychrome Pictures
Main Cast
Character
Actor
Chava
Carlos Padilla
Kella
Leonor Varela
Beto
José Maria Yazpik
Mama Toya
Ofelia Medina
Rosita
Ana Paulina Caceres
Cristina Maria
Xuna Primus
The Priest
Daniel Gimenez Cacho
Innocent Voices (Voces inocentes) is a 2004 Mexican war drama. It depicts the tragedy of the Salvadoran Civil War through the eyes of children, as narrated by eleven-year-old boy Chava.
The following weapons were used in the film Innocent Voices:
Chava's uncle Beto (José Maria Yazpik), a guerrilla fighter, holds an M1911-style pistol in one scene. M1911-style pistols are also used by officers of the Salvadoran Army.
Some soldiers and guerrilla fighters are armed with M16A2 assault rifles. Its appearance in the hands of the Salvadoran Army and FMLN guerillas is highly anachronistic; the M16A2 was not exported to El Salvador during the Civil War (by 1986, the M16A2 had only just been adopted by the US Army and Marine Corps), and the Salvadoran Army did not adopt the M16A2 for service until 2007.
A water-cooled machine gun that appears to be based on a variant of the Vickers Mk.1 Machine Gun is mounted on the turret of the government armored car. It is likely a non-firing mock-up, as the machine gun lacks a barrel inside the water jacket, and the shooting is imitated. The Vickers Mk.1 was not used in the Civil War by either the Salvadoran Army or the FMLN guerrillas.