7 Days in Entebbe: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
7 Days in Entebbe: Difference between revisions
The [[Tokarev_TT-33_Pistol#Tokarev_TT-33|Tokarev TT-33]] is used by Wilfried Böse ([[Daniel Brühl]]) and one of the Palestinian's during the hijacking.
The [[Tokarev_TT-33_Pistol#Tokarev_TT-33|Tokarev TT-33]] is used by Wilfried Böse ([[Daniel Brühl]]) and one of the Palestinians during the hijacking.
[[File:TT-33.jpg|thumb|350px|none|Tokarev TT-33 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev. Post-1947 version. Tula Arsenal (Soviet Union) Note CCCP printing around the star on the plastic grips]]
[[File:TT-33.jpg|thumb|350px|none|Tokarev TT-33 - 7.62x25mm Tokarev. Post-1947 version. Tula Arsenal (Soviet Union) Note CCCP printing around the star on the plastic grips]]
[[File:Entebbe_Bose_TT33.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Wilfried Böse ([[Daniel Brühl]]) initiates the hijacking with a Tokarev TT-33.]]
[[File:Entebbe_Bose_TT33.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Wilfried Böse ([[Daniel Brühl]]) initiates the hijacking with a Tokarev TT-33.]]
Entebbe (released in the US as 7 Days in Entebbe) is a 2018 crime thriller/terrorist drama directed by José Padilha and starring Rosamund Pike and Daniel Brühl. Set over the course of seven days in June-July 1976, the film is the latest recreation of the now famous Operation Thunderbolt, when Israeli commandos of the Sayeret Matkal (commonly known as The Unit) launched a risky counter-terrorist hostage-rescue operation to free hostages from an Air France Airbus A300 which had been hijacked by four members of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFPL), including two left-wing Germans (Pike and Brühl), and flown to Entebbe, Uganda in collaboration with the infamous dictator Idi Amin.
The following weapons were used in the film 7 Days in Entebbe:
Suppressed Beretta Model 70's are used by The Unit, most notably Yonatan Netanyahu (Angel Bonanni) and Zeev Hirsch (Ben Schnetzer). During the raid, several shots fired from the Beretta infamously failed to stop Ugandan Army sentries, forcing one of the commandos to open fire with an AK-47, giving away surprise.
The AK-47 is far and away the most commonly used weapon in the film, being used by Palestinian hijackers (including Böse and Kuhlmann), Ugandan soldiers and The Unit commandos, mostly notably Yonatan Netanyahu (Angel Bonanni).
Most of the Ugandan soldiers at Entebbe Airport can be seen with the Heckler & Koch G3A3.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingHeckler & Koch G3A3 with slimline handguard. This example is equipped with Olive-Drab colored furniture; H&K also produced this furniture in Black and "Jungle"-Green (referred to as "Police Green" in German circles). Saudi Arabia would also produce G3A3 rifles with light tan furniture - 7.62x51mm NATOError creating thumbnail: File missingA Ugandan soldier with a Heckler & Koch G3A3 as Idi Amin addresses the hostages.Error creating thumbnail: File missingUgandan soldiers with G3A3 rifles.
M16A2
An IDF MP can be seen carrying what appears to be an M16A2 during protests. This would be anachronistic, as the M16A2 didn't enter service almost a decade after the Entebbe raid.