The Thin Red Line (1998): Difference between revisions
The Thin Red Line (1998): Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
The Thin Red Line (1998): Difference between revisions
Japanese soldiers are seen using Nambu Type 3 Heavy Machine Guns in the film.
Japanese soldiers are seen using [[Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun|Nambu Type 3 Heavy Machine Guns]] in the film.
[[Image:TRLNambu92-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A Nambu Type 3 machine gun looking out of a machine gun emplacement on Hill 262.]]
[[Image:TRLNambu92-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A [[Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun|Nambu Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun]] looking out of a machine gun emplacement on Hill 262.]]
[[Image:TRLNambu92-2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A Japanese soldier prepares to fire a Nambu Type 3 at the Americans.]]
[[Image:TRLNambu92-2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A Japanese soldier prepares to fire a [[Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun|Nambu Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun]] at the Americans.]]
[[Image:TRLNambu92-3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The Japanese soldier firing his Nambu Type 3 before being overrun.]]
[[Image:TRLNambu92-3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The Japanese soldier firing his [[Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun|Nambu Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun]] before being overrun.]]
[[Image:TRLNambu92-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Japanese soldiers carry a Nambu Type 3 through the forest.]]
[[Image:TRLNambu92-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Japanese soldiers carry a [[Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun|Nambu Type 3 Heavy Machine Gun]] through the forest.]]
The Thin Red Line is a 1998 World War II film directed by Terrence Malick and is the second movie adaptation of the James Jones novel (the first being a 1964 film of the same name). The film is a fictional account of the US Army's fight to capture an entrenched Japanese position during the Battle of Guadalcanal in World War II. The film was shot in Queensland, Australia. One of the notable characters in the film is Cpt. Staros (Elias Koteas), an intelligent, sensitive Army captain who refuses to send his men to their certain death on a futile frontal assault on a fortified Japanese position, which puts him at odds with the ambitious Lt. Col. Tall (Nick Nolte). Another notable characters include the cynical and shrewd 1st. Sgt Welsh (Sean Penn), Pvt. Bell (Ben Chaplin) who is heavily devoted to his wife, and Pvt. Witt (Jim Caviezel), a deserter who hates the Army, but loves the men of Charlie Company enough to rejoin them during the battle. Despite the film's seven Academy Award nominations, this film is often overlooked because it was released in the same year as Saving Private Ryan.
The following weapons were used in the film The Thin Red Line:
Pfc. Doll (Dash Mihok) steals an M1911A1 hanging from a bunk in the ship carrying Charlie Company to the island. He notably uses it when he charges a Japanese machine gun emplacement and fires it at them. Basically every other US soldier also has an M1911A1 as their sidearm, although only few soldiers such as Sgt. Gaff (John Cusack) are seen using them.
Several US soldiers are seen using MK II Hand Grenades in the film. At one point we see Sgt. Keck (Woody Harrelson) straightening the folds on the pin of his grenade, which proves to be a fatal mistake on his behalf when the pin pulls too easily while still attached to his belt.
The issued sidearm of the Japanese Imperial Army is the Nambu Type 14 Pistol. One soldier is seen using it to commit suicide when refusing capture after Hill 262 is taken. Later in the film we see Pfc. Doll (Dash Mihok) showing off a Nambu pistol to fellow soldiers in a personnel transport truck, likely taken off a dead Japanese soldier on the Hill.