Zero Dark Thirty: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Zero Dark Thirty: Difference between revisions
A CIA agent at Camp Chapman in Afghanistan draws a [[Beretta 92FS]] when he gets suspicious about Jordanian double agent Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi.
A guard at Camp Chapman in Afghanistan draws a [[Beretta 92FS]] when he gets suspicious about Jordanian double agent Humam Khalil Abu-Mulal al-Balawi.
Zero Dark Thirty is the 2012 thriller that focuses on the decade-long American manhunt to capture or kill Osama Bin Laden. Directed by Kathryn Bigelow (Point Break, The Hurt Locker), the film encountered controversy in regards to whether the filmmakers were given classified information about details of the Bin Laden operation. The film was originally scheduled to be released in October 2012, but due to a controversy arising from the date's proximity to the American presidential elections, the U.S. release date was pushed back to December 19, 2012.
The following weapons were used in the film Zero Dark Thirty:
CIA SAD Ground Branch operative Larry (Edgar Ramirez) carries a Glock 17 as his sidearm. A man on a motorbike pulls a two-tone Glock 17 after blocking the van Larry is driving..
Members of SEAL Team Six are correctly armed with Heckler & Koch HK416 carbines with 10-inch barrels and a variety of accessories, including Advanced Armament Corp. suppressors, EOTech EXPS3/SU-231A/PEQ sights and AN/PEQ-15 APITALs.
A CIA SAD officer at Camp Chapman can be seen with an M4A1 Carbine fitted with an M68 Aimpoint red dot scope. Anoter CIA officer is seen armed with a basic M4A1 Carbine while tracking Bin Laden's courier in Pakistan. Hakim (Fares Fares), a CIA SAD Officer who accompanies the SEALs as their translator during the Bin Laden raid, is armed with an Aimpoint-equipped M4A1.
Pakistani police officers and a guard at the CIA Black Site in Poland carry AKMS rifles. Navy SEAL Patrick (Joel Edgerton) is also seen taking an AKMS that was mounted on a wall in Osama's bedroom after raiding the Bin Laden compound in Abbottabad.
Pakistani agents clad in burqas wield "AK-47" rifles while apprehending a terrorist suspect. In reality, the rifles are actually blank-firing replicas used because of strict firearms regulations that make it difficult to bring genuine firearms to India (where many of the Pakistan-based scenes were shot).