Tears of the Sun is a 2003 American action film starring Bruce Willis as Lieutenant A.K. Waters, a US Navy SEAL commander who leads his team into Nigeria during a coup to extract Lena Kendricks (Monica Bellucci), an American doctor. When she goes with the team to the extraction site along with 80 refugees from her village, Lena discovers that the SEALs' mission is only to take her. After a change of heart, Waters and his SEAL team then become determined to get the doctor and the refugees to Cameroon border before the rebel militants can find them. The film was directed by Antoine Fuqua and retired Navy SEAL Harry Humphries served as the chief military technical advisor.
The following weapons were used in the film Tears of the Sun:
Another real-life favored handgun of the Navy SEALs, the SIG-Sauer P226 is seen in the hands of Danny "Doc" Kelley (Paul Francis) and Demetrius "Silk" Owens (Charles Ingram).
In a scene added to the extended director's cut, Lt. Waters leaves the priest running the hospital a Walther PPK/S, telling him he may wish to use it on himself rather than be captured by the rebels.
The team’s forward scout, Kelly Lake (Johnny Messner), carries a Remington 870 in addition to his M4A1 Carbine. The shotgun is equipped with an extended magazine tube, a side saddle shell holder, and a "duckbill" muzzle attachment (designed to make the shot spray into a horizontal pattern). The team’s designated marksman, Flea (Chad Smith), takes the shotgun after Lake gets shot, but the weapon was dropped and Flea switches back to his M4A1.
Lieutenant A.K. Waters (Bruce Willis), Flea (Chad Smith), and Lake (Johnny Messner) use M4A1 Carbines as their primary weapons. The team's corpsman Doc (Paul Francis) and radioman Zee (Eamonn Walker) also have accessorized M4 Carbines (with M203 grenade launchers mounted). Flea has a Combat Military Optics LTD Marksman Series Model 100 scope on the carry handle, a cheek pad on the stock, a suppressor, and a custom paintjob of green and black. Flea and Lake have suppressors on their carbines. Both Lake and Lt. Waters have M68 Aimpoint scopes fitted on their weapons. When the team first arrives in Africa, their M4A1s are fitted with PVS-14 night-vision scopes which are removed once morning arrives. Lt. Waters' gun also has a D-LAP laser sight, essentially a more compact PEQ-2A. It is worth noting that they use the correct, modern flash-hiders rather than the A1 style used in so many films.
A Springfield M1A with an aftermarket scope mount is carried by Silk (Charles Ingram). It is covered in heavy custom camo and mounts a Leupold & Stevens Mark 4 LR/T 10x40 M1 rifle scope. He uses this weapon throughout the film. It is noted as being of an M1A not an M25 Sniper Rifle by the notch which would normally contain the fire-selector switch. M21/25 rifles are fitted with a selector lock, preventing the Selective fire mechanism from working in anything other than semi-automatic. When a Civilian M1A is put into a Military M14 stock there is a great big empty notch in the stock where the selector lock should be.
The predecessor to the AKM, the AK-47, or more simply "AK", is also seen in the film. They can be noted by their milled receivers and lack of slanted muzzle brakes. Some may be Norinco Type 56 rifles. Carried by rebel militants, refugees and Doc (Paul Francis), who took it from a dead rebel. He never use it, but after the village raid, he most likely gave it to a refugee, as they acquired a lot of them then.
M16A1 rifles are held by Nigerian government soldiers in the opening scene of the director's cut of the film.
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M16A2
A few of the Marines disembarking the helicopter at the beginning of the film are seen carrying M16A2 rifles, as well as a few Marines at the end of the film.
Slo (Nick Chinlund), the team's designated heavy-gunner and tech-guy, is seen with a paratrooper model of the M249 SAW throughout the film, until he is killed in a shootout with the rebels. Silk (Charles Ingram) then uses the weapon during the climax.
Red (Cole Hauser), the team’s designated heavy-gunner, is armed with an M60E4 machine gun throughout the film, which has a "duckbill" flash-hider on the muzzle. Doc (Paul Francis) wields the weapon when Red runs to set-up a Claymore mine. Another Navy SEAL who accompanies Captain Bill Rhodes (Tom Skerritt) also wields an M60E4.
A DShK heavy machine gun is seen on a mounted platform of a flatbed truck. It’s hard to determine if this is a genuine DShK or a Browning M2 mocked-up as a DShK.
The team’s demolition man, Red (Cole Hauser), carries three M18A1 Claymore mines. He uses two to ambush the rebels and later uses the last one to hold back enemy troops.
During the climax of the film, a pair of F/A-18A Hornet aircrafts are launched to provide close air support for the SEALs, they armed with M61 Vulcans as secondary armament, and they engage the rebels with air-to-ground missiles instead of their guns.