The War Zone (2000)

 ●  English ● 1 hr 30 mins

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In June 1999 during the India - Pakistan War in Kargil every filmmaker around the world wanted a glimpse of the action. The Army Headquarters in Delhi were inundated with requests from television networks that had sent representatives from all over the globe to let them through. Each camera crew was taken on a tour once a week. Permissions were few and far between. The phone rang. They said yes. A certain segment of the Army agreed to depute a single officer who helped to sneak in a lone filmmaker. This was not an official tour. This is not official footage. Surmounting the inherent risks, what was achieved was footage that is concise and clear. Unknown to the Army the objective of this mission was to procure footage of the Bofors Gun in action for a documentary being produced by VPUK, aimed at exposing the scandal involved in the purchase of the gun. It seemed a waste to lose the remaining footage. This film brings never before seen images together with impressions, ideas, and views that rock the very foundations that our society has been built upon. Tracing the development of man, society, politics, military and finally an insight into humans from the aperture that is the war zone.

Cast: Annabelle Apsion, Ray Winstone

Crew: Atul Kumar (Director), Brendan Mcdonnell (Director)

Genres: Drama, War

Release Dates: 22 Dec 2000 (India)

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Did you know? Director Tim Roth has said that the bunker scene was so difficult to film that the sound man almost ruined a take by crying into his microphone. Ray Winstone also found acting the scene upsetting and nearly left the production because of it. Read More
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Actor
Supporting Actress

Direction

Writers

Story Writer
Screenplay Writer
Dialogue Writer
Film Type:
Television Series
Language:
English
Colour Info:
Color
Frame Rate:
24 fps
Aspect Ratio:
1.33:1
Stereoscopy:
No
Trivia:
This film marks Tim Roth's directorial debut.

This film is based on Alexander Stuart's 1989 novel of the same name.

Director Tim Roth has said that the bunker scene was so difficult to film that the sound man almost ruined a take by crying into his microphone. Ray Winstone also found acting the scene upsetting and nearly left the production because of it.