Dirty War (film): Difference between revisions
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director = [[Daniel Percival (Director)|Daniel Percival]] | |
director = [[Daniel Percival (Director)|Daniel Percival]] | |
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writer = [[Daniel Percival (Director)|Daniel Percival]] <BR \> [[Lizzie Mickery]] | |
writer = [[Daniel Percival (Director)|Daniel Percival]] <BR \> [[Lizzie Mickery]] | |
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starring = [[Kameal Nisha Bisnauthsingh]] <BR \> [[Paul Antony-Barber]] <BR \> [[Louise Breckon-Richards]] <BR \> [[Shamshad Akhtar]] <BR \> [[Louise Delamere]] <BR \> [[Ewan Stewart]] | |
starring = [[Kameal Nisha Bisnauthsingh]] <BR \> [[Paul Antony-Barber]] <BR \> [[Louise Breckon-Richards]] <BR \> [[Shamshad Akhtar]] <BR \> [[Louise Delamere]] <BR \> [[Ewan Stewart]] <BR \> [[Koel Purie]] | |
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producer = [[Luke Alkin]] | |
producer = [[Luke Alkin]] | |
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released = [[September 24]], [[2004]] | |
released = [[September 24]], [[2004]] | |
Revision as of 05:24, 9 September 2008
Dirty War | |
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Directed by | Daniel Percival |
Written by | Daniel Percival Lizzie Mickery |
Produced by | Luke Alkin |
Starring | Kameal Nisha Bisnauthsingh Paul Antony-Barber Louise Breckon-Richards Shamshad Akhtar Louise Delamere Ewan Stewart Koel Purie |
Release dates | September 24, 2004 |
Running time | 90 min. |
Language | English |
Budget | £2,500,000 GBP |
Dirty War is a 2004 BBC, in association with HBO Films, made-for-TV movie thriller/drama about a terrorist attack on Central London, written by Lizzie Mickery and Daniel Percival. It was originally broadcast on BBC One on September 24, 2004, on HBO on January 24, 2005, and the first time on American broadcast television on PBS on February 23, 2005. It won a BAFTA Award for Best New Director (Fiction), Daniel Percival.
The film opens with a June 2003 quote from E. Manningham Buller, director general (DG) of MI5,: "It will only be a matter of time before a crude chemical, biological or radiological (CBRN) attack is launched on a major western city" and provides the basic premise for the film.
The film follows the journey of radioactive material, hidden in vegetable oil containers, from Habiller, Turkey, (~210 KM west of Istanbul) through Sofia, Bulgaria, to Deptford, to an East End Indian food takeaway restaurant, and to a rented house in Willesden, where it assembled into a dirty bomb.
When the first bomb goes off in the heart of London, next to the entrance to Liverpool Street Underground station, the city's inadequate emergency services plans are put to an immediate test - with disturbing results for a population ill-prepared to understand or obey anti-contamination and quarantine orders.
In addition to touching upon the motivations of the Islamic extremist terrorists to conduct a martyrdom operation, the events are shown through the eyes of three principal groups.
Nicola Painswick, Minister for London, and Deputy Assistant Commissioner (DAC) John Ives (Ewan Stewart), of the Metropolitan Police Anti-Terrorist Branch, present a governmental point of view.
Watch Commander Murray Corrigan of the London Fire Brigade, and his wife Liz Corrigan, who works for the National Health Service, present two viewpoints.
Detective Sergeant (DS) Mike Drummer and Detective Constable (DC) Sameena Habibullah lead the Police investigation to catch the terrorists before the bombs are detonated. DC Habibullah, as an English Muslim/Muslimah Police officer from Luton, who in addition to English, speaks: Urdu, Punjabi, and Arabic, presents a unique point of view throughout the film.