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Behind Enemy Lines In Hindi 720p

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  4. Behind Enemy Lines In Hindi 720p
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  51. A Navy navigator is shot down over enemy territory and is ruthlessly pursued by a secret police enforcer and the opposing troops. Meanwhile his commanding officer goes against orders in an attempt to rescue him.
  52. Lt. Chris Burnett has lost faith in his job in the Navy and wants to get out, and is even forced to do a reconnaissance mission with his friend Lt. Jeremy Stackhouse over Bosnia. During the mission, they fly their jet off course to check out a suspicious target that turns out to be the site of a mass grave that contains bodies of Bosnian Muslims. The main perpetrator of the massacre, Gen. Miroslav Lokar, has the plane shot down in order to avoid having the plane obtaining evidence of the massacre. Stackhouse ends up getting killed, while Burnett finds himself alone on the run from Lokar's ruthless soldiers. Burnett's commanding officer, Rear Admiral Leslie Reigart, has trouble gaining approval from his own commanding officers to carry out a search-and-rescue mission to save Burnett. From encountering a major battle in a war-torn town, to mine fields, to Serb soldiers seeking the pilot, and to a highly skilled sniper, will Burnett be able to escape Bosnia, or will he suffer the same fate of his comrade?
  53. The entire point of the film is that the American officer didn&#39;t care what the consequences would be, if he went to get his man. He was warned that the consequences would be the deaths of thousands of Yugoslavians. That he was prepared to risk all those lives for just one man is an issue of its own, which I might come back to soon.<br/><br/>What I object to is the fact that film then tried to justify this using the very dubious evidence of ethnic cleansing. Although this made their rescue of the fallen soldier worthwhile (in the broad societal sense), it was an accident, i.e. not the reason that they rescued him. The rescue was a selfish one, and the ex post justifications for it are despicable.<br/><br/>I know it&#39;s only a film, but still these things all help people to form their opinions. I think it&#39;s shameful.
  54. As is typical with action/military films, I found myself annoyed with the blatant technical inaccuracies in the film regarding military hardware, practices, capabilities, etc.<br/><br/>Many people dont care, dont know, it makes no difference to their enjoyment of the film. But to me, it smacks of amateurish research and attention to detail. Its not that it ruins the picture, its simply that it slaps you in the face with a reminder that hey, this is only a film. The attention to detail is what sets apart really well-done military films, like &quot;Saving Private Ryan&quot;.<br/><br/>I will highlight several glaring inaccuracies:<br/><br/>1. Aerial photo reconnaissance is not performed at low level, as is depicted in the film. In several scenes, the plane is flying between mountain peaks and through valleys. Furthermore, you would never recon anything by flying directly over it. Recon missions are supposed to be covert.<br/><br/>2. Thermal imagery, from satellites, is not capable of the real-time, sub one-meter resolution that is often depicted in thriller films..like the Tom Clancy films.<br/><br/>3. SAM missiles are not capable of tracking an aircraft in the manner shown (ie, repeated turn-on-a-dime maneuvering over a period of several minutes) Even a medium range SAM might only have a range of up to 10 km, which is about the distance covered in less than 30 seconds at mach 1, a speed the F18A can easily achieve in much less than that period of time. Granted SAM&#39;s get up to Mach1+ quicker than the average aircraft, like maybe just 4-6 seconds, but they cant turn on a dime at Mach 1, and they have limited range. If you were fired on by a SAM, chances are its either gonna hit you right away, or miss you entirely, not chase you around.<br/><br/>3. In the scenes dealing with extracting the downed aviator from behind enemy lines, the helicopters leave from the USS Carl Vinson, which is presumedly somewhere in the Adriatic off the coast of Croatia. They travel to a pick-up point, near the town of Hac. (this is probably based on the real life city of Bihac, in northern Bosnia, near the border with Croatia). However, travel time is about 10 minutes. This is a distance of at least 100 miles, and would probably take about 45 minutes.<br/><br/>4. Also in the helo scene, we see Gene Hackman&#39;s character sitting in the second pilot position of the aircraft. This would never be done..an Admiral would never be flying a helo. A combat helicopter is always manned by two fully functional, active pilots. In case the aircraft commander gets hit, you have to have another pilot on the stick to fly the aircraft.<br/><br/>Granted, all the inaccuracies contribute in small measure to the consistency of the story line. Without Gene Hackman in the final rescue scene, there could be no climactic resolution of the conflict that Owen Wilson&#39;s character introduced in the early part of the film.
  55. As intense an immersion in military ambience as a Hollywood movie could hope to provide in just over 90 minutes.
  56. When naval fighter navigator Lieutenant Chris Burnett (<a href="/name/nm0005562/">Owen Wilson</a>) is shot down during an apparently successful cease-fire over Serb-held Bosnian territory while on a Christmas Day reconnaissance mission and his pilot Lieutenant Jeremy Stackhouse (<a href="/name/nm0532683/">Gabriel Macht</a>) is summarily executed by Bosnian-Serb General Miroslav Lokar&#39;s (<a href="/name/nm0472762/">Olek Krupa</a>) assassin Sasha (<a href="/name/nm0556343/">Vladimir Mashkov</a>), Burnett is left to make his way alone to the rally point. Meanwhile, his commanding officer Admiral Leslie Reigart (<a href="/name/nm0000432/">Gene Hackman</a>) finds himself in conflict with his superior officer, Admiral Juan Miguel Piquet (<a href="/name/nm0021835/">Joaquim de Almeida</a>), when Reigart orders a search-and-rescue mission to save Burnett. Piquet fears that any attempt to rescue Burnett from behind enemy lines could throw Bosnia into more civil war, thus hampering NATO&#39;s withdrawal from the nation. Consequently, Burnett is ordered to make his way to a new extraction point in the friendly zone, a long and dangerous trek that takes him through mine fields, mass graves, and war torn Bosnian villages all the while being pursued by Lokar, Sasha, and their Bosnian-Serb forces. The film is based on a story by American screenwriting brothers James and John Thomas and a screenplay by David Veloz and Zak Penn. Behind Enemy Lines was followed by three unrelated sequels: <a href="/title/tt0497329/">Behind Enemy Lines II: Axis of Evil (2006)</a> (2006), <a href="/title/tt1208647/">Behind Enemy Lines: Colombia (2009)</a> (2009), and <a href="/title/tt2992552/">Seal Team Eight: Behind Enemy Lines (2014)</a> (2014). The Bosnian War took place between April 1992 and December 1995 following the breakup of Yugoslavia. After Bosnia seceded from Yugoslavia, tensions between Bosnia&#39;s Serb, Muslim and Croat communities rapidly descended into war between these groups, with, at the height of the conflict, each side fighting each other. The Bosnian War gained international attention because of the numerous war crimes committed on all sides of the war. Growing concern over mounting atrocities led to international intervention, eventually resulting in a peace treaty that ended hostilities in Bosnia in December 1995. While Bosnia has remained at peace since the end of the war, lingering animosities between the country&#39;s ethnic groups have hampered progress at full recovery. During their reconnaissance mission, the duo unknowingly took photos of mass graves of the victims of Lokar and his men. Worried that the mass graves would be discovered and the crimes be traced to him, Lokar orders that the jet be shot down and that both Burnett and Stackhouse be killed in the hope that Lokar&#39;s crimes would not be exposed to the outside world. Just as the aircraft carrier is gearing up to leave the area, Burnett manages to reactivate the homing beacon on Stackhouse&#39;s ejection seat, alerting Reigart that he is still alive. Knowing that he will lose his command for going against orders, Reigart sends out a task force to rescue Burnett. Hot on Burnett&#39;s tail are Sasha and Lokar&#39;s second-in-command, Colonel Bazda (<a href="/name/nm0407258/">Marko Igonda</a>), who have been following him. Along the way, however, Bazda steps on a landmine and is killed. Sasha catches up to Burnett, who is apparently shielding himself behind the ejection seat and prepares to outwait him until he hears the Search-and-Rescue helicopters approaching. He sneaks up on Burnett but realizes that he&#39;s been tricked as Burnett leaps out of a snowdrift and shoots him several times. Sasha shoots Burnett in the arm, and they go hand-to-hand until Burnett stabs Sasha in the chest with a flare, killing him. Unfortunately, the homing beacon has also alerted Lokar as to Burnett&#39;s position, and his tanks and infantry begin crashing through the trees. Burnett runs toward the helicopters, who begin firing on Lokar&#39;s troops. Rather than get to safety, however, Burnett runs back to the ejection seat in order to retrieve the hard drive containing the photos of the mass graves. In the final scene, Burnett and the helicopters land on the aircraft carrier amid cheers, and a written epilogue notes: Chris Burnett stayed in the Navy. The photographic evidence he recovered led to the arrest and conviction of Miroslav Lokar for numerous war crimes including genocide. Admiral Leslie Reigart lost command of his Battle Group. He was reassigned to an &quot;administrative&quot; job in Washington. He chose instead to retire with the respect and gratitude of the men and women under his command. No definitive reason is given during the movie, but the general consensus of viewers is that Sasha was a lone wolf, a freelance assassin exclusively loyal to Lokar. He resented having to lug Bazda, an inexperienced officer and possible liability in combat, along with him on his mission to kill Burnett. For the most part, the film is loosely based on the experiences of U.S. Air Force Captain Scott O&#39;Grady. In June 1995, during the war in Bosnia, O&#39;Grady was patrolling Bosnian airspace in part of a NATO-enforced no-fly zone and was shot down by Bosnian Serb forces near the town of Mrkonjic Grad. O&#39;Grady spent six days in Bosnian Serb-controlled territory before he was rescued by US Marines. O&#39;Grady subsequently filed a suit against the film&#39;s producers for defamation and for making a movie about his ordeal without his permission. The case was ultimately settled out of court. Nevertheless, the events of the film differ from O&#39;Grady&#39;s experiences, such as that he never engaged in combat with his pursuers, nor did he enter populated areas. Viewers who have seen Behind Enemy Lines have also recommended <a href="/title/tt0120070/">Savior (1998)</a> (1998) in which an American fights in Bosnia as a mercenary, and <a href="/title/tt0216799/">Harrison&#39;s Flowers (2000)</a> (2000) in which an American woman travels into Yugoslavia during the troubles in an attempt to find her journalist husband. <a href="/title/tt0283509/">No Man&#39;s Land (2001)</a> (2001) is a Bosnian-produced film about the War that won the 2002 Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film. <a href="/title/tt0116860/">Lepa sela lepo gore (1996)</a> (Pretty Village, Pretty Flame) (1996) is thought of as THE definitive film about the Bosnian War. Though it takes place in Macedonia, <a href="/title/tt0110882/">Pred dozhdot (1994)</a> (1994) details the stirring ethnic hatreds akin to those in Bosnia. <a href="/title/tt0464029/">Grbavica (2006)</a> (2006) details, in a way, the aftereffects. a5c7b9f00b
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