Discord-logo.jpg Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

Talk:Zulu Dawn

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search

I believe the "shotgun" is actually a double rifle.--Alowe56 22:45, 1 December 2010 (UTC)

Moved from main page

This isn't actually a continuity error since CSM Williams handed Private Williams his Martini-Henry with a bayonet in between scenes. The rifle CSM Williams wasn't his anyway, it was just one he picked up. --Funkychinaman 16:24, 21 July 2012 (CDT)

It is also worth noting that the bayonets missing on the Martini-Henry rifles might not be anachronistic as the early versions of that rifle had issues with casings sticking inside the chamber when the weapons were fired rapidly, and the way that they "fixed" this in the field was to use their bayonets to pry the casings out. Though I doubt that this was the reason some or the bayonets were missing in the film, it is something that has a real world reason for the bayonets to not be there. Dover500 23:07, 21 July 2012 (CDT)


C.S.M. Williams (Bob Hoskins) saves his son in law Pte. Williams (Dai Bradley), note the private has a rifle with no bayonet fitted.
Seconds later it becomes a carbine with a rather floppy looking bayonet!

Webley-Pryce Revolver?

I know the Webley-Pryce would have existed at the time of the Anglo-Zulu War, but the most common chamberings i have read about it being made in, the .455 Webley and .476 Enfield, seems to not have been introduced until the and Webley Mk I and Enfield Revolver respectively. If it wasn't loaded in those, what ammunition would have been used in it at the time of the Anglo-Zulu War? The .442 Webley or the .450 Adams perhaps? Z008MJ (talk) 11:06, 16 March 2014 (EDT)


Do Not Sell My Personal Information