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Zulu

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Zulu is a classic 1964 war film set during the Anglo-Zulu War, directed by Cy Endfield and featuring Michael Caine in his breakout film role. The cast also includes Stanley Baker, Jack Hawkins, Ulla Jacobsson, Patrick Magee and James Booth. Richard Burton provides the narration for the opening and closing scenes.Based on true events, the film is the story of a Last Stand that the defenders managed to win. The Battle of Rorke's Drift was the result of the Battle of Isandlwana, at which the British expeditionary force of 2000 sent to crush the Zulus had been destroyed through a combination of skilled Zulu leadership of fearless legions of warriors and the incompetence of British commanders. 139 British soldiers in a farmstead, assigned there to protect the wounded (who numbered about one third of the 139) held out against 4-5,000 Zulus for 12 hours. The battle is held to this day as one of the very best defences in all history. Eleven of the soldiers were awarded the Victoria Cross (the highest possible decoration for bravery), the highest number of this medal ever awarded for a single action.It was followed fifteen years later by a prequel, Zulu Dawn, about the disastrous Battle of Isandlwana that took place earlier the same day. The film was released on the centenary of the battle. It was written by Cy Endfield and starred Burt Lancaster, Peter O'Toole, and Bob Hoskins, and is generally regarded as being better history but the inferior film. It is also much more openly critical of the Anglo-Zulu War, emphasising the fact that the British instigated the war in order to seize Zululand.
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Dropped link to LoveableRogue: Not a Feature - IGNORE
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Miles Gloriosus
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Miles Gloriosus: The trader who runs into the Zulu scouts claimed he was trailed by a dozen of them, when the British can see he was only followed by three or four. Makes his claims he'd seen more dubious.
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 Zulu / int_120a6a29
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ArtisticLicenceHistory
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Artistic Licence – History: The 24th Regiment are identified as a Welsh regiment, but were actually predominantly English with Welsh and Irish filling out the ranks. They would not be known as the South Wales Borderers until two years after the battle. The portrayal of Colour Sergeant Bourne as a towering, middle-aged veteran soldier. The real Bourne was actually slightly-built and in his mid-twenties (he was, in fact, the youngest Colour Sergeant in the British Army at the time). He was even young enough to be the last survivor of the battle, dying on 9 May 1945 (appropriately enough, on the day after the war in Europe was won). The Zulus didn't charge headlong at the British riflemen with nothing but spears and shields over open ground, which is part of the reason they won at Isandlwana and the events of the film happened in the first place. They used rocks and broken terrain as cover until they were within a few yards of the British positions, then they charged the riflemen with their spears. The real Commissary Dalton wasn't the prissy pen pusher the film shows him to be. He was actually an experienced former soldier who may well have talked Chard and Bromhead out of abandoning the position in favour of fortifying and defending it. The movie makes it look like Cesthawayo's main army won the Battle of Isandlwana, then descended on Rorke's Drift. In reality the attacking Zulu force was a reserve impi who hadn't been engaged at Isandlwana, and disobeyed orders to cross into Natal and attack the British. As a result, most of the Zulu firearms at Rorke's Drift were outmoded rifles and muskets purchased from arms traders, rather than Martini-Henrys taken from the British dead at Isandlwana. The portrayal of Private Hook was so offensively wrong (in real life he was a model soldier and a teetotaler) that his daughter walked out of the film premiere. Otto Witt wasn't a pacifist (he helped the British soldiers plan their defence) or a drunk, and he only left so as to alert his family at his farm a little way away; he also wasn't a widower and had three children at the time, the oldest of whom was seven years old. Also contrary to the film's portrayal, Witt was not well-liked by the Zulu and had actually been banished from the Kingdom by Cesthawayo before the war broke out. John Chard was actually senior to Gonville Bromhead by several years, as opposed to the several weeks mentioned in the film when the two discuss the dates of their commissions. In fact, the senior officer at Rorke's Drift had been a Major Spalding (Lord Chelmsford's quartermaster-general) but he had departed the day before to ascertain the whereabouts of reinforcements, leaving Chard as the senior officer (Spalding having ascertained that Chard was indeed senior to Bromhead prior to his departure). Averted in the case of Lietenant Bromhead, who is often described as being partially deaf. According to one of the most detailed and comprehensive books on Rorke's Drift, this seems to have been a misinterpretation of primary accounts that after the battle, Bromhead was withdrawn and quiet towards officers attached to reinforcements; these are symptoms that could just as easily be the result of PTSD (which didn't have a name in the 1870s) than deafness. That said, other sources indicate that he did have hearing problems but this did not affect his ability to command men. The line about his father having fought at Waterloo and his great-grandfather having fought with Wolfe at Quebec is historically accurate, for he was indeed the scion of a notable military family. While the duelling war chants/songs makes for good film, it would be wholly inaccurate. Both the British and the Zulus took army discipline quite seriously during battle.
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Dirty Coward
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Dirty Coward: Private Henry Hook is portrayed as this until he has a change of heart and becomes a hero, saving the lives of at least a dozen patients in the hospital.
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 Zulu / int_135b9977
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Bloodless Carnage
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Bloodless Carnage: As a practical matter, 1960s special effects wouldn't have been up to the challenge of faking hundreds of bayonettings and large-caliber bullet wounds on bare-chested Zulu extras, so there is no blood shown from this. However the spearheads and bayonets have some.
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 Zulu / int_14ed6ab7
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Does This Remind You of Anything?
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Does This Remind You of Anything?: Chelmsford states the invasion "is the Final Solution to the Zulu problem." Apparently launching an unjustified invasion to satisfy imperialistic ambitions isn't enough to make him look a villain; he's got to be a proto-Nazi as well.
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 Zulu / int_159ce749
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Ensign Newbie
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Ensign Newbie: Bromhead, though in Real Life both he and Lieutenant Chard were inversions: they were old for their rank, having been repeatedly passed over for promotion as unlikely to amount to much. It's often claimed that Bromhead was at least partially deaf, but the latest authoritative study of the 1879 campaign suggests this was a misinterpretation of Bromhead suffering from PTSD in the immediate aftermath of the battle. At the end of the film the erstwhile confident and collected Chard reveals he's just as green as Bromhead.
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 Zulu / int_19d8d325
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Darkest Africa
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Darkest Africa: Takes place there.
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 Zulu / int_24321e44
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Only Sane Man
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Only Sane Man: Several characters occupy this position. Bishop Colenso who tries to talk Bartle Frere out of starting the war. Durnford, being seemingly the only high ranking officer to understand and how to fight the Zulus. Hamilton-Brown, who is openly disgusted by Chelmsford's arrogance and refusal to tend to his soldiers' well being. Harford, who desperately tries to get reinforcements sent to the outnumbered Pulliene and is continually rebuffed, and finally reporter Norris Newman who correctly predicts exactly what's going to happen when Chelmsford splits his forces.
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Anachronism Stew
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Anachronism Stew: Due to either a lack of Martini-Henry rifles or .570 blanks, a decent chunk of the weapons wielded by British forces in the film are actually anachronistic Lee-Enfield Mark is with the telltale magazine removed, as well as Webley Mk. VI revolvers, not introduced until 1915. This is due to a lack of functional Beaumont-Adams revolvers used in the actual battle.
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More Dakka
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More Dakka: The chief tactic of the British.
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Theme Music Power-Up
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Theme Music Power-Up: "Men of Harlech". Seconds earlier, the British garrison is getting visibly demoralised by the Zulu war chant. Then they start singing, and it's like a psychological warfare No-Sell.
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Scary Black Man
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Scary Black Man: The Zulus. Very much justified by Real Life.
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 Zulu / int_3511c4d7
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Plunder
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Plunder: Zulus are shown rifling British dead at Isandlwana.
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 Zulu / int_396e1c2a
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Face Death with Dignity
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Face Death with Dignity: Pulleine is writing a letter to his wife as the Zulus overrun everything. One bursts into his tent, and Pulleine sets aside his gun and lets the man stab him.
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 Zulu / int_3d2c6d30
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Skewed Priorities
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Skewed Priorities: A common problem with the quartermaster in the column. A native worker drowns in the river? Well, he's got mud all over the bullets. Later on, during the battle, he refuses to hand out bullets to soldiers out of turn, even when they need those bullets because the Zulus are overrunning them at that very moment. Chelmsford. Having just wandered into hostile territory and split his forces, he decides to make camp, have a light lunch and get his picture sketched. He ignores the messages of "we're under attack" because he's too busy stuffing his face. Crealock scolds Lieutenant Harford for being alarmed when he passes on the message of troops being overrun.
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Dated History
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Dated History: The film depicts a key reason for the British defeat at Isandlwana that the soldiers ran out of ammunition because Quartermaster Bloomfield dispenses reserve bullets to soldiers in an absurdly slow, "orderly" fashion. This was widely believed when the film went into production, featuring in Donald Morris's popular book The Washing of the Spears among other accounts of the Zulu War. It appears this story is exaggerated, if not a myth; while Durnford's Native troops did ran out of ammunition, it was mostly because they had been deployed too far from the camp to ensure a steady supply of it, not Bloomfield's poor handling of the supply.note A related myth is that Bloomfield and his aides weren't able to open the ammo boxes because the commissary had misplaced their screwdrivers; even if this had been the case, the boxes were easily broken open with rifle butts or other tools. Most British units closer to the main camp were able to keep up a steady stream of fire until they were overrun, as attested by both British and Zulu accounts of the battle, but their lines were spread too thin to properly defend the camp from a coordinated Zulu attack.
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Surprisingly Realistic Outcome
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Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: The Zulus are pragmatic enough to take rifles and ammunition off of the British dead at Isandlwana, and take them to Rorke's Drift. What started out as a battle of guns against spears turns into a fight of guns against other guns. After the initial surprise (because the defenders weren't expecting the Zulus to have looted rifles), reality sets in and it isn't as decisive — just because the Zulus know how to fire and reload rifles doesn't instantly make them expert marksmen, which takes prolonged training. One of the British officers notes that the Zulus thankfully aren't great shots (they've never had any experience firing rifles before note  historians of the Zulu War have noted that without training, the Zulus did not understand how to align or calibrate the rifle sights, did not realise what they were for, and simply pointed at the target and fired; most bullets therefore went hopelessly wide). They also realize that the Zulu commander isn't going to have his few men with rifles fire at the same time that his main force charges in with spears, for fear of hitting his own men. Even so, more than a few times the Zulu riflemen get lucky with their shooting and several British soldiers find this out the hard way. In a much less dramatic example, when the British are preparing to meet the Zulu for the first time, Bromhead orders them to fix bayonets, which they do in precise, formation style ... and one of the men drops his.
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 Zulu / int_41dd77d
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Zerg Rush
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Zerg Rush: As before, the Zulu's main battle tactic. And it works for them. The British have guns, cannon, and mortars, and they still run out of bullets and get overrun.
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Cold-Blooded Torture
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Cold-Blooded Torture: The British army tries to get information out of the three Zulus they capture by beating the living shit out of them. The Zulus figured this would happen, and planned for it.
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Shoot the Messenger
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Shoot the Messenger: Cetshwayo's son demands he kill the messenger relaying the British Empire's view of the Zulus. Cetshwayo does not.
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Becoming the Mask
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Becoming the Mask: During the "Men of Harlech" scene you see dozens of weary demoralized soldiers who enlisted because no one else was poor enough for the job, converting themselves into the Proud Warrior Race Guys that they were singing of. If you look closely at the Zulus you can see how many are obviously youngsters out for the first time. They are becoming the mask too.
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The Guards Must Be Crazy
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The Guards Must Be Crazy: Or just flat-out Too Dumb to Live. They wander off, leaving their three captives to sit and think up a means of escape. Then, when one starts calling out (the old "guards! Guards!" routine), only one wanders over, and gets laid out. His buddy is too busy staring off at the hills to notice as the Zulus cut themselves free, kill the guard, and run off.
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Worthy Opponent
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Worthy Opponent: The Zulus appear to be massing again to wipe out the British, but it turns out they're saluting the British for their bravery before departing for good. This is a small fabrication: in real life the Zulus left because they weren't supposed to be there in the first place — Prince Dabulamanzi, the commander of the Zulu force that attacked Rorke's Drift, was King Cetshwayo's half-brother, and noted for his rashness and aggressive command behaviour. The attack at Rorke's Drift was actually a direct violation of orders from the king, specifically that the Zulu forces were to act only in defence of Zululand, and under no circumstances to invade British-held territory. In reality, the Zulus had just disappeared by the dawn after the final attack, and only one more Zulu impi was briefly sighted by the men, retreating about an hour ahead of the British reinforcements. Chard is wounded and goes for treatment. He tells Bromhead that he is in command now, and adds, "It's what you wanted, isn't it?"
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Bad Vibrations
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Bad Vibrations: "Damn funny. It ... it's like a train in the distance."
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 Zulu / int_4781adbb
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Jerk with a Heart of Gold
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Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Bromhead spends the first hour or so of the film being a snobby, entitled prick to Chard, giving him backhanded advice and willfully acting as unhelpful as possible. When the shared reality of their situation finally slaps him in the face, he proves himself a courageous, capable officer who comes to acknowledge Chard's abilities, and by the end of the film, the two of them have become Bash Brothers.
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Cool Versus Awesome
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Cool Versus Awesome: British versus Zulus. Even their choirs are manly.
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Planet of Steves
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Planet of Steves: Discussed by some of the soldiers. Truth in Television as the Welsh have a rather limited range of names, so soldiers with similar names go by their serial numbers to avoid confusion. Two of the VC winners at the battle had the same surname (Jones), but different first names.
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 Zulu / int_4960ec4f
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Minored in Ass-Kicking
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Minored In Ass Kicking: Bromhead, although portrayed as an aristocratic officer whose job is squarely one of command and leadership, is skilled with his pistol and at one particularly dire point trades his sword (intended as a badge of rank), for a rifle and joins the ranks of the flying platoon to repel Zulus breaching the perimeter.
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 Zulu / int_4ae690ca
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Laughing Mad
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Laughing Mad: After a day and night being attacked by Zulus, Bromhead starts having a case of the giggles when it looks like they're in for Round 2, only to be told they're actually saluting the Brits.
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 Zulu / int_4c76a470
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Comedic Relief Characters
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Comedic Relief Characters: At first, Commissary Dalton and the company cook fit the image of traditional comic stock characters from British adventure stories. Then the trope gets very Subverted early on when Dalton is taken out by a gunshot and then the cook gets brutally speared in the back, emphasizing the latter's agonizing death. Dalton is not shown playing any further part in the rest of the film though the ending shows he survived, and it's stated in the closing that the real Dalton also received the Victoria Cross.
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 Zulu / int_4da6ac
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Rated M for Manly
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Rated M for Manly: Manly Zulus fighting the manly British Army in a very manly manner.
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Mirroring Factions
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Mirroring Factions: The "Men of Harlech" scene emphasizing the mutual warlikeness of the British and the Zulus.
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Dual Wielding
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Dual Wielding: Schiess dual wields his bayoneted rifle and his crutch.
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 Zulu / int_56515a39
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Artistic License – History
 Zulu / int_56515a39
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The Zulus appear to be massing again to wipe out the British, but it turns out they're saluting the British for their bravery before departing for good. This is a small fabrication: in real life the Zulus left because they weren't supposed to be there in the first place — Prince Dabulamanzi, the commander of the Zulu force that attacked Rorke's Drift, was King Cetshwayo's half-brother, and noted for his rashness and aggressive command behaviour. The attack at Rorke's Drift was actually a direct violation of orders from the king, specifically that the Zulu forces were to act only in defence of Zululand, and under no circumstances to invade British-held territory. In reality, the Zulus had just disappeared by the dawn after the final attack, and only one more Zulu impi was briefly sighted by the men, retreating about an hour ahead of the British reinforcements.
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 Zulu / int_58962105
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White-and-Grey Morality
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White-and-Grey Morality: The Zulus are fighting for their land, whereas the English are defending a hospital.
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 Zulu / int_5fff364d
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Combat Medic
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Combat Medic: Surgeon Reynolds, who never fights but neither does he so much as flinch at the sight of hordes of angry Zulu warriors flooding into his makeshift hospital. As stated in the closing credits, he's one of the eleven British soldiers to be awarded the Victoria Cross for the defence of Rorke's Drift.
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 Zulu / int_61a503a7
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Hell Is That Noise
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Hell Is That Noise: The first hint of the approach of the Zulu forces is the sound of them beating on their shields; Bromhead, unnerved for the first time in the film, says it sounds like an oncoming train. The Zulu continue to do it several more times as psychological warfare, terrifying the soldiers of the outpost.
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 Zulu / int_61c683d2
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We Have Reserves
 Zulu / int_61c683d2
comment
We Have Reserves: The Zulus. There are so many that they are able to expend several simply to test the firing strength of the British.
 Zulu / int_61c683d2
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Zulu / int_61c683d2
 Zulu / int_6293c185
type
Sequel Hook
 Zulu / int_6293c185
comment
Sequel Hook: In the final scene, as Chelmsford and his escort discover the overrun camp, Crealock informs Chelmsford that he's ridden a little way along the track that leads to Rorke's Drift — "The sky above is red with fire," as the characters of the original film are currently fighting for their lives.
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Zulu / int_6293c185
 Zulu / int_629de9ad
type
'70s Hair
 Zulu / int_629de9ad
comment
'70s Hair: Well... the 1870s anyway. The long sideburns on the men wouldn't look out of place a century later.
 Zulu / int_629de9ad
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1.0
 Zulu / int_629de9ad
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 Zulu / int_6375f746
type
Drill Sergeant Nasty
 Zulu / int_6375f746
comment
Drill Sergeant Nasty: And a Colour Sergeant Nasty as well. Private Williams is distracted on parade by the former yelling at a native contingent, so the CSN sends him over to the drill sergeant to say "I love you more than my Colour Sergeant." He's then made to run around the field holding his rifle over his head until as such a time as he collapses.
 Zulu / int_6375f746
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 Zulu / int_68069489
type
Nipple and Dimed
 Zulu / int_68069489
comment
Nipple and Dimed: The first TV screenings of this film cheerfully screened it in its entirety, including the mass wedding sequence near the start where several hundred Zulu warriors dance their way into wedlock with a line of several hundred very exuberantly bouncy Zulu maidens. On the elsewhere mentioned African tribeswomen principle, this protracted scene of southern African pulchritude was always left in, regardless of the time of day of screening, throughout the 1970's, 1980's, and 1990's. Yet in the early 2000's, all this abruptly changed and British TV adopted a strictly censored version with all the bouncy toplessness left out. There was no clear reason given for this change of mind on the part of the broadcasters, and it was noticeable that later graphic scenes depicting mass slaughter of Zulu warriors under concentrated British riflepower were left in.
 Zulu / int_68069489
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Zulu / int_68069489
 Zulu / int_70ade2c4
type
Culture Clash
 Zulu / int_70ade2c4
comment
Culture Clash: Margareta Witt is put off by the Zulu mass marriage ceremony, wondering why the young women are permitting themselves to be married off to old men. Her father reminds her that many young women in Europe have arranged marriages with rich men, and perhaps the Zulu way is better, since they know they'll be getting a brave man out of it.
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Zulu / int_70ade2c4
 Zulu / int_7860d036
type
Get It Over With
 Zulu / int_7860d036
comment
Get It Over With: At the end of the film, the defenders are exhausted and mostly wounded, and the Zulu mass on the opposing hill and begin a chant. The British officer in charge shouts for the "bastards" to just attack, why are they taunting them? The Boer guide then begins to crack a smile, and goes to sit down next to him and tells him it's not a taunt, it's a salute. And everyone breaks down laughing with relief.
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Zulu / int_7860d036
 Zulu / int_7f390ebc
type
Developing Doomed Characters
 Zulu / int_7f390ebc
comment
Developing Doomed Characters: The first part of the movie is introducing us to several characters. Most of them won't make it to the end credits.
 Zulu / int_7f390ebc
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1.0
 Zulu / int_7f390ebc
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Zulu / int_7f390ebc
 Zulu / int_8930448
type
Soldier vs. Warrior
 Zulu / int_8930448
comment
Soldier vs. Warrior: The British are shown firing controlled volleys where the Zulus advance in an individualistic way. A bit of a subversion though as a Boer tells the British in no uncertain terms that the Zulus are not a mere warband, but are themselves a regimented and disciplined force who fight with a well developed and effective tactical doctrine. Also why the Zulus are show being less organized in marching ranks, in battle they are more than capable of coordinated attack as shown when a British soldier in melee with a Zulu is killed in a backstab from behind by his nearby friend. The famous "Men of Harlech" scene might also indicate that the British and the Zulus are actually both Warriors.
 Zulu / int_8930448
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1.0
 Zulu / int_8930448
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Zulu / int_8930448
 Zulu / int_8c1ad82f
type
Proud Warrior Race Guy
 Zulu / int_8c1ad82f
comment
Proud Warrior Race Guy: Both the British and the Zulus. More or less the whole point of the film.
 Zulu / int_8c1ad82f
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1.0
 Zulu / int_8c1ad82f
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Zulu / int_8c1ad82f
 Zulu / int_9cc1a329
type
Upper-Class Twit
 Zulu / int_9cc1a329
comment
Upper-Class Twit: Lord Chelmsford, and most of his officers. They all laugh at the Only Sane Man at the luncheon, who calls them out on eating while the troops go hungry (and Chelmsford's reaction is to sneer at the man for being "poorly behaved" and Irish. Ironic too, given that Chelmsford is played by Irishman Peter O'Toole)
 Zulu / int_9cc1a329
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 Zulu / int_9cc1a329
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Zulu / int_9cc1a329
 Zulu / int_9d12bbc1
type
Foreshadowing
 Zulu / int_9d12bbc1
comment
Foreshadowing: The Boer character makes a few Deadpan Snarker remarks about the British and Boers fighting on the same side for now, united against a common enemy. But he suggests after the war with the Zulus, things may well be different. In Real Life, the first Boer War happened a little over a year later. This was a direct consequence of the hamfisted way the British prosecuted the Zulu War, followed by a botched peace settlement and the British administration seeking to grab what it could after the collapse of the Zulu Empire. This alienated the Boers of the Transvaal and drove them into open revolt. And twenty years after the Zulu War...
 Zulu / int_9d12bbc1
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 Zulu / int_9d12bbc1
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Zulu / int_9d12bbc1
 Zulu / int_9da6354b
type
Reality Has No Subtitles
 Zulu / int_9da6354b
comment
Reality Has No Subtitles: The Zulus' dialogue and chanting isn't translated.
 Zulu / int_9da6354b
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1.0
 Zulu / int_9da6354b
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 Zulu
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Zulu / int_9da6354b
 Zulu / int_a7b324e
type
Handicapped Badass
 Zulu / int_a7b324e
comment
Handicapped Badass: Durnford's only got one working arm, but he's still a capable fighter, and lasts a long way into the Battle of Islandwana before getting downed.
 Zulu / int_a7b324e
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Zulu / int_a7b324e
 Zulu / int_a91078ea
type
Adaptational Jerkass
 Zulu / int_a91078ea
comment
Adaptational Jerkass: Private Henry Hook is potrayed as an obnoxious, insubordinant malingerer who fakes illness to escape duty, only to becoming a brave fighter and a good soldier in the final scene. There's nothing to suggest that Private Hook was anything but a good soldier throughout his career, and his children were angered and disgusted by film's portrayal of their father.
 Zulu / int_a91078ea
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 Zulu / int_a91078ea
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Zulu / int_a91078ea
 Zulu / int_a9f86a47
type
What a Senseless Waste of Human Life
 Zulu / int_a9f86a47
comment
What a Senseless Waste of Human Life: A couple times, and wrong on both counts.
 Zulu / int_a9f86a47
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 Zulu / int_a9f86a47
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Zulu / int_a9f86a47
 Zulu / int_ad1db87c
type
Oh, Crap!
 Zulu / int_ad1db87c
comment
Oh, Crap!: A perfectly sensible reaction to finding several thousand armed Zulus right on top of you.
 Zulu / int_ad1db87c
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1.0
 Zulu / int_ad1db87c
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Zulu / int_ad1db87c
 Zulu / int_ae087674
type
I Can Still Fight!
 Zulu / int_ae087674
comment
I Can Still Fight!: Several characters, notably Schiess (who at one point swings his crutch at an attacking Zulu), display this more than once.
 Zulu / int_ae087674
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1.0
 Zulu / int_ae087674
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1.0
 Zulu
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Zulu / int_ae087674
 Zulu / int_ae3d6438
type
Deadpan Snarker
 Zulu / int_ae3d6438
comment
Deadpan Snarker: Bromhead, very much so. Adendorff also has his moments.
 Zulu / int_ae3d6438
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1.0
 Zulu / int_ae3d6438
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Zulu / int_ae3d6438
 Zulu / int_ba5bd7
type
Ignored Expert
 Zulu / int_ba5bd7
comment
Ignored Expert: A Boer and his son, who have already seen combat against the Zulus (and have the assegai scars to prove it) suggest a defensive technique of circling their wagons into a laager. Chelmsford ignores them.
 Zulu / int_ba5bd7
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 Zulu / int_ba5bd7
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Zulu / int_ba5bd7
 Zulu / int_bdb5c651
type
Real Men Love Jesus
 Zulu / int_bdb5c651
comment
Real Men Love Jesus: Colour-Sergeant Bourne coolly despatches Zulus with his bayonet, commands ranks of riflemen and quotes Psalm 46 before the battle.
 Zulu / int_bdb5c651
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 Zulu / int_bdb5c651
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Zulu / int_bdb5c651
 Zulu / int_bfc2ec8a
type
That Makes Me Feel Angry
 Zulu / int_bfc2ec8a
comment
That Makes Me Feel Angry: Played for pathos in the scene in which Colour Sergeant Bourne takes register.
 Zulu / int_bfc2ec8a
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 Zulu / int_bfc2ec8a
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Zulu / int_bfc2ec8a
 Zulu / int_c02f148d
type
Both Sides Have a Point
 Zulu / int_c02f148d
comment
Both Sides Have a Point: While our sympathies are with the protagonists in Rorke's Drift who are obviously trying to avoid being slaughtered, at the same time the film deliberately avoids vilifying the Zulu forces. They're fighting back against the Boers and the British Empire trying to take their land, and the foot soldiers are following their leaders' orders just as much as the British solders are obeying their superior officers.
 Zulu / int_c02f148d
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 Zulu / int_c02f148d
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Zulu / int_c02f148d
 Zulu / int_c40c8b74
type
And Starring
 Zulu / int_c40c8b74
comment
And Starring: The opening cast roll ends with "And introducing Michael Caine".
 Zulu / int_c40c8b74
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 Zulu / int_c40c8b74
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Zulu / int_c40c8b74
 Zulu / int_c4942576
type
Cunning Linguist
 Zulu / int_c4942576
comment
Cunning Linguist: Adendorff gives cultural advice.
 Zulu / int_c4942576
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 Zulu / int_c4942576
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Zulu / int_c4942576
 Zulu / int_c93a6560
type
Impaled with Extreme Prejudice
 Zulu / int_c93a6560
comment
Impaled with Extreme Prejudice: what the British and the Zulus do to each other with spears and bayonets whenever the Zulus' Zerg Rush manages to get through the British's dakka.
 Zulu / int_c93a6560
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 Zulu / int_c93a6560
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Zulu / int_c93a6560
 Zulu / int_c9981efb
type
The Engineer
 Zulu / int_c9981efb
comment
The Engineer: Lt. Chard was only a Royal Engineer assigned to Rourke's Drift to build a bridge across the Buffalo River.
 Zulu / int_c9981efb
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 Zulu / int_c9981efb
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Zulu / int_c9981efb
 Zulu / int_c9c756a8
type
Child Soldiers
 Zulu / int_c9c756a8
comment
Child Soldiers: While not serving in a combat role, the British army does have children serving in support roles. They don't survive.
 Zulu / int_c9c756a8
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 Zulu / int_c9c756a8
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Zulu / int_c9c756a8
 Zulu / int_d9e9ad7e
type
The Cavalry
 Zulu / int_d9e9ad7e
comment
The Cavalry: Rather cruelly subverted. A large force of cavalrymen arrive at the fort...then flee when faced with the Zulu army. It should be noted that historically the cavalry actually fought in the opening stages of the battle before being forced to withdraw due to a lack of ammunition for their carbines. The cavalry unit was also mostly made up of black riders rather than white farmers as depicted in the film.
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 Zulu / int_dca70c44
type
Reasonable Authority Figure
 Zulu / int_dca70c44
comment
Reasonable Authority Figure: The Zulu leader who orders his men not to capture the Witts as they ride away from Rorke's Drift counts as this.
 Zulu / int_dca70c44
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 Zulu / int_dca70c44
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Zulu / int_dca70c44
 Zulu / int_df410b77
type
Decoy Protagonist
 Zulu / int_df410b77
comment
Decoy Protagonist: The film starts off with missionary Otto Witt and his daughter Margareta watching a mass Zulu marriage ceremony. You'd be forgiven for thinking that they'll be more involved in the plot of the film, especially given how prominently their actors' names (Jack Hawkins and Ulla Jacobsson) are in the credits, but the attention soon switches to the soldiers at Rourke's Drift and the Witts escape from the battle (and the story) at around the halfway mark.
 Zulu / int_df410b77
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 Zulu / int_df410b77
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Zulu / int_df410b77
 Zulu / int_e061d153
type
Sergeant Rock
 Zulu / int_e061d153
comment
Sergeant Rock: Colour Sergeant Bourne provides the quote at the top of this trope's page; while usually stern with the men, he knows when to show a softer side (like comforting Private Cole when the latter is unnerved by Witt's drunken ranting, and later ensuring that Private Hitch seeks medical attention during the post-battle roll call), helps to ease the tension by quoting Psalm 46 just before the Zulus attack, and when they do attack, he kills several of them with his bayonet note  in Real Life, he was actually 23 years old at the time of Rorke's Drift and was the youngest Colour Sergeant in the British Army; for his bravery at Rorke's Drift, he was awarded the Distinguished Conduct Medal (for non-officers, the second-highest decoration after the VC) and was offered a commission but declined, although he was later commissioned, and ended his long military career as a Lieutenant-Colonel . Corporal Allen, although not a sergeant, also qualifies note  he had actually been a sergeant but was demoted for being drunk on duty some time before Rorke's Drift; he was later promoted back to that rank .
 Zulu / int_e061d153
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 Zulu / int_e061d153
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Zulu / int_e061d153
 Zulu / int_e0c3f8bf
type
Punch-Clock Hero
 Zulu / int_e0c3f8bf
comment
Punch-Clock Hero / Punch-Clock Villain: Both sides are soldiers doing their respective jobs for their respective countries. It is not even considered necessary to worry about which government is in the right from the political point of view.
 Zulu / int_e0c3f8bf
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 Zulu / int_e0c3f8bf
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Zulu / int_e0c3f8bf
 Zulu / int_e11e88b6
type
Thousand-Yard Stare
 Zulu / int_e11e88b6
comment
Thousand-Yard Stare: The final scene of the movie is Chelmsford wandering through the ruins of the camp at Isandlwana, just staring at the devastation his bad decisions helped cause.
 Zulu / int_e11e88b6
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 Zulu / int_e11e88b6
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Zulu / int_e11e88b6
 Zulu / int_e16217f8
type
Historical Villain Upgrade
 Zulu / int_e16217f8
comment
Historical Villain Upgrade: Henry Hook wasn't the cowardly drunk the film portrayed him as, but a model soldier. His daughter walked out of the premiere when she saw how her father was being portrayed.
 Zulu / int_e16217f8
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 Zulu / int_e16217f8
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Zulu / int_e16217f8
 Zulu / int_e3d06d0c
type
Bash Brothers
 Zulu / int_e3d06d0c
comment
Bash Brothers: Chard and Bromhead begin the film unable to stand each other, but by the end of it, they have proven themselves quite a formidable duo, and form a mutual respect.
 Zulu / int_e3d06d0c
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Zulu / int_e3d06d0c
 Zulu / int_e5fd8bc2
type
Hate Sink
 Zulu / int_e5fd8bc2
comment
Hate Sink: Not a flattering depiction of Lord Chelmsford at all. He's an arrogant, idiotic jackass who seems to spend near every free moment glowering at someone, or ignoring advice just 'cuz, ultimately leading to the slaughter at Isandlwana. At no point does he show anything approaching a likeable trait.
 Zulu / int_e5fd8bc2
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 Zulu / int_e5fd8bc2
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Zulu / int_e5fd8bc2
 Zulu / int_ea6f361f
type
You Are Number 6
 Zulu / int_ea6f361f
comment
You Are Number 6: The Privates Jones refer to each other by the serial numbers of 593 and 716. We also meet 612 Williams. In Welsh regiments where an awful lot of people might be called Williams or Owen or Jones (Wales doesn't have that many surnames), this was, and remains, standard practice. While squaddies generally prefer to use distinguishing nicknames where possible, invention tends to fade after about the tenth Jones...
 Zulu / int_ea6f361f
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Zulu / int_ea6f361f
 Zulu / int_eaaf461f
type
National Geographic Nudity
 Zulu / int_eaaf461f
comment
National Geographic Nudity: At play with the Zulu wedding sequence that the Witts witness at the beginning of the film.
 Zulu / int_eaaf461f
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 Zulu / int_eaaf461f
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Zulu / int_eaaf461f
 Zulu / int_ed2bbf8a
type
You Are in Command Now
 Zulu / int_ed2bbf8a
comment
Chard is wounded and goes for treatment. He tells Bromhead that he is in command now, and adds, "It's what you wanted, isn't it?"
 Zulu / int_ed2bbf8a
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 Zulu / int_ed2bbf8a
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Zulu / int_ed2bbf8a
 Zulu / int_f1d6144a
type
War Is Hell
 Zulu / int_f1d6144a
comment
War Is Hell: "Do you think I could stand this butcher's yard more than once?" In fact, he did. The real John Chard was also there for the war's finale, the Battle of Ulundi.
 Zulu / int_f1d6144a
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 Zulu / int_f1d6144a
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Zulu / int_f1d6144a
 Zulu / int_f68ac685
type
Battle Chant
 Zulu / int_f68ac685
comment
Battle Chant: The battle chants of the Zulu warriors (which also include shield bashing) before the final battle are notorious; perhaps the full-throated rendition of the song "Men of Harlech" (made in response to the Zulu chants) by the Welsh soldiers could fit as well.
 Zulu / int_f68ac685
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 Zulu / int_f68ac685
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 Zulu
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Zulu / int_f68ac685
 Zulu / int_f7cee9b
type
Last Stand
 Zulu / int_f7cee9b
comment
Last Stand: Averted; they actually do win.
 Zulu / int_f7cee9b
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Zulu / int_f7cee9b
 Zulu / int_ff7f34c5
type
Pet the Dog
 Zulu / int_ff7f34c5
comment
Pet the Dog: Cesthawayo saving the Witts from being killed as war breaks out. He even has one of his own men executed to help them escape.
 Zulu / int_ff7f34c5
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ItemName
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Zulu

The following is a list of statements referring to the current page from other pages.

 Zulu
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Action Genre / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
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African Chant / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
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As Long as It Sounds Foreign / int_b373c87e
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Big Badass Battle Sequence / int_b373c87e
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Bleak Border Base / int_b373c87e
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Bloodless Carnage / int_b373c87e
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Bottomless Magazines / int_b373c87e
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Captain Smooth and Sergeant Rough / int_b373c87e
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Cavalry Betrayal / int_b373c87e
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Cavalry Refusal / int_b373c87e
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Cool Versus Awesome / int_b373c87e
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During the War / int_b373c87e
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Ensign Newbie / int_b373c87e
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Epic Movie / int_b373c87e
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Final Solution / int_b373c87e
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General Failure / int_b373c87e
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Gentle Giant / int_b373c87e
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Get It Over With / int_b373c87e
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Heroic Bystander / int_b373c87e
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Homage / int_b373c87e
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I Can Still Fight! / int_b373c87e
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Impromptu Fortress / int_b373c87e
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Improperly Placed Firearms / int_b373c87e
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Lovable Rogue / int_b373c87e
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More Dakka / int_b373c87e
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Music for Courage / int_b373c87e
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National Anthem / int_b373c87e
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Nipple and Dimed / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Nom de Guerre / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Officer and a Gentleman / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Plunder / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Praetorian Guard / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Rated M for Manly / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Real Men Love Jesus / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Red Is Heroic / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Sergeant Rock / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
'70s Hair / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Shield Banging / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Sibling Seniority Squabble / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Soldier vs. Warrior / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Stiff Upper Lip / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Survival Mantra / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
That Makes Me Feel Angry / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
The Cavalry / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
The Engineer / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
The Medic / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
Those Were Only Their Scouts / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
What a Senseless Waste of Human Life / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
You Are in Command Now / int_b373c87e
 Zulu
hasFeature
You Are Number 6 / int_b373c87e