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・ Guns (essay)
・ Guns (film)
・ Guns (magazine)
・ Guns (miniseries)
・ Guns a Poppin
・ Guns and Butter (song)
・ Guns and Guitars
・ Guns and Horses
・ Guns and Robots
・ Guns and Roses (2012 film)
・ Guns and Roses (disambiguation)
・ Guns and Roses (Numbers)
・ Guns and Roses (TV series)
・ Guns and Roses Volume. 1
・ Guns and Roses Volume. 2
Guns at Batasi
・ Guns at Dawn
・ Guns Babes Lemonade
・ Guns Don't Argue
・ Guns Don't Kill People Rappers Do
・ Guns Don't Kill People... Lazers Do
・ Guns for Antigua
・ Guns for Hands
・ Guns for Hire
・ Guns for San Sebastian
・ Guns Girls and Gangsters
・ Guns in the Dark
・ Guns in the Ghetto
・ Guns in the Heather
・ Guns N' Roses


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Guns at Batasi : ウィキペディア英語版
Guns at Batasi

''Guns at Batasi'' is a 1964 drama film starring Richard Attenborough, Jack Hawkins, Flora Robson, John Leyton and Mia Farrow. The film was based on the 1962 novel ''The Siege of Battersea'' by Robert Holles and was directed by John Guillermin. Although the action is set in an overseas colonial military outpost during the last days of the British Empire in East Africa, the production was made at Pinewood Studios in the United Kingdom.
==Plot==
A group of veteran British sergeants, headed by an ultra-correct, order-barking Regimental Sergeant Major (Richard Attenborough), are caught between two dissident factions in an unnamed newly created African state (most likely Kenya, since the character of RSM Lauderdale mentions that the Turkana people live in the north, which is where they live in Kenya. The African soldiers also speak amongst themselves in Kiswahili, the lingua franca of the region). The story neatly exposes the feelings of the professional NCOs, their officers and the African soldiers and officers, who are still painfully new to both guns and political slogans.
When the post-colonial government of the unnamed African country is overthrown by a populist uprising, troops loyal to the new administration take over the barracks, arrest the commanding officer and seize weapons. With the British NCOs cut off in the Sergeants' mess during the mutiny, the action boils down to the initiative and confusion of the griping, duty-hardened British soldiers in defending Captain Abraham (Earl Cameron) (a wounded African officer), and themselves, against the mutineers. The mess situation is further complicated by having to temporarily accommodate Miss Barker-Wise, a female British MP (Flora Robson) and Karen Eriksson, a UN secretary (Mia Farrow), the latter providing some love interest.
Eventually the minor action comes to anti-climactic end when the country's new administration allows the senior British officers to return to the barracks at Batasi and end the siege, but not before the RSM and a private involve themselves in some 'action' -- the destruction of two Bofors guns Lieutenant Boniface had brought out to fire on the Sergeants' mess. The film concludes with the news that a new government is in power. The film illustrates an erupting new world where the so-called common man, both black and white, no longer has a clear idea of the realpolitik due to the social revolutions in a post-colonial world.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Guns at Batasi」の詳細全文を読む



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