Zero Dark Thirty - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Zero Dark Thirty"
Zero Dark Thirty (2012)
Timing: 2:37 (157 min)
Zero Dark Thirty - TMDB rating
7/10
4845
Zero Dark Thirty - Kinopoisk rating
6.867/10
82810
Zero Dark Thirty - IMDB rating
7.4/10
339000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Executive Producer

Greg Shapiro
Executive Producer
Photo Colin Wilson #24900
Colin Wilson
Executive Producer
Ted Schipper
Executive Producer

Writer

Casting

Gail Stevens
Casting
Photo Richard Hicks #71050
Richard Hicks
Casting
Mark Bennett
Casting

Editor

Art Direction

Ben Collins
Art Direction

Supervising Art Director

Rod McLean
Supervising Art Director

Costume Design

George L. Little
Costume Design

Stunts

Photo Lauren Shaw #4752Photo Lauren Shaw #4753Photo Lauren Shaw #280264Photo Lauren Shaw #280265
Lauren Shaw
Stunts
Photo Marie Fink #4761
Marie Fink
Stunts
Photo Geo Corvera #66457
Geo Corvera
Stunts
Photo Gaëlle Cohen #31479
Gaëlle Cohen
Stunts
Todor Lazarov
Stunts
Photo Elitsa Razheva #13180
Elitsa Razheva
Stunts
Photo Radka Petkova #80954
Radka Petkova
Stunts
Emil Tonev
Stunts
Mustapha Touki
Stunts
Svetoslav Rangelov
Stunts

Production Design

Jeremy Hindle
Production Design

Stunt Coordinator

Photo Stuart Thorp #326945Photo Stuart Thorp #326946

Stuart Thorp

Stuart Thorp
Stunt Coordinator

Second Unit Director

John Mahaffie
Second Unit Director

Set Decoration

Lisa Chugg
Set Decoration

Key Makeup Artist

Lesley Smith
Key Makeup Artist
Virginia Holmes
Key Makeup Artist

Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Paul N.J. Ottosson
Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Original Music Composer

Photo Alexandre Desplat #13910Photo Alexandre Desplat #66001

Alexandre Desplat

Alexandre Desplat
Original Music Composer

Co-Producer

Matthew Budman
Co-Producer

Second Assistant Director

Sarah Hood
Second Assistant Director

Stunt Double

Marina Yordanova
Stunt Double

Additional Photography

Ryley Brown
Additional Photography

Director of Photography

Photo Greig Fraser #3128Photo Greig Fraser #3129Photo Greig Fraser #3130

Greig Fraser

Greig Fraser
Director of Photography

Camera Operator

Simon Finney
Camera Operator

Costume Supervisor

Darion Hing
Costume Supervisor

Sound Effects Editor

Jamie Hardt
Sound Effects Editor
Lee Gilmore
Sound Effects Editor

Visual Effects Supervisor

Mike Uguccioni
Visual Effects Supervisor

First Assistant Director

Photo Scott Robertson #7594Photo Scott Robertson #7595
Scott Robertson
First Assistant Director
David Ticotin
First Assistant Director

Foley Artist

Alex Ullrich
Foley Artist

Sound Designer

Paul N.J. Ottosson
Sound Designer

Dialogue Editor

Robert Troy
Dialogue Editor

Foley Editor

Mark Pappas
Foley Editor

Key Hair Stylist

Lesley Smith
Key Hair Stylist
Virginia Holmes
Key Hair Stylist

Special Effects Technician

David Poole
Special Effects Technician

Hair Designer

Makeup Designer

Photo Daniel Parker #71523

Daniel Parker

Daniel Parker
Makeup Designer

Foley Mixer

John Sanacore
Foley Mixer

Gaffer

Perry Evans
Gaffer

First Assistant Camera

Jake Marcuson
First Assistant Camera

Visual Effects Editor

Photo Harry Yoon #21654
Harry Yoon
Visual Effects Editor

ADR Supervisor

James Simcik
ADR Supervisor

Second Assistant Camera

Paul Snell

Paul Snell
Second Assistant Camera

Sound Supervisor

Paul N.J. Ottosson
Sound Supervisor

Best Boy Electrician

David Sinfield
Best Boy Electrician

What's left behind the scenes

  • Joel Edgerton was initially considered for the lead role, but he left the project due to scheduling conflicts, and the role went to Jason Clarke. Later, when the scheduling issue was resolved, Edgerton returned to the project, but in a different role.
  • Rooney Mara could have starred in this film, but she had to decline, and ultimately the role went to Jessica Chastain.
  • Tom Hardy, Idris Elba, and Guy Pearce were considered for various roles in the film. Hardy's role ultimately went to Mark Strong.
  • Initially, the film was about a decade-long, unsuccessful hunt for Osama bin Laden. After he was killed, the script was completely rewritten.
  • There were previous negotiations with James Cameron, the ex-husband of this film's director, Kathryn Bigelow, for him to direct the film, but he declined in favor of working on the sequel to "Avatar" (2009).
  • This is the first feature film where Jeremy Hindle worked as a production designer. Previously, Hindle collaborated with Australian cinematographer Greg Fraser on television commercials. Director Kathryn Bigelow praised Hindle for his remarkably accurate recreation of bin Laden’s compound, built from scratch in the Jordanian desert in less than three months.
  • Jordan and the Indian city of Chandigarh, located near the Pakistani border, were used to film scenes set in Pakistan and Afghanistan. Some footage featuring stunt doubles was actually filmed in Pakistan.
  • In the military memoir "No Easy Day," written by a member of a Naval Special Warfare Development Group, the film's main character, CIA operative Maya, is known only as Jen.
  • The scene depicting the raid on Osama bin Laden's compound lasts about 25 minutes. That’s only a few minutes shorter than the duration of the actual Navy SEAL attack.
  • Somewhat unusual was the reaction of CIA Director Michael Morell, who stated that while the filmmakers consulted with the CIA, the film is nonetheless a dramatization and not historically accurate. In particular, Morell refuted the film’s claim that enhanced interrogation techniques, also known as torture, were very helpful during the search for Osama bin Laden. Director Morell stated: “That depiction is false. We cannot allow a Hollywood movie to cloud our memory.”
  • At the Lamborghini showroom in Kuwait, Dan asks if there is a Balboni among the cars on display. He is referring to the Gallardo LP 550-2 Valentino Balboni, a limited-edition version of the Gallardo named after Lamborghini’s test driver. It’s a car with a stripe down the middle.
  • The stealth helicopters used in the actual mission were heavily modified Sikorsky UH-60 Black Hawks. A radar-absorbent coating, like that of an F-117 fighter jet, helped them avoid detection by Pakistani air defenses, and additional blades on the main and tail rotors created less noise than standard rotors.
  • The strange night vision goggles with four lenses worn by the Navy SEALs are actually real. They are a cutting-edge development, the GPNVG-18 (Panoramic Night Vision Goggles) manufactured by L-3 Warrior Systems. The additional lenses provide a better peripheral view.
  • Among the many books she researched in preparation for her role as a CIA operative, Jessica Chastain highlighted two that were of particular interest to her, namely Lawrence Wright's The Looming Tower: Al-Qaeda and the Road to 9/11 (published in Russian as “Al-Qaeda”) and Michael Scheuer's Osama Bin Laden (“Usama bin Laden”).
  • Jessica Chastain consistently saved voice messages from director Kathryn Bigelow, and in one such message she learned that she had been chosen for the role of Maya. This message arrived on November 21, 2011, at 01:04.
  • In January 2013, shortly before the film's release, three politically active members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (Martin Sheen, David Klonoff, and Edward Asner) announced that they would organize a public condemnation of the film for its tolerance of torture.
  • According to the film's advertising, its title has four meanings. Zero Dark Thirty is a military term denoting time (30 minutes after midnight). It can also be interpreted as the expression “Under the Cover of Darkness.” Furthermore, it is the time when the Navy SEAL helicopters took off to carry out the mission to eliminate the world's most wanted man – Osama bin Laden. And finally, the expression is used as a metaphor for the ten-year relentless pursuit of Osama bin Laden.
  • The screenwriter, director, and producer, as well as much of the film crew, had previously worked on The Hurt Locker (2008).
  • The prototype for Jessica Chastain's character was a real CIA employee whose name remains undisclosed. She was awarded a major U.S. military honor for her participation in the operation.
  • As Bigelow had anticipated, immediately after the announcement of the development of such a political film, the film crew was met with a barrage of criticism. One of the first to voice his opinion was U.S. Representative Peter King, who wondered: "Was Bigelow granted access to classified documents?" The director responded with a curt "No comment." Despite this, screenwriter Boal admitted that much of the film was based on his own research. Later, opponents of President Obama claimed that representatives of his administration personally provided the filmmakers with secret data.
  • Zero Dark Thirty is a military term denoting the precise time of 00:30. It was at this appointed hour that the group of Navy SEALs began to carry out their mission. Osama bin Laden was killed at 2 a.m. on May 2, 2011.
  • Several important factors regarding the preparation and execution of the raid, which are detailed in the book No Easy Day, were embellished or omitted entirely in this film. These include the discussion of whether to bomb the compound or conduct a raid using special forces; the construction of a full-scale replica of the compound in North Carolina for training purposes and repeated exercises with the same team of Navy SEALs and helicopters that were used in the final raid; and the presence of backup "Black Hawk" helicopters at the forefront during the mission, which proved vital after a helicopter went down during the initial landing.
  • Regardless of the film crew's clearances, the Pentagon found the film so realistic that the U.S. Department of Defense launched a special investigation to determine who had revealed all the secrets of the hunt for bin Laden to Bigelow. The investigation revealed that the classified information was leaked by Michael Vickers, the closest aide to U.S. Secretary of Defense Panetta.
  • U.S. Senator John McCain, who himself was subjected to torture during his military career in Vietnam, said that the film made him sick — “because it’s wrong.” In a speech in the Senate, he said that “the application of ‘enhanced interrogation techniques’ to Khalid Sheikh Mohammed not only did not give us information about bin Laden’s courier Abu Ahmed, but actually provided false and misleading information.” John McCain, Dianne Feinstein, and Carl Levin sent a critical letter to Michael Lynton, Chairman of Sony Pictures Entertainment’s distribution, stating that “with the release of ‘Zero Dark Thirty,’ the filmmakers and your production studio are perpetuating the myth that torture is effective. You have social and moral obligations to present the facts accurately.”
  • U.S. Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, in an interview with NBC on February 3, 2013, confirmed that torture was used during the operation to eliminate the head of “Al-Qaeda” when asked about the film “Zero Dark Thirty.”
  • When Joseph Bradley is watching the explosion of a London bus, a Google Chrome icon can be seen on his computer desktop, even though Chrome did not appear until September 2008.
  • When Maya is talking with the CIA director over lunch, the Olympic Games symbol is visible on a bottle of Coca-Cola.
  • In several instances, Maya pronounces the city name Peshawar as Pesh-a-war. In reality, it is more correctly pronounced as Pe-shawar.
  • At the beginning of the waterboarding scene, during Ammar’s second interrogation, Dan puts on gloves to adjust the rope, and 10 seconds later, when he picks up a towel, the gloves are gone. In the next scene, the gloves are already in his pocket.
  • When two armed motorcyclists block the passage of the CIA agents, a car approaches from behind them to prevent them from reversing. In the next shot, the camera changes angle. The two motorcyclists are still there, but the car that was approaching from behind the agents’ vehicle is no longer visible.
  • Abu Ahmed never extends his right arm out of the car at all during the time the team films him in Peshawar. However, in the next scene, when Larry shows Maya one of the photographs, Abu’s right arm is extended out of the car window.
  • When Faraj is arrested by a group of men dressed in black burqas, two of them are seen walking across a small bridge towards him. In the next shot, only one person is visible on the bridge.
  • In the scene where the courier is pursued through the streets of Pakistan, an Indian flag is clearly visible in the background during a wide shot of the street.
  • When the CIA agent asks for help from his Kuwaiti colleagues, the scene takes place in a Kuwaiti bar where girls are dancing and people are clearly drinking alcoholic beverages. In reality, alcohol is still strictly prohibited in Kuwait, and there are no bars or nightclubs there.
  • Pakistanis speak Urdu, English, and other regional languages, but not Arabic.
  • In the film, Osama bin Laden has a gray beard. In Mark Owen's book about the raid, he describes his great surprise when, standing over bin Laden's body, he saw his beard was as black as coal.
  • The real suicide bomber at Camp Chapman in 2009 had visited the base several times, so he was considered trustworthy and was not searched at the entrance. The film portrays this incident as if intelligence forces first encountered the Jordanian mole.
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