{"id":10439,"date":"2023-11-07T08:42:46","date_gmt":"2023-11-07T03:12:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/new-feature-film-re-imagines-the-role-of-the-feared-nepalese-brigade-films-entertainment\/"},"modified":"2023-11-07T08:42:46","modified_gmt":"2023-11-07T03:12:46","slug":"new-feature-film-re-imagines-the-role-of-the-feared-nepalese-brigade-films-entertainment","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/farratanews.online\/new-feature-film-re-imagines-the-role-of-the-feared-nepalese-brigade-films-entertainment\/","title":{"rendered":"New feature film re-imagines the role of the feared Nepalese brigade | Films | Entertainment"},"content":{"rendered":"
Cast of Gurkha Warrior (Image: Getty)<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n
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A British Army helicopter lands deep in hostile territory, hovering a few feet above the ground to allow the soldiers inside it to leap into the unknown, rifles at the ready. It doesn\u2019t take long for the enemy to demonstrate they\u2019re unwelcome.<\/p>\n
Shots crack through the air and within moments one of the men, a Gurkha soldier, is down and lies writhing on the ground, his blood leaking into the soil. In the noise and confusion of the firefight he is nearly forgotten, until one man hears his cries, doubles back and begins dragging his comrade towards cover. The chopper has long gone. They are surrounded and outnumbered.<\/p>\n
The wounded Gurkha\u2019s thoughts turn to home, to the village high in the mountains of Nepal where the family he has not seen for years waits anxiously for his return.<\/p>\n
Will he ever see them again?<\/p>\n
While such scenes have undoubtedly played out countless times around the world in real life, this one is from a thrilling new film, Gurkha Warrior.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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It\u2019s released on Friday in time for Remembrance Day, but enjoyed its premiere in Leicester Square earlier this autumn to cheers and applause from the audience, many of them former or serving Gurkhas. Like most war movies, it is replete with action, tension and tragedy, it also has the unusual distinction of its director, Milan Chams, leading actor Ritesh Chams (no relation) and producer, Prasant Thapa all being former Gurkhas who served in the British Army from East Timor to Sierra Leone, Bosnia and Afghanistan.<\/p>\n
There is little doubt their personal experience of soldiering in extreme conditions gives the film its raw authenticity.<\/p>\n
Gurkha Warrior is set during the Malayan Emergency, a 12-year conflict fought against the Communists by the British in Malaya, then part of the Empire. In 1957 it became part of the independent Malay Federation and in 1963 part of the Federation of Malaysia.<\/p>\n
In 1948 Communist insurgents, eager to make Malaya a communist state, began attacking police stations, rubber plantations and railways, unleashing a war of bitter savagery and terror. The CTs \u2013 Communist Terrorists \u2013 some of whom fought alongside the British in the Second World War, used guerrilla tactics later copied against the French and Americans by the Vietcong, including terrorising villagers to force them to feed them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Ritesh in his British Army days (Image: Getty)<\/span><\/span><\/div>\n
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Those who resisted, or were suspected of informing, were tortured, and executed. Any soldier unlucky enough to be captured faced a similar fate, a chilling thought, especially for the fresh-faced young National Servicemen sent straight from training into the \u2018Green Hell\u2019 of the Malayan jungle as reinforcements.<\/p>\n
The British Army\u2019s Gurkha regiments played a heroic central role in the war with their renowned jungle fighting skills, physical and mental toughness, as well as their famous kukris, the curved knife used for slicing through undergrowth \u2013 or an enemy\u2019s neck. They were often dropped by helicopter into remote jungle and would spend weeks tracking insurgents through mountainous forest. After fighting with distinction in Malaya, the Gurkhas \u2013 who have served with the British Army for more than 200 years \u2013 fought in Borneo, the Falkland Islands, Bosnia, Sierra Leone, Iraq and Afghanistan. Many still follow fathers and grandfathers into the Brigade of Gurkhas.<\/p>\n
Such was the case for Ritesh Chams, who stars in Gurkha Warrior as Corporal Birkha Bahadur, leading his men on a desperate mission to rescue comrades who have gone missing \u2013 feared captured \u2013 in the jungle.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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Ritesh\u2019s own grandfather served in Malaya \u2013 as did Prasant\u2019s. Ritesh was determined to follow his footsteps into the Gurkhas and, in 2004, aged 18, passed the notoriously tough selection in Nepal, going on to serve in Bosnia, Sierra Leone and Afghanistan.<\/p>\n
It was on his second tour of Afghanistan when he was serving with the Mercian Regiment, that he found himself in a situation almost exactly like a scene from the movie, with a backdrop of desert instead of jungle. In the early hours of June 4, 2010, the deadliest year of the war for Coalition troops, his 12-man section was dropped by a Chinook helicopter on a mission to seek out Taliban troops known to be in the area. As the Chinook took off, the UK troops came under attack from all sides.<\/p>\n
It was still night and impossible to see where the firing was coming from. Nonetheless, they advanced through the darkness as bullets cracked and grenades burst around them. After a fierce, six-hour firefight, the Chinooks returned for them, but just as they were moving towards the choppers, sand whipped up by the rotor blades swirling around them, Ritesh was hit in the buttocks.<\/p>\n
\u201cI was shouting \u2018Man Down! Man Down!\u2019 but nobody heard me above the noise of the helicopter blades, and nobody could see me through the dust,\u201d he recalls.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n
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