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Zero Dark Thirty Poster

Zero Dark Thirty

The greatest manhunt in history.
2012 | 157m | English

(333525 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 5 (history)

Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Writer: Mark Boal
Staring:
Details

A chronicle of the decade-long hunt for al-Qaeda terrorist leader Osama bin Laden after the September 2001 attacks, and his death at the hands of the Navy S.E.A.L. Team 6 in May, 2011.
Release Date: Dec 19, 2012
Director: Kathryn Bigelow
Writer: Mark Boal
Genres: Drama, Thriller
Keywords hotel, van, mossad, central intelligence agency (cia), assassination, prisoner, car dealer, iraq, pakistan, f word, man hunt, u.s. navy seal, female protagonist, gunfight, terrorism, raid, text message, monkey, dog, special forces, tied up, military, area 51, terrorist group, torturing, woman director, al qaeda, prison camp, suicide bombing, political thriller, ex special forces, post 9/11, helicopter crash, islamabad
Production Companies Annapurna Pictures, First Light, Mark Boal Productions
Box Office Revenue: $132,800,000
Budget: $40,000,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Jessica Chastain Maya
Jason Clarke Dan
Kyle Chandler Joseph Bradley
Jennifer Ehle Jessica
Mark Strong George
Joel Edgerton Patrick - Squadron Team Leader
Chris Pratt Justin - DEVGRU
Edgar Ramírez Larry from Ground Branch
Mark Duplass Steve
Scott Adkins John
Harold Perrineau Jack
Jeremy Strong Thomas
Reda Kateb Ammar
Ricky Sekhon Osama Bin Laden
J.J. Kandel J.J.
James Gandolfini C.I.A. Director
Stephen Dillane National Security Advisor
John Schwab Deputy National Security Advisor
Martin Delaney Assistant to National Security Advisor
John Barrowman Jeremy
Jeff Mash Deputy Director of C.I.A.
Taylor Kinney Jared - DEVGRU
Callan Mulvey Saber - DEVGRU
Phil Somerville Phil - DEVGRU
Nash Edgerton Nate - DEVGRU EOD
Mike Colter Mike - DEVGRU
Jessica Collins Debbie
Frank Grillo Squadron Commanding Officer
Fares Fares Hakim
Alexander Karim Detainee on Monitor
Siaosi Fonua Henry - DEVGRU
Daniel Lapaine Tim - Station Chief
Homayoun Ershadi Hassan Ghul
Michael G. Gabel C.I.A. Security (uncredited)
Fredric Lehne The Wolf
Osama Bin Laden Self (archive footage)
Name Job
William Goldenberg Editor
Richard Hicks Casting
Marie Fink Stunts
Daniel Parker Hair Designer, Makeup Designer
Joseph Beddelem Stunts
Harry Yoon Visual Effects Editor
Jeremy Hindle Production Design
Ben Collins Art Direction
Lisa Chugg Set Decoration
George L. Little Costume Design
Darion Hing Costume Supervisor
Rod McLean Supervising Art Director
Jake Marcuson First Assistant Camera
Ryley Brown Additional Photography
Paul N.J. Ottosson Sound Supervisor
Virginia Holmes Key Makeup Artist, Key Hair Stylist
Lesley Smith Key Makeup Artist, Key Hair Stylist
Sarah Hood Second Assistant Director
David Ticotin First Assistant Director
John Mahaffie Second Unit Director
Marina Yordanova Stunt Double
Svetoslav Rangelov Stunts
Todor Lazarov Stunts
Stuart Thorp Stunt Coordinator
Emil Tonev Stunts
Mustapha Touki Stunts
Alexandre Desplat Original Music Composer
Mark Boal Writer
Mark Bennett Casting
Greig Fraser Director of Photography
Lauren Shaw Stunts
Radka Petkova Stunts
Scott Robertson First Assistant Director
Nash Edgerton Stunt Double
Geo Corvera Stunts
Gaëlle Cohen Stunts
Elitsa Razheva Stunts
Kathryn Bigelow Director
Dylan Tichenor Editor
Gail Stevens Casting
Simon Finney Camera Operator
Name Title
Greg Shapiro Executive Producer
Matthew Budman Co-Producer
Colin Wilson Executive Producer
Ted Schipper Executive Producer
Mark Boal Producer
Megan Ellison Producer
Kathryn Bigelow Producer
Organization Category Person
Academy Awards Best Picture N/A Nominated
Academy Awards Best Supporting Actor Jason Clarke Nominated
Golden Globes Best Actress Jessica Chastain Won
BAFTA Awards Best Supporting Actress Jessica Chastain Nominated
SAG Awards Best Actress Jessica Chastain Nominated
SAG Awards Best Director Kathryn Bigelow Nominated
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 39 66 26
2024 5 37 64 25
2024 6 35 61 25
2024 7 46 82 22
2024 8 33 45 23
2024 9 25 31 19
2024 10 27 41 20
2024 11 30 59 19
2024 12 29 37 19
2025 1 30 45 22
2025 2 29 51 5
2025 3 12 40 2
2025 4 7 11 4
2025 5 8 12 5
2025 6 6 8 4
2025 7 5 6 3
2025 8 4 5 3
2025 9 5 5 4

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2025 3 333 629
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2024 12 605 823
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2024 8 915 915

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Reviews

FarSky
N/A

It’s simultaneously a blessing and a curse that I often wind up seeing films post-theatrical release. Even though I don’t intentionally seek out spoilers (OK, I do, but I’m getting better about it), I do still read reviews of films. The best reviews convey two things: 1) what the author thought of t ... he film in question, and 2) enough information to give the reader an informed opinion as to whether or not said reader will enjoy the film, regardless of the author’s response. Those reviews, coupled with the near-unanimous praise the film has received from all quarters caused me to believe that I would fall in love with this film, becoming swept up in its high-tension, immaculately-crafted story of the hunt for, and eventual assassination of, master terrorist Osama bin Laden. I was so very, very wrong. It starts well enough: under a black screen, a restrained opening plays audio (I do not know if it was real or dramatized) of phone calls placed on September 11, 2001 as the terrorist attacks that brought down the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were occurring. The film then introduces us to Maya (Jessica Chastain), one of many CIA workers tasked with finding the man responsible for those terrorist attacks. We follow Maya over the next twelve years, seeing small glimpses of her as she grows from determined but unsure interrogator to a woman whose sole reason in life is the location and capture of Osama bin Laden. The film was in production for a long time, and the ending had to be hastily rewritten to account for the real-life assault on the bin Laden compound, which resulted in his death. What a boon this became for the film (to say nothing of the country as a whole), as the thirty-minute compound assault that serves as the film’s final act is a breathtaking, tour-de-force whirlwind, following Seal Team Six into the dark den of the most notorious terrorist in American history and emerging victorious. Unfortunately, the two hours preceding that astonishing climax is unforgivably dull, lacking almost completely in character development and good writing, and structured with the worst possible way in which to tell this epic and (potentially) fascinating story. Chastain, one of the best actresses of her generation, vacillates between being utterly terrific (attempting to convince her superiors of her lead, her final scene) and sadly miscast. Chastain is an actress of uncommon grace and beauty, and trying to put her in the role of an embittered federal agent simply doesn’t work. The rest of the cast is serviceable, but the script (more on that in a moment) simply gives them nothing to do. At least the SEALs fare slightly better, with Joel Edgerton and Chris Pratt (from TV’s 'Parks & Recreation') crafting positive impressions from their slivers of dialogue. Oh, that script. Written by journalist Mark Boal (Oscar-winning screenwriter of Bigelow’s 'The Hurt Locker'), it is a cacophony of crap. The dialogue is inane (“Bin Laden is there. And you’re going to kill him for me.”), the characters are flat, lifeless, and uninteresting, and most unforgivably, it takes what should have been a massively satisfying story (the hard-won retribution visited upon the monster that killed 3,000 innocent Americans), and trivialized it to nothing than the personal investment of a single person spurred by the death of a couple of coworkers during the twelve-year-long search. I understand that the search for bin Laden was over a decade of boredom and legwork, punctuated only by intermittent threats (most of which felt cooked up specifically for the film, despite those setpieces paling to what I can only imagine the real scenarios must have been like). But Bigelow’s insistence on conveying that to the viewers by boring them to tears as well is not an effective recipe for drama. In a way, it’s the inverse of Steven Spielberg’s 'Saving Private Ryan'. 'Ryan' is a not a good film (the screenplay is utter dreck), but the skill, inventiveness, and sheer directorial talent on display in that phenomenal opening sequence catapult it to being on the greatest scenes in cinema history. Here, Bigelow stages her own version at the end of her film, and the results are equally gripping and visceral. On the basis of that one scene alone, Bigelow (much like Spielberg) deserved inclusion in the Academy’s nominees for Best Director. Outside of that, however, I find the critical acclaim of the film to be completely mystifying. The movie as a whole is rotten to its poorly-written core, a waste of money, and a diminishment of one of the best real-life stories of modern times. If you can, pop in for the last reel, but spend the other two hours watching something better.

Jun 23, 2021
tanty
5.0

Quite a flat movie. The story is interesting and also the fact that it shows how US has used tortures (which everybody but some US citizens already knew) but not much more than that. ...

Jun 23, 2021