IMDb RATING
5.4/10
2.9K
YOUR RATING
A gunned down Navy SEAL Master Chief must guide a child to safety through a gauntlet of hostile Taliban insurgents and survive the brutal Afghanistan wilderness.A gunned down Navy SEAL Master Chief must guide a child to safety through a gauntlet of hostile Taliban insurgents and survive the brutal Afghanistan wilderness.A gunned down Navy SEAL Master Chief must guide a child to safety through a gauntlet of hostile Taliban insurgents and survive the brutal Afghanistan wilderness.
- Directors
- Writers
- Stars
Xander Gòmez
- Lewa 'The Hunter'
- (as Xander Gomez)
Glenn Peña
- 'Big Boy'
- (as Glenn Pena)
- Directors
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
I really enjoyed Warhorse One but it does take a bit of patience. Hollywood action and military movies have conditioned us to expensive sets and dramatic effects. I found this to be a much more one character focused story with set intimate action sequences. Others have commented on the endless ammunition but I found the attention to detail refreshing with malfunction clearing and a more steady approach as opposed to typical action movies. The little girl is fantastic and provides the core emotion and motivation for the movie. The dialogue was a little quiet but I took this as intentional due to the evasion and covert aspect of the story. I thoroughly enjoyed the movie and it was a nice change of pace.
I am going to whine a little bit about the idiots that complain it was filmed in Colorado, what you wanted it filmed in Afghanistan. The main star did everything in this movie but run the food truck. If you gave this a one/ten what will you give Megalodon., the Frenzy. Also low budget but without the acting, any special effects. I also think Warhorse One was entertaining, not an academy award winner by any means, The typical good guy that at least misses his target occasionally and the bad guys that can't hit anything. I don't watch a movie to complain if he shoots to many bullets from one magazine or if the soundtrack is not the best. All I can say about people like that, is I have more important things to be critical of.
In Vietnam the American military establishment consumed an estimated 50,000 rounds of ammunition for every enemy killed.
Back in the days before soldiers sprayed bullets about the field of battle promiscuously (i.e. The Civil War) it took about 60 rounds to "take out" one enemy soldier. The amount of ammunition used in WW2 resulted in 25,000 rounds per casualty. Usually, you go on a combat patrol with around 210 rounds; If you get into a firefight, your ammunition can deplete very quickly.
Yet what we saw in this movie, the frogman, call-sign Warhorse Once wasted his bullets to kill enemies like he had endless supplies of bullets from his logistic arsenal. He usually kept shooting with a salvo of 3 or 4 or even 5 bullets that resulted killing nobody, but when he shot just once, there's a kill. A veteran soldier, alone in the wildness, chased by swarm of enemies should and would never waste his bullets like what we saw in this moronic unrealistic firefights, but he just wasted his bullets so mindlessly generous. It's just made me shake my head non-stop sneering.
Back in the days before soldiers sprayed bullets about the field of battle promiscuously (i.e. The Civil War) it took about 60 rounds to "take out" one enemy soldier. The amount of ammunition used in WW2 resulted in 25,000 rounds per casualty. Usually, you go on a combat patrol with around 210 rounds; If you get into a firefight, your ammunition can deplete very quickly.
Yet what we saw in this movie, the frogman, call-sign Warhorse Once wasted his bullets to kill enemies like he had endless supplies of bullets from his logistic arsenal. He usually kept shooting with a salvo of 3 or 4 or even 5 bullets that resulted killing nobody, but when he shot just once, there's a kill. A veteran soldier, alone in the wildness, chased by swarm of enemies should and would never waste his bullets like what we saw in this moronic unrealistic firefights, but he just wasted his bullets so mindlessly generous. It's just made me shake my head non-stop sneering.
I won't give this a number. It's true that it's unreal that Mirko never runs out of ammunition. I noticed and I didn't care. I think it strange that he seemed to move faster and yet, somehow the "insurgents " always seemed to be right behind him. I'm sure that SEALS are better marksmen. He certainly was mistaken to have trusted the obvious enemy and more so to leave the child behind with him, but the rescue effort had to be set up. No one can cover so much challenging terrain and do it with no food and almost no water. There are many faults in the plot and the reflections when looking skyward were annoying to me. So what! I was entertained and amazed at everything that was conveyed in Zoe's expressions. I don't think that can be coached. It has to be natural talent. True, as 1 professional reviewer pointed out, one who acts with children or animals is sure to be upstaged, and Athena Duren did it without having to have a single word of dialogue. That smile...
I truly can't say that the movie is a great one...
It's a budget movie, and that shows.
The filming locations (although stunning) aren't really convincing of (how I picture) Afghanistan's nature.
Not always very convincing special effects...
But I've got to hand it to Johnny Strong (Mirko), he was not only co-writer/co-director/co-main character, but he also was Head of Post Production, Editor and Color, Original score & music, Head of sound design, Lead VFX Design, Makeup and special effects makeup, Camera operator, Stunt Coordinator, Props, Head of Lighting, Miniatures and Miniature SFX all designed, build, and filmed by Johnny Strong.
So he had a lot of tasks to do in this movie, and I don't know if that's always a good thing, but he gets some kudos for that!
The main reason it got a 6 from me is: ''Zoe'' aka Athena Durner.
She acted in a very convincing way, she put down a great character!
She did a great job in making the film a lot more watchable!
I think a new star is born here!!
The filming locations (although stunning) aren't really convincing of (how I picture) Afghanistan's nature.
Not always very convincing special effects...
But I've got to hand it to Johnny Strong (Mirko), he was not only co-writer/co-director/co-main character, but he also was Head of Post Production, Editor and Color, Original score & music, Head of sound design, Lead VFX Design, Makeup and special effects makeup, Camera operator, Stunt Coordinator, Props, Head of Lighting, Miniatures and Miniature SFX all designed, build, and filmed by Johnny Strong.
So he had a lot of tasks to do in this movie, and I don't know if that's always a good thing, but he gets some kudos for that!
The main reason it got a 6 from me is: ''Zoe'' aka Athena Durner.
She acted in a very convincing way, she put down a great character!
She did a great job in making the film a lot more watchable!
I think a new star is born here!!
Did you know
- TriviaAs well as acting in the film Johnny Strong (amongst other things) also wrote & directed it.
- GoofsBefore diving from a cliff into the river, the Master Chief Navy Seal flings his backpack down into the river. The river has tremendous rapid currents that he manages to negotiate for quite a distance. After reaching a calm section of the river and climbing out, he notices his backpack just a few feet away. The probability of a backpack managing on its own to float down a raging river for a long distance and end up at the same spot he does is near zero.
- How long is Warhorse One?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official sites
- Language
- Also known as
- Opération Warhorse
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross worldwide
- $1,001
- Runtime2 hours 6 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content