Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle are developing a new war film for Netflix based on the memoir of a British officer who served in Afghanistan.
The project, titled “No Way Out: A Gripping True Story of Men Under Siege,” tells the story of a British military unit assigned to hold a district in Afghanistan’s Helmand province in July 2006 before coming under Taliban attack.
The film is based on the memoir of Major Adam Jowitt, who commanded the British unit during the mission in Helmand.
Before leaving the military, Prince Harry served for ten years in the British Army and completed two deployments in Afghanistan.
He first traveled to Helmand in late 2007 for a ten-week mission, serving as a battlefield air controller.
That deployment ended earlier than planned after news of his presence was leaked online.
Harry later completed Apache helicopter pilot training and returned to Afghanistan in 2012 for another twenty-week deployment.
Kensington Palace officially announced the end of Harry’s military service in 2015.
Last year, Harry and Meghan Markle signed a new agreement with Netflix giving the streaming company first-look rights to media projects produced by their company, Archewell.
Analysts say Prince Harry’s return to Afghanistan-related storytelling could renew attention to Britain’s role in the war and the experiences of Western soldiers during the conflict.
Experts also note that many Western war films about Afghanistan focus heavily on military survival, combat experiences, and battlefield narratives while often giving less attention to the experiences of Afghan civilians affected by the war.
According to observers, Harry’s direct military involvement in Afghanistan adds a personal dimension to the project, turning the film into both a commercial production and a reflection of his own wartime legacy.



















