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Difference between revisions of "The Keep"

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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== Karabiner 98k  ==
 
== Karabiner 98k  ==
The Wehrmacht soldiers use [[Karabiner 98k]] rifles. Although the Einsatzkommando mostly use submachine guns, a few are seen with Karabiners.
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The Wehrmacht soldiers use [[Karabiner 98k]] rifles. Although the Einsatzkommando mostly use submachine guns, a few are seen with Karabiners. They're also seen used by the Romanian Iron Guard soldiers at the border.
 
[[Image:Karabiner-98K.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Karabiner 98k - German manufacture 1937 date - 7.92x57mm Mauser]]
 
[[Image:Karabiner-98K.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Karabiner 98k - German manufacture 1937 date - 7.92x57mm Mauser]]
 
[[Image:thekeep11.jpg|thumb|none|500px|The Einsatzkommando in the foreground holds a [[Karabiner 98k]] as the SS arrest Glaeken Trismegestus ([[Scott Glenn]]).]]
 
[[Image:thekeep11.jpg|thumb|none|500px|The Einsatzkommando in the foreground holds a [[Karabiner 98k]] as the SS arrest Glaeken Trismegestus ([[Scott Glenn]]).]]

Revision as of 00:42, 14 February 2014

The Keep (1983)

The Keep is a 1983 horror film that was the second feature directed by Michael Mann (his first being the James Caan thriller Thief). Only later would Mann become well known to the American public through his hit television series Miami Vice which ran from 1984-1990. During the 1980s, Mann became famous for his fondness for catchy pop music and synth scores as well as hip and flashy (for the time) cinematography. His fondness for unconventional cinematography shows its inception in this film and would later explode into the neon colors of Miami Vice and his third feature film Manhunter. It has gained something of a cult film status and many consider it a camp classic. One of the details which drew attention from film buffs was its accurate (for the time) portrayal of the weapons and equipment of the SS and Heer units in 1940. Despite the glaring anachronism that the SS Allgemeine (the only SS division authorized to wear the iconic Black uniform with party armband) never operated outside the borders of Germany (this film takes place in the Carpathian Mountains in Romania), the uniforms, backpacks, equipment and gear of the SS and the Heer Soldiers showed a surprising attention to detail. Most World War II films up to that time had little accuracy when costuming any German forces.

The following firearms are used in the 1983 film The Keep:



MP38

Captain Klaus Woermann (Jürgen Prochnow) carries an MP38. A few of his men do, too.

MP38 Submachine gun - 9x19mm
Woermann reflexively aims his MP38 at the Keep's caretakers when they startle him.

MP28/II

The Einsatzkommando commanded by Major Kaempffer (Gabriel Byrne) mostly use Haenel-Schmeisser MP28/II submachine guns.

Haenel-Schmeisser MP28/II Submachine Gun - 9mm
The Einsatzkommando, including the adjutant (Wolf Kahler), with their Haenel-Schmeisser MP28/II submachine guns.

Walther PPK

SS Major Erich Kaempffer (Gabriel Byrne) carries what looks like a Walther PPK as his sidearm.

Early Nazi PPK - 7.65x17mm Auto (.32 ACP)
Kaempffer with his Walther PPK

Karabiner 98k

The Wehrmacht soldiers use Karabiner 98k rifles. Although the Einsatzkommando mostly use submachine guns, a few are seen with Karabiners. They're also seen used by the Romanian Iron Guard soldiers at the border.

Karabiner 98k - German manufacture 1937 date - 7.92x57mm Mauser
The Einsatzkommando in the foreground holds a Karabiner 98k as the SS arrest Glaeken Trismegestus (Scott Glenn).

MG34

The MG34 is used by German sentries at the entrance to the Keep.

MG34 7.92x57mm Mauser with front and rear sights folded down.
A sentry rests next to his MG34.

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