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Difference between revisions of "Talk:Sahara (2005)"

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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-Double Agent M
 
-Double Agent M
 
::It's SEAMLESSLY
 
::It's SEAMLESSLY
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Any of you notice the major error by MoviePropMaster2008 on the revolver used by Kazim to kill Hopper? He states it was a S&W .44 that belonged to a General Sir Henry Watkins/Watkis (the accent the actor uses makes it hard to tell). An S&W .44 would have been used by a US General perhaps, but no US General would have been knighted, so MoviePropMaster2008 didn't do his research properly. General Sir Henry Watkis (1860-1931) was a General in the Indian Army (under British Colonial Rule) and would have had the standard British Military issue revolver, a Webley Revolver, which in some of it's variations look virtually identical to Kazim's revolver, which takes the exact calibre round Kazim states his revolver takes, .455 (also known as a Webley Round). Hopefully this little bit of proper research by a gun novice highlights that just because you think you know something, you might want to thouroughly check your facts before publishing things!
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-Taliesin79
  
 
==UMP-9==
 
==UMP-9==

Revision as of 09:29, 11 October 2016

Walther

It is very unrealistic that he would have found a Walther PPK from a Malian soldier, and in reality it would probably have either been a Makarov PM or a PSM. I have heard other people say that the gun is a Makarov PM, but it doesn't look at all like it. As A PSM is Russian made, he could have gotten one in Mali, but look how he ejects the clip. The magazine release is on the side of the grip, while on the PSM it's on the butt. This pretty much proves that it's a PPK.--User: Colt Revolver Fan. Looks more like a Walther PP fullsize to me. I went frame-by-frame a while ago and the slide looked a bit too long for it to be a PPK. - Cyber 14

Magazine. - Gunmaster45

I've read that the Walther PP was actually issued to Mali Soldiers according to a citation from "Janes Infantry Weapons" --AdAstra2009 02:51, 10 November 2010 (UTC)

Kazims gun collection

Baby Browning?

--AdAstra2009 23:36, 19 December 2009 (UTC)

Anyone else think the gun handling is very well-done? Not only do Al Giordino and everyone else re-load often, but when Al firt picks up the AK, he checks the magazine and chamber before firing. Of course, there was the whole anti-helecopter cannon scene but still.--Mandolin 01:59, 14 July 2010 (UTC)

I agree, the gun handling in the movie is exceptional. One bit that immediatly comes to mind is the shootout at the well in which Steve Zahn flips his rifle from his right to left hand in order to maximise the over at hand. And he does it seemlessly. -Double Agent M

It's SEAMLESSLY

Any of you notice the major error by MoviePropMaster2008 on the revolver used by Kazim to kill Hopper? He states it was a S&W .44 that belonged to a General Sir Henry Watkins/Watkis (the accent the actor uses makes it hard to tell). An S&W .44 would have been used by a US General perhaps, but no US General would have been knighted, so MoviePropMaster2008 didn't do his research properly. General Sir Henry Watkis (1860-1931) was a General in the Indian Army (under British Colonial Rule) and would have had the standard British Military issue revolver, a Webley Revolver, which in some of it's variations look virtually identical to Kazim's revolver, which takes the exact calibre round Kazim states his revolver takes, .455 (also known as a Webley Round). Hopefully this little bit of proper research by a gun novice highlights that just because you think you know something, you might want to thouroughly check your facts before publishing things! -Taliesin79

UMP-9

I was watching the movie today, and it appears that one of Massarde's guards (the one patrolling the tunnel to the waste dump) carries a UMP-9 in some shots, in a possible continuity error as it looked like he was carrying a G36 in other shots. -- K 98.118.59.151 20:12, 26 December 2010 (UTC)

AK47 in Sahara (2005)

The AK47 rifle that Al Giordino uses in the desert battle looks similar to a WASR-3, but I believe it to actually be a Hungarian NGM-81 in 5.56mm NATO.

[image:http://i25.photobucket.com/albums/c55/ChrisV196/ARF%20junk/fegngm812.jpg]


The "blonde" style furniture is much closer in appearance to Hungarian stocks than Romanian. Its generally grainless and yellow in color. Also, Hungarian AKs have a distinctive flair at the bottom back of the grip which is sometimes visible in the movie.


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