Fiery Roads (Ognennye dorogi) - Film 3: Difference between revisions
Fiery Roads (Ognennye dorogi) - Film 3: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Fiery Roads (Ognennye dorogi) - Film 3: Difference between revisions
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 16:
Line 16:
|actor2=[[Igor Dmitriev]]
|actor2=[[Igor Dmitriev]]
|character3=Ibn-Yamin
|character3=Ibn-Yamin
|actor3=Nabi Rakhimov
|actor3=[[Nabi Rakhimov]]
|character4=Sadiqjan-bai
|character4=Sadiqjan-bai
|actor4=[[Bimbolat Vatayev]]
|actor4=[[Bimbolat Vatayev]]
Line 102:
Line 102:
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-6.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A closer view of Lee-Enfield.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-6.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A closer view of Lee-Enfield.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-7.jpg|thumb|none|500px|The barrel of Lee-Enfield is seen at the right.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-7.jpg|thumb|none|500px|The barrel of Lee-Enfield is seen at the right.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-8.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Lee-Enfield is seen on the foreground.]]
[[File:Lee Enfield CMLE.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Lee-Enfield Mk.I* CLLE (Charger Loading Lee Enfield) - .303 British. Note this rifle is a modified version of the original Magazine Lee-Enfield rifle Mk.I as opposed to the later Short Magazine Lee-Enfield.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-10.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Lee-Enfield is seen at the right.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-8.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Lee-Enfield is seen on the foreground. The shape of the front sight resembles Mk.I* rather than original Mk.I, seen above. The barrel band looks too large but it can be a non-standard piece, added during a repair.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-10.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Same rifle is seen at the right.]]
== M1917 Enfield ==
== Enfield Pattern 14 ==
[[M1917 Enfield]] (or a mix of M1917s and British P14s) rifles are also seen in hands of British soldiers and Ottoman policemen in Ep.9 (these scenes are set in 1910s, before the appearance of this rifle).
[[Enfield Pattern 14]] (or a mix of P14s and [[M1917 Enfield]]s) rifles are also seen in hands of British soldiers and Ottoman policemen in Ep.9 (these scenes are set in 1910s, before the appearance of this rifle).
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-2.jpg|thumb|none|500px|The barrel of Enfield is seen at the right.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-2.jpg|thumb|none|500px|The barrel of Enfield is seen at the right.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-4.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A soldier at the left carries a [[Karabiner 98k]], while two soldiers at the right are armed with [[Lee-Enfield|Lee-Enfield Mk I]] and M1917 Enfield.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-4.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A soldier at the left carries a [[Karabiner 98k]], while two soldiers at the right are armed with [[Lee-Enfield|Lee-Enfield Mk I]] and Enfield P14.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-11.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A soldier at the right carries an M1917 Enfield.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-11.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A soldier at the right carries an Enfield rifle.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-12.jpg|thumb|none|500px|M1917 Enfield is seen.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-12.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Enfield rifle is seen.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-13.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A British soldier carries M1917 Enfield.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-13.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A British soldier carries an Enfield rifle.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-18.jpg|thumb|none|500px|An Ottomnan policeman (Mayak Kerimov) with M1917 Enfield rifles.]]
[[File:Ognennye dorogi-E9-Rifle-18.jpg|thumb|none|500px|An Ottomnan policeman (Mayak Kerimov) with an Enfield rifle.]]
== Karabiner 98k ==
== Karabiner 98k ==
Line 131:
Line 132:
== Artillery ==
== Artillery ==
In Ep.9 British troops in India use a field gun for execution of local rebels, like it was during the Great Indian Rebellion of 1857. The gun itself looks more like a mockup, made of parts of real guns as well as metall tubes.
In Ep.9 British troops in India use a field gun for execution of local rebels, like it was during the Great Indian Rebellion of 1857. The gun itself looks more like a mockup, made of parts of real guns as well as metall tubes. Same looking props are seen in ''[[It_Was_in_Kokand_(Eto_bylo_v_Kokande)#Artillery|It Was in Kokand (Eto bylo v Kokande)]]'', also filmed by Uzbekfilm.
Singer of the Revolution (Pevets revolutsii, Uzbek title Inqilob kuychisi) is the third film of Soviet Uzbek TV series Fiery Roads (Ognennye dorogi) (filmed in 1982, released in 1983). It depicts the wanderings of Hamza Hakimzade Niyazi in Central Asia, Ottoman Empire and British India in 1910s, and his participation in Russian revolution 1917.
Nagant M1895 revolvers are seen in hands of several Kokand townspersons, and by government officers as well as revolutionaries. Both pre- and post-1930 versions are seen.
Pistols
TT-33
When Hamza visits Syria (at that time a part of Ottoman Empire) in Ep.9, an anachronistic TT-33 is carried by an Ottoman policeman. Probably it stands for similar looking FN Model 1903 that was issued to Ottoman police (8,000 ordered in 1908-1914).
Colt M1911A1
When Hamza visits British India in Ep.9, British Capt. Richardson (Timofey Spivak) carries an anachronistic M1911A1 pistol.
Rifles
Mosin Nagant M1891/30
Mosin Nagant M1891/30 rifles, standing for original M91s, are used by Russian police in Kokand and Odessa. In Ep.12 during the revolutionary events of 1917 M91/30 rifles are used by Bolsheviks and government soldiers.
Lee-Enfield Mk.I
In the scene of Hamza's wanderings in British India in Ep.9, British soldiers carry Lee-Enfield Mk.I rifles.
Enfield Pattern 14
Enfield Pattern 14 (or a mix of P14s and M1917 Enfields) rifles are also seen in hands of British soldiers and Ottoman policemen in Ep.9 (these scenes are set in 1910s, before the appearance of this rifle).
Karabiner 98k
Anachronistic Karabiner 98k rifles are also seen in hands of British soldiers in Ep.9.
Trivia
Holsters
Artillery
In Ep.9 British troops in India use a field gun for execution of local rebels, like it was during the Great Indian Rebellion of 1857. The gun itself looks more like a mockup, made of parts of real guns as well as metall tubes. Same looking props are seen in It Was in Kokand (Eto bylo v Kokande), also filmed by Uzbekfilm.