Farewell (Proshchay): Difference between revisions
Farewell (Proshchay): Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Farewell (Proshchay): Difference between revisions
Twin (over and under) 25-mm AA automatic guns 2M-3M with two 110-PM autocannons are mounted on Project 183 torpedo boats. In reality these guns appeared only in 1950s.
Twin (over and under) 25-mm AA automatic guns 2M-3M with two 110-PM autocannons are mounted on Project 183 torpedo boats. In reality these guns appeared only in 1950s.
[[File:25mm 2M-3M.jpg|thumb|none|400px|25mm 2M-3M naval mounting with two 110-PM autocannons in museum exposition]]
[[File:Proshchay-2M3M-1.jpg|thumb|none|500px|]]
[[File:Proshchay-2M3M-1.jpg|thumb|none|500px|]]
[[File:Proshchay-2M3M-2.jpg|thumb|none|500px|2M-3M mountings on two Project 183 torpedo boats are seen at the background.]]
[[File:Proshchay-2M3M-2.jpg|thumb|none|500px|2M-3M mountings on two Project 183 torpedo boats are seen at the background.]]
Farewell (Proshchay) is a Soviet 1967 (filmed 1966) B&W war movie directed by Grigori Pozhenyan. In Spring 1944 a unit of Soviet torpedo boats of Black Sea fleet gets a mission to intercept German sail schooner Lola that is used for secret operations.
The following weapons were used in the film Farewell (Proshchay):
KPV heavy machine guns in 2M-5 twin mountings are mounted on Soviet Project 123-K torpedo boats. These torpedo boats are of post-war model; wartime torpedo boats were armed with DShK machine guns.
Twin (over and under) 25-mm AA automatic guns 2M-3M with two 110-PM autocannons are mounted on Project 183 torpedo boats. In reality these guns appeared only in 1950s.
Stroyev (Vladimir Akimov) shoots a pellet gun in the shooting gallery. It appears to be a German pre-war Diana Model 25 or its Soviet produced under license copy Izhmash PSR.
An abandoned 2.8 cm sPzB 41, light anti-tank gun with squeeze bore, is seen in recently liberated town of Yalta. Possibly same prop (this is a really rare gun) was used in Port, filmed by same studio a decade later.