Double Impact: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Double Impact: Difference between revisions
A [[Desert Eagle]] MK VII fitted with a cumbersome 1980s laser sight mounted on top is held by a Triad in the drug factory shootout. Judging by the size of the bore, it was most likely a .357 Magnum version (being the most popular version in movies released in the early 1990s).
A [[Desert Eagle]] MK VII fitted with a Laser Aim LA 1000 laser sight mounted on top is held by a Triad in the drug factory shootout. Judging by the size of the bore, it was most likely a .357 Magnum version (being the most popular version in movies released in the early 1990s).
[[Image:DesertEagle357Black.jpg|thumb|350px|none|Desert Eagle MK VII - .357 Magnum. This is the most commonly seen Desert Eagle pistol in films before 1999.]]
[[Image:DesertEagle357Black.jpg|thumb|350px|none|Desert Eagle MK VII - .357 Magnum. This is the most commonly seen Desert Eagle pistol in films before 1999.]]
[[Image:DIDE02.jpg|thumb|600px|none|The Triad pulls his [[Desert Eagle]] MK VII fitted with a cumbersome 1980s laser sight on Chad.]]
[[Image:DIDE02.jpg|thumb|600px|none|The Triad pulls his [[Desert Eagle]] MK VII fitted with a Laser Aim LA 1000 laser sight on Chad.]]
[[Image:DIeagle.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Triad holding the Desert Eagle (for what seems to be an inordinate amount of time) fitted with the laser sight.]]
[[Image:DIeagle.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Triad holding the Desert Eagle (for what seems to be an inordinate amount of time) fitted with the laser sight.]]
[[Image:DIDE01.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Look at the size of the bore. Very small considering the actor isn't a big man either.]]
[[Image:DIDE01.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Look at the size of the bore. Very small considering the actor isn't a big man either.]]
Double Impact is a 1991 action film that focuses on a pair of twins who are raised in separate countries and environments after their parents are killed in an ambush. Reunited in Hong Kong, the twins join forces to take down the man responsible for their parents' deaths and stealing their rightful inheritance. Jean-Claude Van Damme portrays both Chad, a French-raised karate instructor fond of short-shorts and the color pink, and Alex, a low level crook raised in Hong Kong and fond of cigars and leather jackets.
The following weapons were used in the film Double Impact:
Alex Wagner (Jean-Claude Van Damme) uses a Beretta 92FS during the raid on the warehouse, chambering it upside down after a dive roll into combat. He later draws his second Beretta and dual-wields them for the duration of the warehouse shootout.
A Desert Eagle MK VII fitted with a Laser Aim LA 1000 laser sight mounted on top is held by a Triad in the drug factory shootout. Judging by the size of the bore, it was most likely a .357 Magnum version (being the most popular version in movies released in the early 1990s).
A Colt M1911A1 is used by Alex in the abandoned hotel room. Chad claims it will not work, and Alex responds by firing it in excess of ten times into a window.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingOlder version Smith & Wesson Model 60 Ladysmith - .38 Special.Error creating thumbnail: File missingAlex has a Smith & Wesson Model 60 put to his cheek. Some may ask, how is the trigger back that far and a round not have gone off? Note that the hammer is cocked, and the revolver is now in single-action mode. Therefore, the trigger SHOULD be that far back, and NOT a movie mistake.
Walther P38
A Walther P38 is used by one of the Triad members in the opening shootout.
Heckler & Koch MP5A3s are seen in the hands of Triad members at the drug warehouse, and are also used by Chad during the raid. It is fitted with a telescoping stock, and a slimline forearm. Interesting to note that the sound used to dub the MP5 gunshots is switched with the Uzi halfway through the film.
An M16A1 is used by Triad gangsters during the beach hotel attack, some with Vietnamese style short magazines. One is recovered and used by Chad. Distinguishable as an A1 due to the triangular foregrip and old-style pistol grip.