Midnight Heat: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Midnight Heat: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{unidentified}} {{Infobox Movie |name = Midnight Heat |picture = Midnight Heat DVD.jpg |caption = ''DVD Cover'' |country = 25px USA |director = Allan A. Gol...")
[[File:Midnight Heat-Shotgun-7.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A guard fires his shotgun. Note the rifle sights.]]
[[File:Midnight Heat-Shotgun-7.jpg|thumb|none|500px|A guard fires his shotgun. Note the rifle sights.]]
== Unidentified pistol grip shotgun ==
== Smith & Wesson 3000 ==
Payne's henchman holds a pump action shotgun with pistol grip during the attack on prison bus. One of the prison guards also carries a shotgun that is taken from him by Scar ([[Jeremy Roberts]]). Later Scar and other henchmen use same looking shotguns.
Payne's henchman holds a [[Smith & Wesson 3000]] pump action shotgun with pistol grip during the attack on prison bus. One of the prison guards also carries a shotgun that is taken from him by Scar ([[Jeremy Roberts]]). Later Scar and other henchmen use same looking shotguns.
[[Image:S&WModel3000wfoldingStock.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Smith & Wesson 3000 shotgun with black synthetic furniture and folding stock (folded) - 12 Gauge]]
Midnight Heat (alternative title Blackout) is a 1996 made for TV action thriller directed by Allan A. Goldstein and starring Brian Bosworth as a banker John Gray who suffers of amnesia after a car accident. He has strange flashbacks that reveal him as a person with criminal past.
The following weapons were used in the film Midnight Heat:
During the attack on prison bus Payne (Brad Dourif) draws a Taurus Model 689 revolver and hands it to one prisoner, then to another one. At last the revolver is hold by Scar (Jeremy Roberts).
Wayne Garret (Brian Bosworth) uses a Beretta 92FS Inox throughout the movie. Payne (Brad Dourif) carries Beretta 92FS Inox in several scenes. Beretta pistols are also seen in flashback scenes in hands of bank robbers, including Garret, Payne and Payne's second-in-command Scar (Jeremy Roberts).
A Desert Eagle Mark VII is seen in hands of Payne's henchmen during the attack on prison bus. In the final scene Scar (Jeremy Roberts) carries a Desert Eagle.
Colt MK IV Series 80
In the scene when Payne purchases a helicopter, a mechanic (James Gordon MacDonald) carries an M1911-style pistol in a pocket, possibly a Colt MK IV Series 80 as it has a flat mainspring housing and a bright logo on a wooden grip.
Unidentified pistol
In one scene Payne (Brad Dourif) wields an unidentified pistol together with his Beretta 92FS Inox. It is seen very brifely but possibly it's just another Beretta, fitted with a sound suppressor.
Submachine Guns
Cobray M11/9
Cobray M11/9 SMGs are used by Payne's henchmen in several scenes.
Shotguns
Ithaca 37
What appears to be an Ithaca 37 is used by a security guard in a flashback scene.
Smith & Wesson 3000
Payne's henchman holds a Smith & Wesson 3000 pump action shotgun with pistol grip during the attack on prison bus. One of the prison guards also carries a shotgun that is taken from him by Scar (Jeremy Roberts). Later Scar and other henchmen use same looking shotguns.
Rifles and Assault Rifles
Ruger Mini-14
A stainless steel Ruger Mini-14 with folding stock and sniper scope is used by Payne's henchman during the attack on prison bus.
Ruger Mini-14 in Muzzelite MZ14 Bullpup Stock
In the final scene several of Payne's henchmen carry Muzzelite MZ14 Bullpup version of Ruger Mini-14 rifles. Wayne Garret (Brian Bosworth) disarms a henchman (Jim Cody Williams) and uses the rifle. The rifles (most likely it's a single movie prop) are fitted with barrel shrouds and night vision devices.
M16A2
An M16A2 (most likely a semi auto version, like Colt Government Model HBAR) is used by Payne (Brad Dourif) when he chases Garret on helicopter. An M16, possibly the same movie prop, is seen in hands of a henchman in one scene.