Bulletproof (1988): Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Bulletproof (1988): Difference between revisions
[[Image:BP88_SW10_01.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Billy tries to fire at the ice cream truck. McBain probably wouldn't appreciate a gun going off right next to his face.]]
[[Image:BP88_SW10_01.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Billy tries to fire at the ice cream truck. McBain probably wouldn't appreciate a gun going off right next to his face.]]
==Beretta 92SB==
==Beretta 92SB-C==
Tarpley ([[James Andronica]]) and Blackburn ([[R.G. Armstrong]]) are seen armed with [[Beretta 92SB]] pistols.
Tarpley ([[James Andronica]]) and Blackburn ([[R.G. Armstrong]]) are seen armed with [[Beretta 92SB-C]] pistols.
[[Image:BerettaM92SB.jpg|thumb|300px|none|Beretta Model 92SB - 9x19mm (note rounded trigger guard and flat bottom magazine).]]
[[Image:BerettaM92SB.jpg|thumb|300px|none|Beretta Model 92SB - 9x19mm]]
[[Image:BP88_92SB_01.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Tarpley and Blackburn draw their pistols after McBain puts a bullet through his own door.]]
[[Image:BP88_92SB_01.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Tarpley and Blackburn draw their pistols after McBain puts a bullet through his own door. The stubby appearance of the slide proves this to be a 92SB-C.]]
[[Image:BP88_92SB_02.jpg|thumb|none|500px|]]
[[Image:BP88_92SB_02.jpg|thumb|none|500px|Tarpley holds his 92SB-C. Note how the barrel does not protrude from the slide, further suggesting that this is a 92SB-C.]]
McBain also uses a stainless M1911A1 throughout the film. Captain Devon Shepard (Darlanne Fluegel) tries to draw one during the ambush, but is dissuaded by CSM O'Rourke.
Colt Python
McBain has a Colt Python, but is never seen using it. Montoya (Don Pike) is seen using it during the ice cream truck chase.
In a continuity error, the High Standard Model 10B morphs into a half assembled AR-15 with A1 handguards. This might be because the scene involved McBain beating up two guards with the weapon and they did not want to risk damage to the Model 10B.
Faux T-72 and ZSU-23-4
This film reuses the faux T-72 and ZSU-23-4 from Red Dawn.
M75 APC
This film also has a vintage M75 APC. The M75 was first fielded during the Korean War.
BRDM-2
This film also has what appears to be a real BRDM-2.
"Faux" Mil Mi-24P "Hind-F" Gunship
What is referred to in the film as an "Mi-24 Hind" helicopter is in reality a visually modified Sikorsky S-62, which has been fitted with wings, faux rocket pods and missiles, and a fake (and apparently non-functional) side-mounted cannon near the nose which is presumably supposed to be a Gryazev-Shipunov GSh-30-2K (making it a Hind-F variant), making the aircraft superficially resemble the famous Russian attack helicopter. The same modified helicopter was used to represent the Hind-F in several other films from the period, including Braddock: Missing in Action III from the same year and (with slightly more convincing modifications) 1989's Red Scorpion.
"MBT-90 Thunderblast"
America's newest tank, with armor "thick enough to survive anything from a Stinger to a ten-foot SAM" (which doesn't really say much; anti-aircraft missiles generally have almost no armor-piercing capabilities and would be no match for even modest tank armor). As the production rented vehicles from the same one from Red Dawn, this is likely the same modified tank chassis used for the Abrams in that film.
The vehicle features additional parts including a secondary AA turret based on that of the German Flakpanzer Gepard self-propelled AA gun (albeit with shorter guns which appear to be rotary), and bulky additions to the main gun based on the outline of the ARES 75mm gun of the High Survivability Test Vehicle (Lightweight) (HSTV-L) tank prototype from the early eighties. As with the "Brawl" tank in Transformers, this appears to have unbalanced the fake main turret, to the point the main gun is fitted with a fixed "travel lock" whenever the vehicle is shown moving, presumably to stop it from falling off the vehicle.