The Nest (Nid de guêpes): Difference between revisions
The Nest (Nid de guêpes): Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
The Nest (Nid de guêpes): Difference between revisions
[[Image:Guepesaug1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Winfried fires his AUG through the firing ports in the APC using an external camera and monitor.]]
[[Image:Guepesaug1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Winfried fires his AUG through the firing ports in the APC using an external camera and monitor.]]
[[Image:Guepesaug2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Winfried scouts for attackers with his AUG while wearing his ballistic mask]]
[[Image:Guepesaug2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Winfried scouts for attackers with his AUG while wearing his ballistic mask]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nest (Nid de guêpes), The}}
[[Category:Movie]]
[[Category:Movie]]
[[Category:Crime]]
[[Category:Crime]]
[[Category:French Produced/Filmed]]
[[Category:French Produced/Filmed]]
Latest revision as of 20:10, 29 July 2023
The Nest (2002) American Release poster - title originally Nid de guêpesNid de guêpes (2002) aka The Nest - original French poster
The Nest (original title Nid de guêpes) is a 2002 French action movie directed by Florent-Emilio Siri. It was loosely inspired by the 1976 American thriller Assault on Precinct 13.
The following weapons were used in the film The Nest (Nid de guêpes):
Laborie (Nadia Farès) keeps a Vektor CP1 as a sidearm. Laborie later hands out another one of these to Selim (Sami Bouajila), which he uses to free the prisoner.
A Gaucher magazine-fed bolt-action rifle with a wooden stock is used by Louis (Pascal Greggory), the security guard. He loaded it with 12mm shotgun shells contrary to the real .22 LR caliber.
The FAMAS is first seen in the hands of French soldiers, later recognized as the main weapon of French commando soldier Helene Laborie (Nadia Farès). French soldiers use the F1 version but Laborie uses the G1 version.
The SIG SG 552 is first seen in the hands of Giovanni (Valerio Mastandrea), the Italian commando. Later SG 552s are seen in use by both French policemen and the Albanian gangsters.