The Outlaw Josey Wales: Difference between revisions
The Outlaw Josey Wales: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
The Outlaw Josey Wales: Difference between revisions
[[Image:WalesColtWalkers.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Josey Wales famously poses with his Colt Walker 1847s.]]
[[Image:WalesColtWalkers.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Josey Wales famously poses with his Colt Walker 1847s.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Josey Wales presents his two Colt Walker 1847s butts forward when two bounty chasers hold him up in the trading shop.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Josey Wales presents his two Colt Walker 1847s butts forward when two bounty chasers hold him up in the trading shop.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Unfortunately for them, Wales knows his gun tricks and reverses the guns with lightning speed (too fast to grab a clear picture, infact). This trick is actually quite simple to accomplish if you know how to do it.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Unfortunately for them, Wales knows his gun tricks and reverses the guns with lightning speed (too fast to grab a clear picture, in fact). This trick is known as the "Road Agent's Spin" and is actually quite simple to accomplish if you know how to do it.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Wales draws his Colt Walker in his left hand and a Colt 1860 Army in his right to kill the Union soldiers in the town.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-3.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Wales draws his Colt Walker in his left hand and a Colt 1860 Army in his right to kill the Union soldiers in the town.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Wales aims his Colt Walker at a group of thugs as they attempt to rape Laura Lee ([[Sondra Locke]]), only holding his fire when their leader forces them to stop their attack.]]
[[Image:TOJWColtWalker-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Wales aims his Colt Walker at a group of thugs as they attempt to rape Laura Lee ([[Sondra Locke]]), only holding his fire when their leader forces them to stop their attack.]]
Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood) carries two Colt Walker 1847 revolvers in twin holsters as his primary sidearms, although he carries four pistols in total. While not supposed to be known by the audience, the guns are converted to fire metallic cartridges instead of firing percussion cap and ball, since this it is safer to use blanks than firing blackpowder blank shot. While some of the guns are anachronistically seen with conventional metallic conversion kits with ejector rods and loading gates, these guns lack these features to try to hide its conversion. In some scenes though, the guns are non-firing models which do have percussion nipples so the audience can be tricked into thinking the guns are a percussion only. The famous image in which Wales poses with his Colt Walkers is a good example.
In the film, there are multiple variants of the Colt 1860 Army revolver (despite the fact there was only one available during the Civil War, since cartridge conversions didn't exist at the time), including:
Standard
The most common version of the Colt Army in the film is the standard version without an obvious conversion such as a Richards-Mason. Even so, almost all of them have a hidden cartridge conversion since it is safer to shoot metallic blank catridges than black powder blank shot.
When Wales' family is first murdered by the Red Legs, he retrieves a gun from the ashes of his house, which is a Colt Army with a cartridge conversion and a loading gate only. Due to quick camera cuts, it appears he fires far more than six shots at a time.
Lone Watie (Chief Dan George) sneaks up on Wales and holds a Colt Army with a Richards Conversion (has a rear sight added to the breech ring instead of the rear sight on the hammer, has a frame-mounted firing pin, and a hammer modified to strike this firing pin. Also had ejector rod and loading gate) on him, boasting that only an Indian can sneak up on someone. Wales agrees and in a second, Watie has a gun to his head from Little Moonlight (Geraldine Keams).
Union "Red Leg" leader Captain Terrill (Bill McKinney) carries a Colt 1851 Navy with a brass frame as his sidearm, and is noteably seen using it during the slaughter of the Confederate soldiers. It is not a Griswold and Gunnison 1860 as a previous user claimed, as it has an octagonal barrel, not a round barrel like an G&G.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingColt 1851 Navy - .36 caliber.Error creating thumbnail: File missingTerrill fires his Colt 1851 Navy at the cart Wales was firing the Gatling Gun in. He fires four shots before charging the cart and when he sticks the gun in, you cans see all six lead balls loaded in the chambers.
Sharps 1863 Cavalary Carbine
The Union soldiers are seen armed with Sharps 1863 Cavalary Carbines in the film.
Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood) carries a Sharps 1865 rifle fitted with a full length J. Stevens brass tube target scope, which he uses to shoot the ferry rope in two, leaving the pursuing Redlegs stranded in the water. He later uses it to tie a white flag to when approaching the Commancheros before using it to shoot one of them off their horse.
Another anachronistic firearm in the film, Trapdoor Springfield 1873 rifles are used by Abe (Len Lesser) and Lige (Doug McGrath) when they attempt to capture Josey Wales (Clint Eastwood) by the river side. Later in the film, several are used by Wales' allies in the house to shoot at the Red Legs outside.
Union troops use two Colt 1872 Gatling Guns to mow down Josey Wales' (Clint Eastwood) comrades after they surrender, despite being an anachronistic firearm. Wales kills the gunner and loader in one of the gun carts and uses it to mow down Union troops and destroy the other gun. One of these guns was recently sold for a price of roughly $30,000 in a gun auction, in which they listed the gun as a Colt 1872 in .45-70 caliber.