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The Hunted (1995): Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Swvctryr.jpg|thumb|400px|none|Smith & Wesson Military And Police - .38 Special.]] | [[Image:Swvctryr.jpg|thumb|400px|none|Smith & Wesson Military And Police - .38 Special.]] | ||
[[Image:Hunted95_SW10_01.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The cops draw their revolvers.]] | [[Image:Hunted95_SW10_01.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The cops draw their revolvers.]] | ||
[[Image:Hunted95_SW10_02.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | [[Image:Hunted95_SW10_02.jpg|thumb|none|600px|An officer ([[Warren Takeuchi]]) with his Smith & Wesson drawn.]] | ||
==Replica revolver== | ==Replica revolver== |
Revision as of 16:44, 16 January 2015
The Hunted is a 1995 martial arts film written and directed by J.F. Lawton (who wrote Under Siege and created V.I.P.) starring Christopher Lambert and John Lone. Lambert plays Paul Racine, an American salesman who's in the wrong place at the wrong time and witnesses a murder, placing him in the middle of a centuries-old feud between ninjas and samurai. Not to be confused with the similarly-named 2003 film starring Tommy Lee Jones and Benicio del Toro.
The following weapons were used in the film The Hunted (1995):
Miroku Liberty Chief
A dying Lt. Wadakura (Masumi Okada) hands Paul Racine (Christopher Lambert) his service weapon, which appears to be a Miroku Liberty Chief. It is a Japanese revolver based on the Colt Detective Special.
Custom Machine Pistol
One of the detectives in Nagoya is armed with a custom machine pistol. This appears to be the same machine pistol from other Vancouver productions like Timecop and Rumble in the Bronx.
Glock 17
Nemura (James Saito) and a henchmen both draw Glock 17 pistols with stainless steel slides before Kinjo (John Lone) disarms them both.
Smith & Wesson Model 10
The uniformed policemen in Nagoya carry Smith & Wesson Model 10 revolver as their service weapons to serve as a placeholder for Nambu Model 60s.
Replica revolver
Racine draws his revolver in the middle of a pachinko parlor to create a diversion. It appears to be a different revolver. Since this scene was likely shot in a real pachinko parlor in Japan rather than on a set in Vancouver, this might be a replica or flash paper gun.