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The Hunted (1995): Difference between revisions
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__TOC__<br clear=all> | __TOC__<br clear=all> | ||
==Miroku | ==Miroku Special Police== | ||
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]]. | A dying Lt. Wadakura (Masumi Okada) hands Paul Racine ([[Christopher Lambert]]) his service weapon, which appears to be a [[Miroku Liberty Chief|Miroku Special Police]]. It is a Japanese revolver based on the [[Colt Detective Special]]. | ||
[[Image: | [[Image:Miroku Special Police.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Miroku Special Police - .38 Special]] | ||
[[Image:Hunted95_DS_01.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Racine hides in the closet when the first ninja comes.]] | [[Image:Hunted95_DS_01.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Racine hides in the closet when the first ninja comes.]] | ||
[[Image:Hunted95_DS_02.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | [[Image:Hunted95_DS_02.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] |
Revision as of 18:35, 16 July 2020
The Hunted is a 1995 martial arts film written and directed by J.F. Lawton (who wrote Under Siege and created V.I.P.) and starred Christopher Lambert as Paul Racine, an American salesman who unexpectedly witnesses a murder, placing him in the middle of a centuries-old feud between ninjas and samurai. The cast also included Joan Chen and John Lone. Not to be confused with the similarly-titled 2003 film.
The following weapons were used in the film The Hunted:
Miroku Special Police
A dying Lt. Wadakura (Masumi Okada) hands Paul Racine (Christopher Lambert) his service weapon, which appears to be a Miroku Special Police. It is a Japanese revolver based on the Colt Detective Special.
M91S
One of the detectives in Nagoya is armed with a short-barreled M91S machine pistol. These custom-built weapons have been featured in several films and TV shows produced in British Columbia.
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.