Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

Talk:Big Game (Bolshaya igra): Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 3: Line 3:
[[File:BG AR10 4.jpg|thumb|none|500px|]]
[[File:BG AR10 4.jpg|thumb|none|500px|]]
:Thanks. There's actually a lot more other interesting weapons (in particular, what appears to be an H&K G3s, and one of versions of the Bazooka), but good screencaps impossible to do. --[[User:Slon95|Slon95]] ([[User talk:Slon95|talk]]) 17:05, 1 March 2016 (EST)
:Thanks. There's actually a lot more other interesting weapons (in particular, what appears to be an H&K G3s, and one of versions of the Bazooka), but good screencaps impossible to do. --[[User:Slon95|Slon95]] ([[User talk:Slon95|talk]]) 17:05, 1 March 2016 (EST)
::Thanks to you for an interesting page. I slightly remember this movie from late 1980s, but of course I couldn't guess in that time that the original AR-10 appears there. I really wonder where this Armalite and all these rare (for Soviet movies) guns came from. At first I guessed that AR-10 is from Cuba, but then I found out that Cuban AR-10s were of Transitional model. And the origin of Hotchkiss SMG is even more mysterious. [[User:Greg-Z|Greg-Z]] ([[User talk:Greg-Z|talk]]) 09:26, 2 March 2016 (EST)

Revision as of 14:26, 2 March 2016

I think that the light machine gun is not a Bren but a Bulgarian-issued ZB 39. Greg-Z (talk) 16:23, 1 March 2016 (EST)

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
ZB 39 Light Machine Gun, the last version of ZB-26 that incorporates some features of Bren.
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Thanks. There's actually a lot more other interesting weapons (in particular, what appears to be an H&K G3s, and one of versions of the Bazooka), but good screencaps impossible to do. --Slon95 (talk) 17:05, 1 March 2016 (EST)
Thanks to you for an interesting page. I slightly remember this movie from late 1980s, but of course I couldn't guess in that time that the original AR-10 appears there. I really wonder where this Armalite and all these rare (for Soviet movies) guns came from. At first I guessed that AR-10 is from Cuba, but then I found out that Cuban AR-10s were of Transitional model. And the origin of Hotchkiss SMG is even more mysterious. Greg-Z (talk) 09:26, 2 March 2016 (EST)