Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War: Difference between revisions
Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Tae Guk Gi: The Brotherhood of War: Difference between revisions
Error creating thumbnail: File missingUniformed irregulars hold their M1 Garands at the head of Pvt. Jin-seok Lee (Bin Won). A Closeup shot of the particular blank adapters for the M1 Garand used in the movie. They are external attachable BFAs that extend the end of the rifle by a 0.5 inch
M1 Carbine
Error creating thumbnail: File missingKorean War Era M1 CarbineError creating thumbnail: File missingVigilante Irregulars use M1 Carbines to Execute suspected collaborators in Seoul - .30 Carbine. These rifles have the 30 round magazines issued after WWII, but these are M1 Carbines, not M2s since they lack the selector switch.Error creating thumbnail: File missingJin-tae Lees' squad plants landmines on a road, some of the squad carries M1 Carbines - .30 CarbineError creating thumbnail: File missingSouth Korean troops celebrate at the news of the Marine Corp landing at Inchon, as F-86 Sabres fly overhead. Visible are many M1 Carbines - .30 carbine
Error creating thumbnail: File missingA muddy, bloody and soot covered Sgt. Jin-tae Lee (Dong-Kun Jang) after his mental breakdown, looking all scraggly with a beard, more like a monster than a soldier, turns an M1917 Water Cooled Machine gun against the North Koreans - .30-06Error creating thumbnail: File missingJin-tae Lee (Dong-Kun Jang comes to his senses when he realizes his brother is not dead and prepares the M1917 Water Cooled Machine gun for battle - .30-06
Maxim M1910-30 Machine Gun
Sokolov's update of the MG08 Maxim machine gun for the Russian 7.62x54R Cartridge. This machine gun was widely used by Russian/Soviet forces in World Wars One and Two and heavily used by their satellite client states.
The rusted decaying remnants of a Browning ANM2 heavy machine gun are excavated by archeologists and South Korean Soldiers in the present day battle site.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingA Rusted and disintegrating ANM2 machine gun is removed by South Korean Soldiers at the site of a present day archeological dig, at the beginning of the movie.
Fake Soviet KPV Heavy Machine Gun
A Mockup of an Anti Aircraft gun, that resembles a cross between the 14.5mm KPV and the 12.7mm NVS Heavy Machine guns is made out of a Browning M2HB. M2 Machine guns are commonly use to mock up foreign heavy machine guns like in Rambo III and The Beast of War.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingSouth Korean Soldier fires his M20 Super Bazooka just before being blown apart by a recoiless rifle round himself - 3.5" RocketError creating thumbnail: File missingSouth Korean Soldier blasts an enemy rooftop position during the savage street fighting in Pyong Yang with an M20 Super Bazooka - 3.5" Rocket
North Korean Soldiers use the Soviet DP Light Machine gun, also known as the DP-27. They differ from the more common DPM with the lack of a pistol grip, differently shaped stock and a bipod that mounts below, not above, the heat jacket of the barrel.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingMosin Nagant M38 Carbine, chambered in 7.62x54RError creating thumbnail: File missingWhen Sgt. Lee breaks into the North Korean enemy Field HQ, there is a lineup of M44 and M38 Carbines against the wall - 7.62x54RError creating thumbnail: File missingThe Chinese Army storms the Allied lines at the Yalu River. Though hard to see in any particular shot, most of the troops in the front of the packs are carrying M38 and M44 Carbines - 7.62x54R
The close support aircraft in the film. We see dozens of F4Us in close ground support roles, using their 20mm cannons to strafe North Korean lines and entrenched soldiers. A mortally damaged F4U also makes it's own 'kamikaze' run at a North Korean gun emplacement.
Since there is so much hand to hand combat in the film, the filmmakers made lightweight dummy Garands and Mosin Nagant Carbines out of wood and metal parts. In closeup they are obvious (also the fact that the actors swing them around like they weigh nothing is also a clue). The Russian carbines are odd looking and looks like a hybrid 91/30 and an M34/44.
When Jin-tae Lee (Dong-Kun Jang) gives his brother Jin-seok Lee (Bin Won) a Hershey's chocolate bar to cheer him up, the candy bar is the "King-sized version" that Hershey introduced in 1980. Also we see the 'nutritional content listings' that were required in the 1990s. Also I didn't know they had bar code readers in 1950.....