Enemy at the Gates: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Enemy at the Gates: Difference between revisions
[[Image:EnemyGatesTT33 02.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A political officer aims his Tokarev TT-33. Note that this pistol appears to have the finer cocking serrations, indicating it is a later (and thus, anachronistic) variant.]]
[[Image:EnemyGatesTT33 02.jpg|thumb|none|600px|A political officer ([[Dan van Husen]]) aims his Tokarev TT-33. Note that this pistol appears to have the finer cocking serrations, indicating it is a later (and thus, anachronistic) variant.]]
[[Image:EnemyGatesTT33 03.jpg |thumb|none|600px|Nikita Khrushchev ([[Bob Hoskins]]) hands a Red Army General ([[Hans Martin Stier]]) his Tokarev TT-33 pistol to commit suicide. Note the shape of the cocking serrations which is typical for pre-1947 version of TT.]]
[[Image:EnemyGatesTT33 03.jpg |thumb|none|600px|Nikita Khrushchev ([[Bob Hoskins]]) hands a Red Army General ([[Hans Martin Stier]]) his Tokarev TT-33 pistol to commit suicide. Note the shape of the cocking serrations which is typical for the pre-1947 version of TT.]]
===Nagant M1895===
===Nagant M1895===
Revision as of 07:11, 28 October 2021
Enemy at the Gates is a 2001 World War II film directed by Jean-Jacques Annaud. Jude Law stars in the film as Vasily Zaitsev, an ordinary Russian soldier who became a legend for his feats as a sniper fighting during the Battle of Stalingrad. Ed Harris co-stars in the film as German intelligence officer Major Erwin König, an expert sniper tasked to eliminate Zaitsev. The cast also includes Joseph Fiennes, Rachel Weisz and Bob Hoskins. The film is notable for being one of the few modern English language films to depict the Eastern Front of the war.
The following weapons were used in the film Enemy at the Gates:
Vasily Zaitsev (Jude Law) uses the sniper variant of the Mosin Nagant M91/30 rifle with a PU scope when he is "promoted" to sniper. The sniper version of the M91/30 is also used by other Soviet snipers, most notably master sniper Koulikov (Ron Perlman), Tania Chernova (Rachel Weisz), and junior snipers Volodya (Ivan Shvedoff) and Ludmilla (Sophie Rois). The use of the PU scope is anachronistic, as the Mosin Nagant rifle with PU scope did not appear until 1943, after the Battle of Stalingrad. Zaitsev actually carried a Mosin Nagant with an earlier PEM scope.
Mosin Nagant M91/30
The Mosin Nagant M91/30 is used by nearly all Soviet infantry enlisted men in the film. Also used by Vasily Zaitsev (Jude Law) in the first battle he experiences in Stalingrad. At the beginning of the film, unarmed conscripts are paired up and given a single M91/30 per pair, and told to pick up their partner's rifle when he is shot. This single scene actually ended up leading to a number of rumors and myths that the Red Army only had half as many guns as soldiers, and sent men into combat unarmed. This, like much of the movie, is completely embellished and was added to emphasize the desperation present in the Soviets at the battle of Stalingrad.
The MP38 is used by various German soldiers, usually older NCOs. The precursor to the MP40, finely machined and more difficult to manufacture, the MP38 was phased out in favor of the stamped sheet metal MP40.
MP40
The MP40 is used by German soldiers, usually infantry NCOs or Armored troops.
MP41
The MP41 (a more expensive, wooden stock version of the MP40) is used by one of the German soldiers firing into the fountain filled with dead Russians.
Machine Guns
MG34
The MG34 is used by German infantry in fortified positions.
MG42
The MG42 is also used by German soldiers. While the MG42 actually saw limited use at Stalingrad, the film's depiction commits the common error of showing the weapon with the post-1943 vertical charging handle instead of the period appropriate and rare slab-sided horizontal handle.
Others
10.5 cm leichte Feldhaubitze 18/40
Some German 10.5 cm Feldhaubitze/Gebirgshaubitze 40 Howitzers can be seen.