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:Hemingway & Gellhorn: Difference between revisions
(→Guns) |
(→Guns) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
There were only two types of firing rifles used by us soldier extras - [http://i.imgur.com/9iuKT.jpg Mosin-Nagants] (see the guy in the white shirt behind the first guy) and what i was told by the armorers were [http://i.imgur.com/hxDt8.jpg Mauser rifles], but don't appear to look like the "Spanish Mauser" listed on this website (note the interesting sloping rear sight) | There were only two types of firing rifles used by us soldier extras - [http://i.imgur.com/9iuKT.jpg Mosin-Nagants] (see the guy in the white shirt behind the first guy) and what i was told by the armorers were [http://i.imgur.com/hxDt8.jpg Mauser rifles], but don't appear to look like the "Spanish Mauser" listed on this website (note the interesting sloping rear sight) | ||
Anytime the camera wasn't close enough or there was no live firing, we were given lightweight replica guns. Most of them were these wood and metal | Anytime the camera wasn't close enough or there was no live firing, we were given lightweight replica guns that looked nothing like our firing counterparts. Most of them (about 90%) were these wood and metal non-functioning reproductions that looked a lot like an [http://i.imgur.com/5WlrN.jpg M1903 Springfield]. They were old and beat up replicas, many missing the front or back sights, or both. They seemed like ROTC training rifles. | ||
There were also 2 [http://i.imgur.com/NZXuI.jpg Lee-Enfield No.1 Mk.IIIs] floating around, one was a non-functioning reproduction, the other was solid resin. | There were also 2 [http://i.imgur.com/NZXuI.jpg Lee-Enfield No.1 Mk.IIIs] floating around, one was a non-functioning reproduction, the other was solid resin. | ||
Line 11: | Line 11: | ||
--[[User:Variableorange|Variableorange]] 22:29, 28 May 2011 (CDT) | --[[User:Variableorange|Variableorange]] 22:29, 28 May 2011 (CDT) | ||
:In your first photo, the guy shooting closest to camera looks like he's firing a [[Mauser Gewehr 1898]]. However on the last photo, the kneeling fellow to the right looks like he's carrying an 1893 Spanish Mauser, albeit the barrel is too long, but sometimes deactivated rifles have plugs welded onto the ends of the barrels. Actually the budget was too small for the war scenes so the first thing they cut was the armorer's budget. I know the propmaster didn't want live firing guns to save money, so she negotiated a deal with ISS to ship them hundreds of broken or deactivated rifles. The cost for the rentals was | :In your first photo, the guy shooting closest to camera looks like he's firing a [[Mauser Gewehr 1898]]. However on the last photo, the kneeling fellow to the right looks like he's carrying an 1893 Spanish Mauser, albeit the barrel is too long, but sometimes deactivated rifles have plugs welded onto the ends of the barrels. Actually the budget was too small for the war scenes so the first thing they cut was the armorer's budget. I know the propmaster didn't want live firing guns to save money, so she negotiated a deal with ISS to ship them hundreds of broken or deactivated rifles. The cost for the rentals was unbeli | ||
Revision as of 06:54, 29 May 2011
Guns
I was an extra playing a Republican soldier during the Spanish Civil War scenes in this film. We managed to take some behind the scenes photographs, which I will link to momentarily.
There were only two types of firing rifles used by us soldier extras - Mosin-Nagants (see the guy in the white shirt behind the first guy) and what i was told by the armorers were Mauser rifles, but don't appear to look like the "Spanish Mauser" listed on this website (note the interesting sloping rear sight)
Anytime the camera wasn't close enough or there was no live firing, we were given lightweight replica guns that looked nothing like our firing counterparts. Most of them (about 90%) were these wood and metal non-functioning reproductions that looked a lot like an M1903 Springfield. They were old and beat up replicas, many missing the front or back sights, or both. They seemed like ROTC training rifles.
There were also 2 Lee-Enfield No.1 Mk.IIIs floating around, one was a non-functioning reproduction, the other was solid resin.
There were a handful of rubber guns. -See the guy on the left and the kneeling guy These were used primarily by soldiers on horseback, stunt people who had to "die" in a scene, but a couple were given to the general soldiers. These are especially conspicuous because the barrel extended slightly longer beyond the front sight than the rest of the guns, they had an oversize bayonet lug, and also none of the rubber guns had shoulder straps. --Variableorange 22:29, 28 May 2011 (CDT)
- In your first photo, the guy shooting closest to camera looks like he's firing a Mauser Gewehr 1898. However on the last photo, the kneeling fellow to the right looks like he's carrying an 1893 Spanish Mauser, albeit the barrel is too long, but sometimes deactivated rifles have plugs welded onto the ends of the barrels. Actually the budget was too small for the war scenes so the first thing they cut was the armorer's budget. I know the propmaster didn't want live firing guns to save money, so she negotiated a deal with ISS to ship them hundreds of broken or deactivated rifles. The cost for the rentals was unbeli