End of Watch: Difference between revisions
End of Watch: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
End of Watch: Difference between revisions
This article is for a film currently in theaters or otherwise unavailable for screencapping. Any screenshots used are from official trailers and sources. Please be prepared to state a source for new images if requested. Content is subject to change.
End of Watch is a 2012 cop thriller starring Jake Gyllenhaal and Michael Peña as a pair of LAPD officers who find themselves the target of a merciless drug cartel. The film is in part seen through the video footage shot from the camera the officers carry wherever they go as well as by the cartel's own cameras. The film was directed by David Ayer (Training Day, Street Kings), who insisted that Gyllenhaal and Pena go on numerous ridealongs with actual LAPD officers.
The following weapons were used in the film End of Watch:
LAPD officers in the film, including Police Officer II Brian Taylor (Jake Gyllenhaal) and Police Officer II Zavala (Michael Peña), carry Glock 22s fitted with Surefire X300 weapon lights; even though Brian erroneously identifies his weapon as a Glock 19 in the locker scene near the beginning.
Officer Taylor takes a custom engraved M1911A1 from a Sinaloa cartel member after discovering a house full of illegal migrants. Later, Big Evil (Maurice Compte) threatens one of his own men with a M1911A1 after his orders are questioned.
Several LAPD officers are seen throughout the film armed with Remington 870 shotguns sporting black synthetic furniture. Sarge (Frank Grillo) also fires a Remington 870 when confronting a heavily-armed group of gangsters.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingRemington 870 sporting black synthetic furniture (12 gauge)Error creating thumbnail: File missingSeveral LAPD officers walk to their patrol cars armed with Remington 870s.Error creating thumbnail: File missingOfficer Zavala safely carries his Remington 870 to his patrol car, with the slide back (showing the empty chamber), and with proper trigger discipline.Error creating thumbnail: File missingOfficer Taylor loads his Remington 870 with ammunition before he sets out on patrol.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSarge (Frank Grillo) fires his Remington 870 at a group of AKMS-armed gangsters after responding to an urgent call for backup.Error creating thumbnail: File missingAn interior shot of an LAPD patrol car showing a Remington 870 mounted on a bracket (between Officer Zavala and Officer Taylor). Something worth noting is that both officers appear to be correctly wearing body armor underneath their uniforms, which is a rarity in many police films. These were actual ballistic vests and not props, as insisted by the director. The man outside the car wearing the red jacket is Cle Shaheed "Bone" Sloan, an actor (and former gangster) who appears in many of David Ayer's films.
Rifles
AKMS
AKMS rifles are used by members of the Curbside gang. Officer Zavala can also be seen with a gold plated AKMS with faux ivory furniture which he finds during a traffic stop. According to director David Ayer, the gold AKMS was a painted airsoft replica.
ICE agents who arrive after Taylor and Zavala uncover a house full of illegal migrants wield M4A1 carbines. Later, a LAPD officer fires a M4A1 during a gun battle with the Curbside gangsters.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingColt M4A1 Carbine with M68 Aimpoint reflex optic and Knight's Armament RAS railed handguard and vertical forward grip - 5.56x45mm