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Network: Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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A member of the ELA opens fire with a [[Colt Official Police]] revolver during a live broadcast.
A member of the ELA opens fire with a [[Colt Official Police]] revolver during a live broadcast.
[[Image:ColtOP4.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Colt Official Police 4" Barrel - .38 Special.]]
[[Image:ColtOP4.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Colt Official Police 4" Barrel - .38 Special.]]
[[Image:Robbins_sm20.jpg|thumb|none|601px|An unidentified handgun is fired by a Second Shooter during a live television broadcast.]]
[[Image:Robbins_sm20.jpg|thumb|none|601px|A Colt Official Police handgun is pulled by the Second Shooter during a live television broadcast.]]
[[Image:robbins3_sm.jpg|thumb|none|601px|An unidentified handgun is fired by a Second Shooter during a live television broadcast.]]
[[Image:robbins3_sm.jpg|thumb|none|601px|The Colt Official Police is fired.]]


==Smith & Wesson 76==
==Smith & Wesson 76==

Revision as of 07:25, 10 February 2013

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Work In Progress

This article is still under construction. It may contain factual errors. See Talk:Network for current discussions. Content is subject to change.

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Network (1976)

Network is the 1976 satire directed by Sidney Lumet (Serpico, Dog Day Afternoon) and written by Paddy Chayefsky that follows a fictional television network that tries to raise its struggling ratings by giving their mentally unstable news anchor his own commercial prime time show to express his rants. The cast included Faye Dunaway, William Holden, Robert Duvall, Ned Beatty, and Peter Finch, whose infamous onair rant in the film is still quoted to this day (Finch won a Best Actor Academy Award for his performance, but passed away before he could accept his award). The film is a modern-day cautionary tale of television, the commercialization of broadcast journalism, and the drive to win ratings at all costs.

The following weapons were used in the film “Network”:


Star Model B

The Great Ahmed Khan (Arthur Burghardt) pulls out what appears to be a Star Model B during a contract negotiation with network lawyers.

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Star Model B Pistol, blued finish - 9mm.
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The Great Ahmed Khan (Arthur Burghardt) pulls out what appears to be a Star Model B during a contract negotiation with network lawyers.
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Khan holds the pistol.

MAC-10

The Great Ahmed Khan (Arthur Burghardt) uses a MAC-10 as he opens fire during a live television broadcast.

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Ingram MAC-10 open bolt submachine gun - .45 ACP
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The Great Ahmed Khan (Arthur Burghardt) opens fire during a live television broadcast.
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The Great Ahmed Khan (Arthur Burghardt) opens fire during a live television broadcast.

Colt Official Police

A member of the ELA opens fire with a Colt Official Police revolver during a live broadcast.

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Colt Official Police 4" Barrel - .38 Special.
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A Colt Official Police handgun is pulled by the Second Shooter during a live television broadcast.
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The Colt Official Police is fired.

Smith & Wesson 76

Heiress Mary Ann Gifford (Kathy Cronkite, the real-life daughter of former CBS news anchor Walter Cronkite) is seen armed with a Smith & Wesson 76 submachine gun that she fires during a bank heist.

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Smith & Wesson M76 - 9x19mm‎
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Undercover footage shows heiress Mary Ann Gifford (Kathy Cronkite) using a Smith & Wesson 76during the takeover of the Flagstaff Independent Bank.
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Gifford with the Smith & Wesson 76 in the undercover footage.
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Mary Ann Gifford (Kathy Cronkite) holds the S&W 76. Kathy Cronkite is the real-life daughter of former CBS news anchor Walter Cronkite.