Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord! |
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here. |
No Country for Old Men: Difference between revisions
Line 45: | Line 45: | ||
[[Image:Nocountry1.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Llewelyn Moss holding Chigurh's TEC-DC9 after the gun battle ]] | [[Image:Nocountry1.jpg|thumb|500px|none|Llewelyn Moss holding Chigurh's TEC-DC9 after the gun battle ]] | ||
[[Image:Tec9--no_country_for_old_men..jpg|thumb|none|500px|The Tec-9 on the seat of the Ram Charger]] | [[Image:Tec9--no_country_for_old_men..jpg|thumb|none|500px|The Tec-9 on the seat of the Ram Charger]] | ||
:Intra-Tec made Tec-9's in the 1980's, that's correct....but the before that the same basic gun was made by Interdynamics and sold as the KG-9 (open bolt) and the KG-99 (closed bolt)..so, it's not entirely a timeline problem | |||
==Norinco Type 56== | ==Norinco Type 56== |
Revision as of 23:28, 4 January 2009
The following guns were used in the movie No Country for Old Men
Winchester 1897 Sawn-off
Llewelyn Moss (Josh Brolin) uses a 12 gauge Winchester Model 1897 sawn off pump for a large part of the film, and uses it to wound Anton. Since Winchester no longer makes this model, and those still in circulation are considered collector's items, the actual firearm used in the film was a relatively inexpensive, new-manufacture Norinco (Chinese) model 1897 clone, who many claim to be, in almost every sense, identical in nomenclature to a Winchester.
Colt M1911A1
Llewelyn takes a nickel plated M1911A1 off a dead drug dealer.
Heckler & Koch SP89
A Heckler & Koch SP89 is picked up by Llewelyn Moss at the scene of a drug exchange gone wrong. (this is an anachronism as the SP-89 didn't start maufacture until 1989)
Colt Series 70 Combat Government Model
Sherrif Ed Tom Bell (Tommy Lee Jones) carries a Colt Series 70 Combat Government Model. This was the only model in that time frame that would of had black grips with the gold medallions, and combat style hammer. The Series 70 Combat Government Model was the forerunner to the Combat Elite.
Intratec TEC-9
Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) uses a silenced Intratec TEC-DC9 machine pistol when he is chasing Lleweyn Moss at the border town.
(This is anachronistic because the TEC-9 was not manufactured until 1985 and the film takes place in 1980)
- Intra-Tec made Tec-9's in the 1980's, that's correct....but the before that the same basic gun was made by Interdynamics and sold as the KG-9 (open bolt) and the KG-99 (closed bolt)..so, it's not entirely a timeline problem
Norinco Type 56
Several Norinco Type 56 copies of the AK-47 assault rifle (both the fixed stock Type 56 and folding stock Type 56-1) can be seen on the ground next to dead drug dealers at the site of the failed exchange.
MAC-10
Two MAC-10s can be seen next to two dead drug dealers.
Smith & Wesson Model 10
Deputy Wendell (Garret Dillahunt) carries a heavy-barrelled Smith & Wesson Model 10 as his sidearm.
Remington 11-87
Anton Chigurh (Javier Bardem) uses a sound-suppressed Remington 11-87 Semi-Auto shotgun with a sawed off barrel in four shooting scenes in the movie. (As with the TEC-9, this is also anachronistic because the Remington 11-87 was not designed until 1987 and the film takes place in 1980.)
(At the same time, though there are suppressors designed for shotguns, the one fitted on Chigurh's 11-87 is much too small, and short to have a distinctive effect on the sound of the shotgun's blast. Real suppressors designed for shotguns are much longer, and even they don't manage to silence a shotgun's blast to the extent that the one in the film did.)
Remington 700 Llewelyn Moss hunting a Proghorn. According to the novel [1], the rifle Llewelyn uses to hunt Pronghorn is a "heavybarreled .270 on a '98 Mauser action with a laminated stock of maple and walnut. It carried a Unertl telescopic sight of the same power as the binoculars [10x]". This description closely matches the Parker Hale 1200 series rifles [2], although the movie prop is most likely a Remington 700 variant, based on the appearance of the action and the placement of the safety switch.