Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

Mosin Nagant Rifle

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 11:48, 16 October 2011 by Bednardos (talk | contribs) (→‎Film)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Mosin Nagant Rifle

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Full-length, Soviet Mosin Nagant M91/30 - 7.62x54mmR
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Full-length, Mosin Nagant M91/30 Sniper Rifle with Russian PU 3.5x sniper scope and down turned bolt handle - 7.62x54mmR
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Mosin Nagant M38 Carbine - 7.62x54mmR. This is the version issued during most of World War 2, the M44 would not be fielded until the last six months of the war. Note slightly shorter barrel, lack of brass reinforcements in the Sling holes and lack of bayonet notch in the stock.
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Mosin Nagant M44 Carbine, with attached side-folding bayonet - 7.62x54mmR. Note, slightly longer barrel ahead of the front sight to accomodate locking in the bayonet, brass reinforcements around the sling holes and an integral bayonet attached to the barrel.

The Mosin Nagant rifle describes a series of rifles that served Russia (and later as the Soviet Union) and its client states for many years. The first model which was issued in 1891 for the Imperial Russian Army. It is one of the longest serving bolt action rifles in history, being issued until the 1940s (and up to the 1960s in third world client nations of the USSR). The original M1891 rifle was updated in 1930, thus the new model was designated the M91/30, which was the most widely distributed bolt action rifle of the Red Army. There was a carbine version known as the M38 issued during World War 2. The M44 carbine saw very little action in WWII, from early 1945 to the end, not enough made it to the front lines to appear in most of the combat photography of World War II. The M44 and M91/30 saw battle in the hands of North Korean Soldiers in 1950-53 and in the hands of the Viet Cong and PAVN during the 1960s.

Note: It was the first firearm to chamber the supreme champion of longest serving firearm calibers in history, the venerable 7.62x54R cartridge, which is still issued and used in armies to this day.


The Mosin Nagant is used by the following actors in the following movies and television shows:

Film

  • Finnish and Soviet soldiers in Ambush (M/39 Rifle, 91/30 rifle)

infantry and sniper versions of the M91/30 rifle)

  • Tom Berenger as Master Gunnery Sgt. Thomas Beckett in Sniper 2 (though misidentified by Beckett as a 1898 Mauser)
  • Vietnamese Villager at the beginning of the movie and NVA sniper at the end of the movie in Flight of the Intruder
  • used by sniper in the bell tower towards the end of the movie Kelly's Heroes (1970)
  • Polish and Soviet soldiers in The Pianist
  • Pvt. Temdekov (Amadu Mamadakov) and many other russian soldiers in Star (Zvezda), The (2002)

Television

  • Nick Boraine as Ivan Fleekov and Russian soldiers in King Solomon's Mines (2004)
  • Various characters in Bors. (Both M91/30 and M44.)
  • Various North Korean and Chinese soldiers in M*A*S*H* (Both M91/30s and M44 Carbines)
  • Mikhail (Andrew Divoff), AKA "Patchy" in Lost shoots Sayid Jarrah (Naveen Andrews) in the shoulder with one. Sayid later commandeers the rifle for himself and is seen wielding it several times.
  • Reilly: Ace of Spies (1983)
  • Weaponology
  • Many soldiers in the History Channel's "Clash of the Gods - Tolkien's Monsters." M91/30s were used in place of Lee-Enfields by the British army during flashbacks to World War I.
  • Top Shot

Anime

Video Games

M39 Finnish Mosin-Nagant Rifle

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
M39 Rifle - 7.62x54mmR

The M39 is a Finnish variation of the Russian Mosin-Nagant rifle. The first models were issued with straight grips. Later models, however, had a curved pistol grip. The main way to tell the difference between a Russian Mosin-Nagant and an M39 is that the M39 has a different stock design and a different front sight.

NOTE: Except for some components, such as the bolt, trigger, and magazine, the parts of these rifles are NOT interchangable with Russian models.

The M39 Rifle is used by the following actors in the following movies and television shows:

Film

Used by Finnish soldiers in Tuntematon Sotilas The Unknown Soldier(both 1955 and 1985 versions)

Used by Finnish soldiers in Ambush (Rukajärven tie)

Used by Finnish soldiers in Hemingway & Gellhorn (2012)