If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.
Shoot 'Em Up
From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 14:42, 31 October 2020 by AdAstra2009(talk | contribs)(→CAR-15: It's a Colt 727 pattern rifle. Fixed M16A2 style upper receiver with 14.5 inch barrel and M4 Carbine type barrel step for 40mm launchers.)
Shoot 'Em Up is a 2007 American action crime comedy film directed and written by Michael Davis. It starring Clive Owen, Paul Giamatti and Monica Bellucci.
The following weapons were used in the film Shoot 'Em Up:
At the beginning of the film, the Baby's Mother (Ramona Pringle) draws a Walther PPK from her purse and uses it to try to kill the 1st Killer (Wiley M. Pickett). The gun jams on her, but luckily Mr. Smith (Clive Owen) is there just in time to save her. After killing 1st Killer with a carrot (we know it's insane), he fixes the malfunctioned gun and uses it for the entire first shootout before running out of ammo.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingWalther PPK - .32 ACPError creating thumbnail: File missingThe Mother (Ramona Pringle) fires her Walther PPK at the 1st Killer.Error creating thumbnail: File missingThe Walther PPK jams on the Mother (Ramona Pringle), although it would appear as if the gun just locked empty. When Smith picks it up to use it, he simply releases the slide, instead of clearing a jam. We can assume the weapons coordinator loaded only one blank in it and later just stuck a loaded magazine in it for the next scene.Error creating thumbnail: File missingMr. Smith fires the Walther PPK at the bad guys.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith rolls out from cover and shoots an oil tank on a nearby truck so he can use it to slide and shoot, another ridiculous logic.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith dispatches multiple bad guys by diving through a window over their cover and landing right in front of them. It doesn't appear as if he is aiming though, more like he is just firing and moving his arm left and right until they are all dead.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith opens the title for the film.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith reloads the Walther PPK.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith shoots the baby's umbilical cord (which looks very CG) with the PPK. The muzzle flash is a post production edit as noted by how the hammer stays in double action configuration.Error creating thumbnail: File missingThe PPK runs empty, but Smith racks the slide repeatedly like it broke or something. This is indicated for sure by the next line.Error creating thumbnail: File missing"What a piece of crap" - Smith throws away the PPK after it goes empty, apparently thinking it broke. This is likely a jab at the fact this is James Bond's sidearm, and Clive Owen was at one point suggested to play this role.
Desert Eagle Mark XIX
Mr. Karl Hertz (Paul Giamatti) uses a satin nickel Desert Eagle Mark XIX chambered in .50 AE (you can tell this, because the Mark XIX .357 and .44 Magnum models all have fluted barrels, this one does not) and fitted with a custom muzzle brake as his sidearm, which the director chose as his weapon because he improperly believed it to be "the most powerful handgun in the world" and wanted to portray Hertz as a "pussy with a gun in his hand", as quoted in the film.
A notable mistake in the film is during the scene in which Hertz interrogates Donna "D.Q." Quintano (Monica Bellucci) by burning her with the hot barrel of his Desert Eagle, firing it more times increasingly to make it hotter. Smith interrupts and Hertz points his Desert Eagle at him, only for Smith to tell him he's "blown his load", claiming the gun is a six-shooter, when in fact the .50 AE model holds seven rounds plus one in the chamber. For that matter, none of the Desert Eagle variants hold six rounds. It can be assumed that the writer of the script intended Hertz to have a Magnum revolver, such as the Smith & Wesson Model 500, instead of the Desert Eagle (however, the S&W 500 only holds five rounds), the other possibility is the former most powerful handgun in the world Smith & Wesson Model 29 which is a six-shooter.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingMagnum Research Desert Eagle Mark XIX with brushed chrome finish - .50 Action ExpressError creating thumbnail: File missingRight away we see what type of person Hertz is when he kills his own man for squirming too much and ruining his shot. For this scene, a low powered blank and protective clothing were used so the actor would not be killed by the round at close range. What made this scene dangerous is that full powered blanks are loaded after that so Hertz could continue firing at Smith. This shot compares the film version to the special features version where we see the CGI blood added in.Error creating thumbnail: File missingHertz fires his Desert Eagle at Smith and the Mother.Error creating thumbnail: File missingHertz searches for Smith and the Mother with his Desert Eagle at the ready.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith disarms Hertz of his Desert Eagle and points it at him.Error creating thumbnail: File missingClose-up of the Desert Eagle as Smith points it at Hertz.Error creating thumbnail: File missingHertz points out to Smith that his Desert Eagle is fitted with a "state-of-the-art" thumb print safety device so only he can fire it. Charles Taylor designed this by adding lights to the grip, one light blue for the thumb, and one that turned either red or green to confirm authorization of the user. Note the .50 AE stamp on the nose of the gun.Error creating thumbnail: File missingClose-up of the muzzle brake as Hertz burns D.Q.Error creating thumbnail: File missingHertz fires his Desert Eagle in the Hammerson factory.Error creating thumbnail: File missing"Come on, Smith, guns don't kill people -- but they sure help!"Error creating thumbnail: File missing"Can't talk right now, honey, I'm right in the middle of something".Error creating thumbnail: File missingHertz struggles to raise his Desert Eagle near the end of the film.
Taurus PT92AFS
Smith (Clive Owen) takes a Taurus PT92AFS from one of the thugs on the rooftop and uses it for a good portion of the film.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingTaurus PT92AFS (stainless) with slimline black factory grips - 9x19mmError creating thumbnail: File missingThe 1st Killer (Wiley M. Pickett) with a Taurus PT92AFS.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith takes the Taurus PT92AFS from one of the thugs on the rooftop after knocking him out by throwing Hertz's Desert Eagle at his face. Note how the slide clearly reads "PT 92 AFS".Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith fires his captured Taurus PT92AFS during the rooftop shootout. With this gun, he takes a sign that says "FAULK TRUCK AND TOOL" and shoots it so it says "FUK U" (the camera ignores the "TOOL" part for another joke later).Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith accidentally drops his PT92AFS in a dirty toilet while hiding in a bathroom stall, so he takes it to the baby changing station to clean it. In reality, armorer Al Vrkljan was the one cleaning the gun and putting it back together, as he was faster than Clive Owen.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith disassembles the PT92AFS to clean all the parts while Lone Man (Greg Bryk) nears closer.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith reassembles the gun just in time and chambers it as Lone Man yells through the bathroom door.Error creating thumbnail: File missingAn excellent close-up of the PT92AFS when Smith tries to fire it through the bathroom door, only for it to misfire due to wet ammunition. Note how he fires it double action despite chambering it and cocking the hammer seconds before.Error creating thumbnail: File missingAs Lone Man tries to stab Smith with a Stiletto knife, Smith puts the PT92AFS under a hand drier to dry the wet bullets. The chance of this working is pretty slim.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith fires his PT92AFS at the playground, using it to shoot the spinning carousel the baby is on so Hertz can't shoot him.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith fires his PT92AFS some more at the carousel. Once he is about three feet from it, it is questionable as to why he doesn't just spin it with his hand instead of "expend his second cartridge on the playground", as Hertz inaccurately states.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith kills a bad guy in his house with his PT92AFS before it runs empty.
Taurus PT92 (two-tone)
A two-tone Taurus PT92 is used by one of Hertz's thugs in Smith's house. In a continuity error, a reverse two-tone model replaces Lone Man's Smith & Wesson Model 629.
Glock 17 pistols (both 2nd and 3rd generation) are used by several of Hertz's (Paul Giamatti) thugs throughout the film. At one point, Smith takes a 3rd gen Glock 17 from a dead thug and points it at Hertz, but Hertz tells him the gun has the same thumb print safety as his Desert Eagle (which conveniently fits right in the thumb relief). Smith then reveals the severed hand of the owner and activates the safety just in time to shoot Hertz in the bulletproof vest before he stabs him with a hunk of glass. He then remarks, "Nothing like a good hand-job". We later see him produce a two-tone model with a chrome slide in the Hammerson factory, which he tosses away, setting off a trip wire and killing a thug pointing a gun at him. This same two-tone Glock 17 is also held by the Diner Holdup Leader (David Ury) at the end of the film.
Smith grabs a two-tone SIG-Sauer P226 with a newer milled slide and uses it throughout the shootout in his house before it runs dry. Smith also uses a K-Kote model taken from a Secret Service agent to hold Senator Rutledge (Daniel Pilon) hostage on his plane and uses it during the ridiculous skydiving shootout. This is strange because the Secret Service should be using SIG-Sauer P229s.
SIG-Sauer P226R pistols (SIG-Sauer P226s with Picatinny rails on the frame) are used by several of Hertz's men. Technically these are now the official P226s but on this site we still call them P226Rs for easier categorization.
Aside from the SIG-Sauer P226 Smith takes from a Secret Service agent, the other USSS agents also use SIG-Sauer P228 pistols, despite the fact that the USSS currently uses P229s, not P228s.
Smith (Clive Owen) takes a Heckler & Koch USP-9 with a stainless slide from a thug in his house after his SIG-Sauer runs out of ammo. He mainly uses it during the shootout in the Hammerson factory. Smith is prominently seen wielding a pair of two-tone USPs on the film cover, although for whatever reason they have the slide of a Desert Eagle digitally edited onto them.
A Heckler & Koch USP Expert with a stainless slide is held by the Diner Hood with Earring (Mike Rad) before Smith (Clive Owen) kicks it from his hand. Because all his fingers were broken and casted, Smith catches the gun on a carrot held firmly in the cast and uses a carrot to pull the trigger while hitting the gun with his other hand.
Para-Ordnance Nite-Tac pistols in both stainless and black are used by Hertz's men when Hertz (Paul Giamatti) teams up with Hammerson (Stephen McHattie), whom the guns are produced from. Para-Ordnance's logo is shaved off and Hammerson's logo is added instead with laser engraving and backfilling.
Mr. Karl Hertz (Paul Giamatti) uses a Para-Ordnance Nite-Hawg as his "spare rod" or back up gun. Near the end of the film, Smith (Clive Owen) takes this pistol from Hertz and uses it during the final showdown.
Heckler & Koch P7 pistols (not able to confirm them being M8s or M13s) are seen in the pawn shop when Smith (Clive Owen) goes to buy bullets. It can be assumed that these pistols are CO2 copies or airsoft replicas, as are all the guns in the shop.
A Browning BDM is seen on a pistol rack in the pawn shop. Since it closely resembles the BDM but has some different traits, it is likely a cheap airsoft imitation.
A Ruger KP90 is seen on a rack in the Hammerson factory, airsoft replica.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingRuger KP90 - .45 ACPError creating thumbnail: File missingA Ruger KP90 is seen bottom left. Also note three Para-Ordnance Nite-Tacs, the Colt Double Eagle seen above, and a Heckler & Koch USP .40. The KP90, Double Eagle, and USP are spring-powered airsoft replicas made by Tokyo Marui.
Revolvers
Smith & Wesson Model 629
Lone Man (Greg Bryk) uses a stainless steel Smith & Wesson Model 629 with a 6" barrel and Hogue grips as his weapon of choice. According to the director, Lone Man's attachment to the .44 Magnum is apparently sexual, as he is often seen "polishing" it in the bathroom. Greg Bryk was somewhat embarrassed when he was informed of this fact, unaware of this character trait when he signed on for the role.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith & Wesson Model 629 with 6" barrel and Hogue grips like the gun in the film - .44 Magnum. The only difference is the front sight.Error creating thumbnail: File missingLone Man runs a rag on his Smith & Wesson Model 629 to keep the stainless finish polished.Error creating thumbnail: File missingLone Man fires his Smith & Wesson Model 629 at Smith in the bathroom. He fires six shots but the last gunshot isn't added.Error creating thumbnail: File missingLone Man reloads his S&W Model 629, but the primers are dented, indicating the rounds are empty shells or dummy rounds.Error creating thumbnail: File missingLone Man with his S&W Model 629.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSmith forces Lone Man to drop his S&W Model 629 by burning his hand with the hand drier. Here we see Hogue grips and that in the chambers, the gun is loaded with hollow points.Error creating thumbnail: File missingLone Man stroking his Magnum, if you know what I mean. But seriously, Lone Man calls Hertz to tell him he's taken care of the birthing center.Error creating thumbnail: File missingLone Man fires his 629 during the skydiving shootout, before falling on the rotors of a helicopter.Error creating thumbnail: File missingWhen Lone Man's severed arm is seen lying on the ground, instead of holding his 629, it is holding the two-tone Taurus PT92 seen above.
Smith uses several Heckler & Koch MP5A3s with tactical tri-rails as makeshift Rube Goldberg-esque traps to take out Hertz's men in the Hammerson factory.
Several of Hertz's men are seen using Mini Uzis during the assault on Smith's house. Smith also takes one and uses it to kill several thugs before switching to another gun.
Smith (Clive Owen) takes a Mossberg 590 Compact Cruiser from one of Hertz's thugs and uses it to kill another, which unrealistically sends the thug flying in the typical action film flair.
Smith uses a Mossberg 500 Cruiser with an extended magazine tube as one of his traps, tossing a two-tone Glock 17 on a trip wire to kill a thug. When the thug is shot, the director imitates the camera blood splatter technique used in video games.
Mr. Karl Hertz (Paul Giamatti) tries to kill the baby at the playground with a Remington 700PSS fitted with a HS Precision stock and folding bipod, a heavy stainless barrel, as well as a stainless 3x9 Buschnell scope. Based on the bolt length, it is assumed to be a .308 caliber.
A Colt Model 727 with a R.I.S. handguard is used by Smith (Clive Owen) as another Rube Goldberg-esque trap, in which he uses strings and trip wires to fire it.
Several of Hertz's men fire Micro Galils at Smith (Clive Owen) during the car chase shootout. Smith knocks out one of these shooters with the door of his BMW and then takes a Micro Galil, using it to take out the pursuing vehicle.
Multiple AK rifles are seen on a rack in the pawn shop but are too close and blurry to tell make and model. These are probably airsoft rifles, seeing as they aren't used in any of the shooting scenes and would probably just be expensive props if they were the real deal. They might also be Norinco copies, which don't cost very much either.
Smith (Clive Owen) takes bullets from a Para-Ordnance Nite-Tac and holds them between his broken fingers and then sticks his hand in the fireplace, shooting Hertz (Paul Giamatti) eight times. Since we only see four bullets in his hand, we realize they can't even get the capacity of the human hand correct! Some questions are raised: How does he eject the magazine when he can barely pull the trigger? How does he remove the bullets from the magazine with broken fingers? And does having all your fingers broken make your hand numb to all pain? Perhaps the biggest problem, though, is the fact that, without rifling, the bullets wouldn't really go anywhere. If anything, the casings, being lighter, would injure Smith's hand even further. The general idea of the film, however, was to be as outrageous and unbelievable as possible, so none of the errors really matter.