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The Bridge (Most) (1942)
From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 12:56, 2 May 2021 by Greg-Z(talk | contribs)(Created page with "{{Infobox Movie |name = The Bridge (Most) |picture = Most 1942 Poster.jpg |caption = ''Modern Poster'' |country = 25px USSR |director =Konstantine Pipinashv...")
The Bridge (Most; Georgian title Khidi) is a 1942 Soviet Georgian war drama directed by Konstantine Pipinashvili and Shota Managadze. During the Soviet offensive in Spring 1942, a strategic bridge is destroyed by the Germans. A sapper battalion under the command of Capt. Ilo Gigauri restores the crossing and defends it against the enemy counterattack.
The following weapons were used in the film The Bridge (Most):
When the Germans interrogate captured Soviet radio operator, one of the officers holds a compact pistol that turns out to a Korovin TK. It may be used as a stand-in for a Mauser Pocket Pistol.
One of the guns, seen in hands of German soldiers, is a mockup with parts of MP38 (barrel, magazine well, part of receiver) in combination with custom parts. A horizontal box is mounted under the receiver instead of a vertical magazine. The reason of creating of such mockup is unclear, since genuine MP40s are used in the film.
Many Soviet soldiers, including Sr. Sgt. Otar Gigauri (Davit Lortkipanidze) who is Capt. Gigauri's younger brother, and Pvt. Baruta (Pyotr Dolzhanov), are armed with Mosin Nagant M1891 Infantry rifles.
Some Soviet soldiers carry Tokarev SVT-38 rifles. Due to a continuity error, Otar Gigauri's Mosin Nagant rifle switches to an SVT-38 during his duel with a German sniper.
Many German soldiers carry rifles that are seen in distance and unclear.
Error creating thumbnail: File missingAn abandoned German rifle on the battlefield. The raised rear sight looks similar to the Lange-Visier of Mauser Gewehr 1898 but the rifle seems to have a straight stock, unlike Gewehr 98.Error creating thumbnail: File missingA German soldier at the background holds a rifle with long sword bayonet. Judging by the shape of the ricasso, the bayonet is not a German M1898 but rather the Czech vz.22, 23 or 24. The rifle has a hood or protection "ears" on the front sight and what seems to be a parade hook on the top barrel band. Among the Mauser rifles that are seen in Soviet films of WWII era, a vz. 98/29 Persian Mauser seems to be a possible guess.Error creating thumbnail: File missingA German soldier fires a very long rifle, holding it in an uncommon way - one hand of the buttstock and another on the trigger. Possibly this gun is not a military bolt action rifle but some kind of old breechloader.Error creating thumbnail: File missingA German soldier holds the rifle over his head while crossing the river. The bolt handle is placed too far ahead, so the rifle may be a kind of training dummy weapon.Error creating thumbnail: File missingSeveral rifles are seen behind the German Oberst (Colonel).Error creating thumbnail: File missingError creating thumbnail: File missingA German soldier is gunned down during the battle for the bridge. He holds a full-length rifle of unknown model.Error creating thumbnail: File missingA German soldier holds a Mauser-style rifle with a sword bayonet during the close combat on the bridge.Error creating thumbnail: File missingA German soldier with an unknown rifle.
Machine Guns
Degtyaryov DP-27
Degtyaryov DP-27 light machine guns are used by Soviet troops. The DP-27s mostly lack the conical flash hiders.
The machine gun, used by German troops in several scenes, is a Degtyaryov DT with fake covers on the barrel and the receiver, without the magazine and with mockup cartridge belt.
In an attempt to destroy the bridge, the Germans use floating mines. The mines are mockups that look like scaled-down version of typical contact naval mines with their "Hertz horn" protuberances.