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Number Seventeen
From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 13:32, 26 July 2022 by Greg-Z(talk | contribs)(Created page with "{{Infobox Movie |name=Number Seventeen |picture=Number Seventeen Poster.jpg |caption=''Theatrical Poster'' |country=25px UK |director=Alfred Hitchcock |da...")
Number Seventeen is a 1932 British B&W crime thriller directed by Alfred Hitchcock, adapted from the 1925 stage play by Joseph Jefferson Farjeon. A group of criminals commit a jewel robbery and hide their loot in an old unihabited house near the coastline. When they meet in the house, everyone tries to get a diamond necklace for himself or herself. Meanwhile, one of the gang members turns out to be an undercover detective, and the involvement of a tramp Ben who stays in this empty house complicates ths situtation even more.
While searching the dead body in the empty house, Ben (Leon M. Lion) finds an Iver Johnson American Bulldog revolver. After he accidentally shoots the gun, "Nephew" (Barry Jones) disarms him. When the gang escapes via a cellar, "Nephew" leaves the gun on the table, and Forsythe (John Stuart) takes it.
Brant (Donald Calthrop) holds a pocket pistol in several scenes. Perfect close-up reveal it as a German manufactured Gerstenberger & Eberwein EM-GE Model 4 starter pistol. This pistol is also briefly held by Nora (Anne Grey).
The gang boss Sheldrake (Garry Marsh) carries an FN Model 1900 pistol. In the scene in the train, this pistol is seen in hands of Brant (Donald Calthrop), due to a continuity error.