Funderb
Member
silvanus, that was a jam, you can clearly see that the brass is jammed between the slide and the barrel of the glock.
Steven Segal must have some serious cash. All the handguns he carries have had extensive work done to eject casings from the left side of the firearm.
And, for a supposed "gun guy", he always has his finger on the trigger in the DVD cover photo.
In Enemy at the Gates, it drove me nuts that Zaitsev didn't shoot right through the cast iron stove that Koenig was hiding behind. A 7.62x54 would likely have decimated it.
In Saving Private Ryan, did I see the sniper (Jackson) slap a different scope on his 1903 immediately before engaging the belltower sniper? If not, what was he doing? If so, what was he thinking?
Smokin' Aces isn't too bad. Nice firefight at the end, especially with the big Barrett hammering away.
He's using a Star Model B. 9mm is correct.Pulp Fiction:at the end of the movie, jules is holding a 1911 pointed at pumpkin and says it's a 9mm...although I guess they do make them in 9mm? Just figured it was a standard .45acp 1911.
3. In many, many westerns, the ambushers each cock their Winchester lever guns one at a time as the camera slowly pans the rooftops.
4. In Saving Private Ryan, one obvious error I saw was that a soldier thumbed the en-block clip into his Garand and then slapped the operating rod handle forward to load the first round. Garands close on loading the clip.
FATGUYNLITTLECOAT - "Pulp Fiction:at the end of the movie, jules is holding a 1911 pointed at pumpkin and says it's a 9mm...although I guess they do make them in 9mm? Just figured it was a standard .45acp 1911."