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'Gran Torino' movie M1 Garand in NRA museum

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7.4K views 32 replies 20 participants last post by  Redneck Yankee  
#1 · (Edited)
For anyone interested, here's the "Get off my lawn" M1 Garand featured in the film, Gran Torino. (NRA museum in Fairfax, VA)

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...and here's one of the actual S&W Model 29s used in the movie 'Dirty Harry'

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...just an fyi for anyone interested in some old "steel and wood" firearms that Clint Eastwood has made somewhat famous in a couple of movies...
 
#29 ·
Wrong movie



This pic is from one of his "Spagetti Westerns" not Josey Wales. He didn't wear a serape or that hat in JW. He also didn't have a cigar in JW, lots of chewing tobacco spit though !

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#6 ·
Outlaw Josie Wales might not just be my fave Squint movie, but #1 movie period.
I think they have two of the pistols from that famous movie on display too, but didn't take a picture of them. (Signs now say "No photography" in the museum...but maybe I can take a sneak pic next time). The museum's section of movie related firearms and firearm props is quite impressive.
 
#11 ·
I handled that .44 Mag a few years back. Had to wear white gloves. Some where I have pictures. That's one of the side benefits of going to the NRA gun shows/NRA meetings and displaying your collection and getting to knowing all the NRA museum people. I have gotten to handle some of the finest collector grade weapons in my life time.
 
#17 ·
Trivia time,
Do you know was supposed to play Harry Callahan in the movies?
According to an Eastwood interview I saw some years ago, ... Clint said he was chosen to play DH in the first movie only after Frank Sinatra turned the role down due to some hand injury that prevented him from holding so large and heavy a handgun as an S&W N-Frame.

No doubt Sinatra had broken his hand on someone's face during a late-night fracas at one of the Vegas clubs he used to frequent. ICONROLLEY

Good thing too. Eastwood took the character and ran with it, whereas I never thought Sinatra was that great of an actor.
 
#19 · (Edited)
In what scene was the M1 Garand rifle shown in Gran Torino? If I recall correctly, the "M1 Rifle" that he brandished while saying "Get off My Lawn" was clearly a plastic movie prop gun.
The M1 was shown in at least 3 scenes in the movie. First was the "Get off my lawn" scene, then the attempted theft of his 1972 Gran Torino were the weapon was fired once in his garage w/ presumably blanks, and the final scene is where Clint Eastwood is describing his Korean War experience with the young man next door, and shows him the M1. The M1 in the NRA museum is a clearly a real vintage M1 that was used, but the display does not say which particular scene(s) it was used in. (To my eyes, the "Get off my lawn" scene appears to have a real M1, but its a low-light scene, so hard to say).

Based on what I have read, is it customary in movie productions to always have at least 2 props of any weapon that is critical to a scene. You have a real example (often firing blanks) for scenes that require live fire or require close-up details, and you typically have one or more lightweight plastic mock-up props that are used for other scenes where it is deemed safer or easier to use. (For example, if the actor is doing stunts you provide them with a lightweight plastic mock-up to reduce possible injuries from carrying a real/heavy firearm). Their is a whole industry around movie props of course...

Somewhere I have a magazine that shows a bunch of 1911s that were used in movies, and I noted that both plastic and real 1911s were often used, depending on the scene. For example, in the famous Terminator movie with the AMT long slide with Laser sight, both metal and plastic versions of that pistol were used, and the same goes for the two nickel plated, engraved 1911s as seen in the move Titantic, two were real, and two were plastic mock-ups. (If I find those pics I post one as an example, the details in the mock-up are usually quite realistic).

BTW, one of the more famous screw-ups re weapon props was during the filming of the 1963 James Bond film, From Russia with Love, when they were doing the official promotional picture shoots with Sean Connery - and they realized that they did not have a Walther PPK pistol for the photo shoot - but the photographer on the set had a Walther LP 53 air pistol, so that is what was used for the official movie poster. (The long barreled .177mm air pistol was never seen in the movie, but that is what happened with they didn't have the proper movie props for that film).

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and here's another picture:
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...that particular LP 53 air pistol is apparently in a museum in Sweden. Just a bit of movie trivia....
 
#21 ·
Back around the turn of the century (that sounds funny, doesn't it? ...early 2000's) when I had discovered eBay, someone had a .44 Automag prop gun or some sort of limited edition copy prop gun of the AutoMag used in Sudden Impact. I was actually in a bidding war over it, but decided... in time... that paying as much for a plastic gun as a real one was foolish.

Also interesting to note... the famous scene in Dirty Harry (You feel lucky, punk?) ...that actor, the black bank robber, was in the first 4 Dirty Harry movies.
 
#23 ·
I've seen screenshots of the lawn scene that show a sling swivel in place of the stacking swivel.
 
#26 ·
Yall quoting Eastwood lines from his movies sure makes me laugh!
All I can think of is in that movie where he is transporting Sondra Locke & he pinches a bike offa that hippie-
"Hey Man That's Our Chopper, Charlie"!
"This Is My Gun, Clyde"!USNA