Kokoda (2010): Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Kokoda (2010): Difference between revisions
:This is not an M1A1 Thompson. I think that is what it is suppossed to be, but the forestock is wrong (it is rounded at the front, possibly damage), the front sight post is too high, the rear sight is just wrong, the bolt handle is that from an M1921/M1928 and not that from an M1 series Thompson. Additionally, the standard M1A1 could not accept drum magazines. I know that there were many different cost cutting measures taken during the production run of the Thompson, and that as a result there were a number of very different but not differently designated Thompsons that were produced, but I do not think that this is the case here. I think that this is a parts gun, and a very bad one at that. It does look basically like a Thompson, but not at all like one if it is examined. Actually, I just looked at it again, it looks like a resin gun, and not a firearm at all.[[User:SAWGunner89|SAWGunner89]] 18:03, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
:This is not an M1A1 Thompson. I think that is what it is supposed to be, but the forestock is wrong (it is rounded at the front, possibly damage), the front sight post is too high, the rear sight is just wrong, the bolt handle is that from an M1921/M1928 and not that from an M1 series Thompson. Additionally, the standard M1A1 could not accept drum magazines. I know that there were many different cost cutting measures taken during the production run of the Thompson, and that as a result there were a number of very different but not differently designated Thompsons that were produced, but I do not think that this is the case here. I think that this is a parts gun, and a very bad one at that. It does look basically like a Thompson, but not at all like one if it is examined. Actually, I just looked at it again, it looks like a resin gun, and not a firearm at all.[[User:SAWGunner89|SAWGunner89]] 18:03, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
Captain Sam Templeton uses an [[Thompson#M1A1_Thompson|M1A1 Thompson]] during the initial skirmish at Deniki. Interestingly enough, an AIF soldier can at one point be seen using an M1A1 Thompson with a 50-round drum magazine.
Captain Sam Templeton uses an [[Thompson#M1A1_Thompson|M1A1 Thompson]] during the initial skirmish at Deniki. Interestingly enough, an AIF soldier can at one point be seen using an M1A1 Thompson with a 50-round drum magazine.
[[Image:M1sb.jpg|thumb|none|500px|M1A1 Thompson with 30-round magazine - .45 ACP]]
[[Image:M1sb.jpg|thumb|none|500px|M1A1 Thompson with 30-round magazine - .45 ACP]]
Line 98:
Line 98:
==Webley Mk IV==
==Webley Mk IV==
A [[Webley Mk IV]] is used by Brigadier General Arnold Potts when his HQ is ambushed by Japanese soldiers.
A [[Webley Mk IV]] is used by Brigadier General Arnold Potts when his HQ is ambushed by Japanese soldiers.
[[Image:Webley-MK-4.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Webley Mk.IV WW2 British Army version chambered for .38 S&W]]
[[Image:Webley-MK-4.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Webley Mk.IV WW2 British Army version chambered for .38 S&W]]
[[Image:K ArnoldPotts WebleyMkVI.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Brigadier General Arnold Potts draws his Webley Mk VI when Japanese soldiers open fire.]]
[[Image:K ArnoldPotts WebleyMkVI.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Brigadier General Arnold Potts draws his Webley Mk VI when Japanese soldiers open fire.]]
[[Image:K ArnoldPotts WebleyMkVI 2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Potts cocks the hammer on his Webley.]]
[[Image:K ArnoldPotts WebleyMkVI 2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Potts cocks the hammer on his Webley.]]
Kokoda is a 2010 ABC documentary about the Kokoda Campaign. Using a mixture of archival footage, interviews and dramatic reconstructions, it tells the story of the fierce and bitter campaign, from the fighting on the ground to the politics behind the battle. It is noteworthy for the impressive effort put into obtaining historically accurate firearms for the productions.
The following weapons were used in the documentary Kokoda:
The main weapon of both the 39th Battalion Militiamen and the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) in the documentary is the Lee-Enfield No.1 Mk.III*, in particular by Captain Basil Catterns and Pte. Laurie 'Smoky' Hausen.
This is not an M1A1 Thompson. I think that is what it is supposed to be, but the forestock is wrong (it is rounded at the front, possibly damage), the front sight post is too high, the rear sight is just wrong, the bolt handle is that from an M1921/M1928 and not that from an M1 series Thompson. Additionally, the standard M1A1 could not accept drum magazines. I know that there were many different cost cutting measures taken during the production run of the Thompson, and that as a result there were a number of very different but not differently designated Thompsons that were produced, but I do not think that this is the case here. I think that this is a parts gun, and a very bad one at that. It does look basically like a Thompson, but not at all like one if it is examined. Actually, I just looked at it again, it looks like a resin gun, and not a firearm at all.SAWGunner89 18:03, 1 March 2011 (UTC)
Captain Sam Templeton uses an M1A1 Thompson during the initial skirmish at Deniki. Interestingly enough, an AIF soldier can at one point be seen using an M1A1 Thompson with a 50-round drum magazine.
39th Battalion Militiamen and AIF soldiers carry Owen Submachine Gun's during the Australian counterattack and the battles at the Buna-Gona beachfront.
Several Japanese soldiers use the Type 92 Heavy Machine Gun, noticeably the soldiers who bypass and ambush Brigadier General Arnold Potts headquarters at Isurava.