Error creating thumbnail: File missing Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

The Interview: Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (WZHBot moved page Interview, The to The Interview over redirect: Bot: Fixing title according to new titling rule.)
(No difference)

Revision as of 21:33, 28 July 2023

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
The Interview (2014)


The following weapons were used in the film The Interview:


Makarov PM

Aaron Rapaport (Seth Rogen) and Park Sook-yin (Diana Bang) carry Makarov PMs as their sidearms. They use them to take over the broadcasting center. North Korean soldiers can also be seen with this weapon.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Makarov PM - 9x18mm Makarov
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Aaron Rapaport (Seth Rogen) takes a Makarov PM.

Unknown MP5 Variant

SEAL Team 6 members that rescue the protagonists can be seen with an unknown variant of the Heckler & Koch MP5, fitted with UMP stocks and ACOG scopes.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Heckler & Koch MP5A3 with UMP stock, RIS foregrip, KAC railed forend, M68 Aimpoint red-dot sight, and weaponlight - 9x19mm
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
An MP5 is seen.

AK-74

In one scene, a North Korean soldier can be seen armed with an AK-74, pointing it at the protagonists when they meet North Korean Director of Communications Park Sook-yin (Diana Bang). It is a stand-in for the North Korean Type 88 variant of the AK-74.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
AK-74 with synthetic furniture - 5.45x39mm
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
A North Korean soldier brandishes an AK-74 as the protagonists meet Director of Communications Park Sook-yin (Diana Bang). Note the lack of a side scope mount and, amusingly, the rear sight is flipped completely up (presumably to allow the sling to hang over the rifle, judging by the actor's pose).

Norinco Type 84S-1

One North Korean soldier can be seen armed with a Norinco Type 84S-1, distinguished by the hooded front sight and lightly-curved 5.56mm magazine. While the North Koreans use the Chinese AK clones, they use the 7.62mm Norinco Type 56, not the Type 84S.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Norinco Type 84S-1 - 5.56x45mm
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
A North Korean soldier armed with a Norinco Type 84S-1 as Park Sook-yin disembarks from the helicopter.

RPD Light Machine Gun

In one scene, an RPD light machine gun can be seen being taken from a hidden compartment and fired at North Korean soldiers by Director of Communications Park Sook-yin.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
RPD Light Machine Gun - 7.62x39mm
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Park Sook-yin opens fire with an RPD light machine gun.

Type 73 Light Machine Gun

In promotional material for the film, such as the poster shown above, North Korean soldiers can be seen brandishing Type 73 light machine guns.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Type 73 Light Machine Gun - 7.62x54mmR

DShK Heavy Machine Gun

A DShK heavy machine gun can be seen mounted on a T-55 tank that Kim Jong-un (Randall Park) shows off to the protagonists. The film claims the tank was "a gift from Stalin" despite the fact that the earliest T-55 model entered production in 1958, and the starring T-55A entered in 1961, nine years after Stalin's death, and well into the process of de-Stalinization within the Soviet Union. The T-55A used in the film in fact belongs to the 1966 ZTS-Martin production from Czechoslovakia and currently resides in the collection of the Chilliwack Military Education Centre.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
DShK heavy machine gun on tripod - 12.7x108mm
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
A DShK heavy machine gun mounted on a Czechoslovak, pretending to be Soviet, pretending to be in North Korea, T-55 tank.