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 Yakuza (1975): Difference between revisions

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
Line 13: Line 13:
[[Image:S&WModel10SnubEarly.jpg|thumb|300px|none|Smith & Wesson Model 10 Revolver Snub Nose with square buttl]]
[[Image:S&WModel10SnubEarly.jpg|thumb|300px|none|Smith & Wesson Model 10 Revolver Snub Nose with square buttl]]


== Colt Detective Special ==
== Smith & Wesson Model 36 ==
Used by various Yakuza soldiers throughout the movie.
Used by various Yakuza soldiers throughout the movie.
[[Image:Colt Detective Special.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Colt Detective Special 1st Gen - .38 Special]]
[[Image:S&W 36.jpg|thumb|none|350px|Smith and Wesson Model 36 - .38 special - 5 shot]]
[[Image:Y8.jpg|thumb|none|400px|]]
[[Image:Y9.jpg|thumb|none|400px|]]


== M1911A1 ==
== M1911A1 ==

Revision as of 19:36, 18 September 2009

Error creating thumbnail: File missing

Nice, but where's the trigger?

This article or section is incomplete. You can help IMFDB by expanding it.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
The Yakuza (1975)
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Ken Takakura as Tanaka Ken in The Yakuza

The Yakuza (1975) was one of the first times that the Hollywood Tough guy/Private Eye genre film met the Japanese Yakuza genre film.An old World War II buddy (Brian Keith) asks Robert Mitchum's character Harry Kilmer to travel back to Japan and rescue his daughter from kidnappers. The Kidnappers are Yakuza and things are more complicated than they appear on the surface. Starring Takakura Ken (who was a massive star in Japan), Robert Mitchum, Brian Keith and a young Richard Jordan. It was written by Robert Towne (Chinatown) and Paul Schrader (Taxi Driver) and directed by Sidney Pollack (Three Days of the Condor , Jeremiah Johnson). Warner Brothers expected a hit, but instead the movie was a bomb at the box office. However over the years it achieved cult film status and became a staple at film schools and film festivals. Especially in Europe. In the years before his death in 2008 Sidney Pollack was invited to speak at different universities in Europe and the United States about his vast body of work. He stated that one of the movies most often asked about was The Yakuza. It's interesting to note that the movie was filmed almost entirely on location in Japan with a mostly Japanese crew and ,by all accounts, the production was trouble free. Unlike Black Rain fifteen years later which almost didn't get finished due to politics and labor issues. It's unclear if Japan had changed or if the two production companies approached things in a different way.


The following guns can be seen in The Yakuza (1975):

Smith & Wesson Model 10

Used by Harry Kilmer (Robert Mitchum) and his sidekick Dusty (Richard Jordan).

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Smith & Wesson Model 10 Revolver Snub Nose with square buttl

Smith & Wesson Model 36

Used by various Yakuza soldiers throughout the movie.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Smith and Wesson Model 36 - .38 special - 5 shot
Error creating thumbnail: File missing
Error creating thumbnail: File missing

M1911A1

Used by Harry Kilmer (Robert Mitchum) and various Yakuza gangsters.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
World War 2 issued Colt M1911A1 Pistol - .45 ACP.
File:Yakuza4.jpg
Robert Mitchum as Harry Kilmer with M1911A1 and double barreled shotgun

12 Gauge Double Barreled Shotgun

Used by Harry Kilmer (Robert Mitchum). The manufacturer is unknown. It is a hammerless model with what appears to be either a twenty - eight or thirty inch barrels.

Error creating thumbnail: File missing
1960s Era Commercial Stevens hammerless side by side shotgun - 12 Gauge.
File:Yakuza4.jpg
Robert Mitchum as Harry Kilmer with M1911A1 and 12 Gauge Double Barreled Shotgun