A Yakuza's Daughter Never Cries: Difference between revisions
A Yakuza's Daughter Never Cries: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
A Yakuza's Daughter Never Cries: Difference between revisions
Assassin ([[Isao Karasawa]]) uses an Izhmash Tigr, a commercial version of the [[SVD Dragunov]], fitted with a sound suppressor at the film beggining.
Assassin ([[Isao Karasawa]]) uses an Izhmash Tigr, a commercial version of the [[SVD Dragunov]], fitted with a sound suppressor at the film beggining.
[[Image:SVD-TigerCarbine.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Commercial "Tiger Carbine" (aka "Dragunov Tiger") version sold in the US, with synthetic furnishings used on domestic SVD-M modernized variant - 7.62x54mm R. More recent Tiger versions have a completely smooth receiver cover.]]
[[Image:SVD-TigerCarbine.jpg|thumb|none|400px|Tiger Carbine with military barrel, bipod, and synthetic furniture - 7.62x54mm R]]
[[Image:Doch yakudzy rifle 1 1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Assassin takes aim with his rifle.]]
[[Image:Doch yakudzy rifle 1 1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Assassin takes aim with his rifle.]]
[[Image:Doch yakudzy rifle 1 2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Close view of the trigger...]]
[[Image:Doch yakudzy rifle 1 2.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Close view of the trigger...]]
A Yakuza's Daughter Never Cries (original title Doch yakudzy, Дочь якудзы) is a 2010 Russian comedy directed by Sergey Bodrov (Prisoner of the Mountains (Kavkazskiy plennik) and Gulshat Omarova and starring Vadim Dorofeyev and Chika Arakawa. This film also known under the title Yakuza Girl.
P.S. Yakudza is a Russian name of yakuza. Letter D added to this word due the rules of the Polivanov system of cyrillization Japanese language.
The following weapons were used in the film A Yakuza's Daughter Never Cries:
Khokhol (ukrainian) (Vitaliy Khaev) can be seen with the Nagant M1895 at the film climax. It appears to be a Blef ("bluff") blank firing revolver, a conversion of live Nagant.