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Difference between revisions of "(Day of the Jackal) - Custom Sniper Rifle"

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
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the rifle used in The Day Of The Jackal,1973. was created  by a master  english gunsmith from an off the shelf sporting rifle. two identical rifles were produced, one being returned to england as per agreement .the rifle was put on display at the Paris Cinematique with other props from the movie due to its award winning stature. at this point in time the manufacturer of the original rifles purchased for movie conversion use has not been determined. if at all possible  a definitive identification of the rifle manufacturer would be welcome for movie afficianados who wish to have movie prop weapons makers known. also a tribute should be paid to the master gunsmith  for creativity simply by mentionig his name for a very professional
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[[Image:TDOTJ-rifle-1.jpg|thumb|right|400px|The Jackal ([[Edward Fox]]) sights the assembled rifle.]]
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[[File:DayofthejackalBullet.jpg|thumb|right|400px|The gunsmith (Cyril Cusack) lays out six explosive bullets, next to a box of the ordinary rounds he converted them from.]]
  
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In ''[[The Day of the Jackal]]'' (1973), the assassin code-named The Jackal ([[Edward Fox]]) commissions a custom-made sniper rifle for his latest "job", designed to break down into slender parts, including a suppressor and telescopic sight, that can be concealed inside (or disguised as) the parts of a set of crutches.  The gunsmith modifies an off-the-shelf sporting rifle by removing the furniture, shortening the barrel, and cutting the bolt away from the chamber mechanism.
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'''N.B.''' In the novel, the master gunsmith who produces the rifle, Paul Goosens, is Belgian, a retired engineer for [[FN]]'s factory in Liège.  The film changed his nationality to Italian, and his surname to "Gozzi".
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Two identical rifles were produced for the film, one being returned to England as per agreement.
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The gun appears to be chambered for .22 Magnum, which is also what the "''GURPS Covert Ops''" pen-and-paper roleplaying game supplement book states, although some believe that it used .22 Hornet ammunition, judging by the bullets seen on screen.
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In the film and the novel, they were said to have hollow tips filled with mercury in liquid form, to make them "explosive." Under the Geneva Conventions, only standard ball ammunition is allowed for use on against enemy soldiers on battlefields, while it remains legal to use other kinds of ammunition when firing at inanimate targets, firing at "unlawful belligerents" such as terrorists and criminals, or equipping civil police forces. However, the Jackal is not concerned with such restrictions.
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[[Category:Gun]]
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[[Category:Sniper Rifle]]
 
[[Category:Fictional Firearm]]
 
[[Category:Fictional Firearm]]

Latest revision as of 23:52, 26 April 2018

The Jackal (Edward Fox) sights the assembled rifle.
The gunsmith (Cyril Cusack) lays out six explosive bullets, next to a box of the ordinary rounds he converted them from.

In The Day of the Jackal (1973), the assassin code-named The Jackal (Edward Fox) commissions a custom-made sniper rifle for his latest "job", designed to break down into slender parts, including a suppressor and telescopic sight, that can be concealed inside (or disguised as) the parts of a set of crutches. The gunsmith modifies an off-the-shelf sporting rifle by removing the furniture, shortening the barrel, and cutting the bolt away from the chamber mechanism.

N.B. In the novel, the master gunsmith who produces the rifle, Paul Goosens, is Belgian, a retired engineer for FN's factory in Liège. The film changed his nationality to Italian, and his surname to "Gozzi".

Two identical rifles were produced for the film, one being returned to England as per agreement.

The gun appears to be chambered for .22 Magnum, which is also what the "GURPS Covert Ops" pen-and-paper roleplaying game supplement book states, although some believe that it used .22 Hornet ammunition, judging by the bullets seen on screen.

In the film and the novel, they were said to have hollow tips filled with mercury in liquid form, to make them "explosive." Under the Geneva Conventions, only standard ball ammunition is allowed for use on against enemy soldiers on battlefields, while it remains legal to use other kinds of ammunition when firing at inanimate targets, firing at "unlawful belligerents" such as terrorists and criminals, or equipping civil police forces. However, the Jackal is not concerned with such restrictions.


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