Discord-logo.jpg Join our Discord!
If you have been locked out of your account you can request a password reset here.

Difference between revisions of "Talk:Open Wound"

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 43: Line 43:
 
==M1 Carbine==
 
==M1 Carbine==
 
[[File:M1 Carbine.jpg|400px|thumb|none|M1 Carbine with heat shield, adjustable rear sight and 15-round magazine - .30 Carbine]]
 
[[File:M1 Carbine.jpg|400px|thumb|none|M1 Carbine with heat shield, adjustable rear sight and 15-round magazine - .30 Carbine]]
 +
[[File:M1 Carbine (Ecuador).jpg|600px|thumb|none|Fabio Nieves shooting a M1 Carbine in a  military shooting range training his character]]
  
 
==Heckler & Koch HK33==
 
==Heckler & Koch HK33==

Revision as of 14:26, 20 August 2023


Machete
Mono con Gallinas (2013).jpg
Country ?
Directed by ?
Release Date ?
Language Spanish
Studio ?
Distributor ?
Main Cast
Character Actor


Mono con Gallinas or Open Wound is a film which narrates the events of the conflict between Ecuador and Peru on the southern border in 1941, when Jorge (Rene Pastor) joins the Ecuadorian military and is captured by Peruvian forces. While recovering from his injuries, a fellow captive plans an escape, and Jorge must decide to stay away or stay with the nurse he's in love with.

The movie is based on the life of the great-uncle of the film director Alfredo León León, Jorge León Chávez when he was 18 years old and was a soldier of the border conflict against Peru in 1941. Much of the story is fiction reconstructed from the experiences of Jorge, who was imprisoned for 8 or 9 months by the Peruvian army in Iquitos and because no one found out about this, they gave him for dead, thus far appearing in military records as killed in war. The film is not about the war itself, rather it is the story of Jorge's captivity, and it is not considered a biopic or historical document. The name of the film was given by the name given by the opposing sides, where the Ecuadorians were called monkeys and the Peruvians chickens.


The following weapons were used in the film Open Wound:


Pistols

Browning Hi-Power

This pistol was the standard weapon of the armed forces of both countries, which is used by the following characters in the film and also it is the only semi-automatic pistol to appear throughout the film's story.

Browning Hi-Power - 9x19mm
Subofficer Mario (Pietro Sibille) with his Browning Hi-Power pistol aiming Jorge while escaping from the military camp
Sergeant Flores (Alfredo Espinoza) taking a black beetle with his gun near the river collecting supplies

Rifles

Czech vz. 33 Mauser

The vz. 33 Czech Mauser was the standard rifle of the Ecuadorian armed forces during the 1941 conflict, here the protagonist Jorge uses this rifle during the events of the film.

Czech vz. 16/33 - 7.92x57mm Mauser - Gewehr 33/40 (t)
Jorge with his rifle hunting a monkey in the jungle
View of the rifle from the other angle in the scene that Jorge points at a Shuar Indian who gives him a dead monkey to eat

Machine Guns

Throughout the history of the Ecuadorian armed forces, Ecuador had a close alliance with Germany at the start of World War II, which Germany was the main seller of machine guns in that country that were used as standards until the decade of the 50's

MG42

MG42 7.92x57mm Mauser
Julio Grueso (Fabio Nieves) and his friends arriving to the military camp carring the MG42 with the left hand

Special Weapons

One of the weapons that although they did not appear in the movie, these weapons served as training for one of the actors who played their characters. The filming of the film took place near a military base of the special forces of the Ecuadorian army called IWIA.

M1 Carbine

M1 Carbine with heat shield, adjustable rear sight and 15-round magazine - .30 Carbine
Fabio Nieves shooting a M1 Carbine in a military shooting range training his character

Heckler & Koch HK33

This is the standar rifle of the ecuatorian army to date, still in service

Heckler & Koch HK33A2 with 40-round magazine - 5.56x45mm

FN MAG

FN MAG 58 - 7.62x51mm NATO
A ecuatorian soldier teaching how to aiming in some directions for the scene of the film for the actor

Do Not Sell My Personal Information