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Difference between revisions of "The Alsatians or the Two Matildas"
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[[File:LesAlsaciens-Mauser5.jpg|thumb|none|600px|After some hesitation, Peter Imhof gets a personal order to take aim at the deserter (Ep. 04). This scene shows many parallels to the 1993 German movie ''[[Stalingrad (1993)|Stalingrad]]''.]] | [[File:LesAlsaciens-Mauser5.jpg|thumb|none|600px|After some hesitation, Peter Imhof gets a personal order to take aim at the deserter (Ep. 04). This scene shows many parallels to the 1993 German movie ''[[Stalingrad (1993)|Stalingrad]]''.]] | ||
− | =Machine Guns | + | =Machine Guns= |
==MG 42== | ==MG 42== | ||
In the last episode, Antoine Roederer and Louis-Charles Kempf-de la Tour are seen handling an [[MG42]]. | In the last episode, Antoine Roederer and Louis-Charles Kempf-de la Tour are seen handling an [[MG42]]. |
Revision as of 12:19, 11 July 2023
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The Alsatians or the Two Matildas is a 1996 French miniseries consisting of four episodes and tells the story of Alsace between 1870 and 1953 through the history of fictional families. It is also the story of a region: Alsace, the "beautiful province" with a glorious past. This region was shaped by the history and rivalry of the two great powers, Germany and France, which for a long time considered each other as "hereditary enemies". Therefore, for centuries Alsace was the scene of conflicts, torn between two cultures and two nations. Within a century, Alsace had to change its nationality four times: French after the Thirty Years' War under Louis XIV, it remained German for almost fifty years from 1870. In 1918 it belonged to France again, from 1940 to Germany, and finally, in 1944 it became French again.
The following weapons were used in the miniseries The Alsatians or the Two Matildas:
Handguns
MAS Mle. 1892
Mle 1892 Revolvers are carried by Charles de la Tour (Jacques Coltelloni) and Ruprecht (Jürgen Zwingel) during the first episode set during the Franco-Prussian War, which is an anachronism. A better choice would be Lefaucheux Revolver. Louis de la Tour (Michel Voïta), Ernst von Wismar (Richard Sammel), Max Seligman (Marc Berman), and a German sailor are seen with Mle. 1892 revolvers in the second episode which takes place from 1904 to 1919.
Walther PP
Hauptmann (Captain) Kiener (Peter Semler) (since he is in the Waffen SS, his rank should be a Hauptsturmführer) is briefly seen with a Walther PP pistol in Ep. 04.
Submachine Guns
MP40
Several German soldiers in Ep. 03 and 04 are armed with MP40s, which are also used by Louis-Charles Kempf-de la Tour (Stanislas Carré de Malberg), Peter Imhof (Jean-Michel Fête), and Antoine Roederer (Philippe Polet) in a flashback.
Sten Mk. II
The British Sten Mk II is used by French Résistance fighters in Ep. 04.
Shotguns
12 Gauge Double Barreled Shotgun
Double Barreled Shotguns are used by Franzl (Frédéric Pierrot, François Dyrek), Edwin Wismar-Marbach (Manfred Andrae), Paul Imhof (Jean-Philippe Meyer).
Rifles
Gras Mle. 1874
French troops in 1870 are seen with Gras Model 1874 rifles standing in for period-correct Chassepot 1866 rifles. Yerri Laugel (Lucas Belvaux) is also seen with one of them.
Dreyse Rifle Mockup
Rifle mockups that resemble Dreyse Model 1841 rifles are wielded by Prussian soldiers. Compared to the real Dreyses, they have longer muzzles and no rear safeties.
Mauser Puška vz. 98/22
Instead of correct Mauser Gewehr 1898 rifles, German soldiers and sailors in the second episode are armed with Vz. 98/22 Czech Mausers.
Berthier Mle. 1892 Carabine
Various French soldiers and some Gendarmerie officers wield Berthier Mle 1892 Artillery Carbines.
Berthier Mle. 1916 Carabine
Some Berthier Model 1916 Carabines are also seen carried by French soldiers.
M1 Carbine
Free French and US Army troops carry M1 Carbines in the fourth episode. All the M1 Carbines are equipped with late WWII bayonet lugs, which is anachronistic for 1944.
M1 Garand
US soldiers also wield M1 Garands.
Mauser Rifle
Unknown Mauser Short Rifles are used by German Wehrmacht, SS soldiers, and Polizei officers. Therese rifles have turned-down bolt handles, grasping grooves, under-mounted sling swivels, tangent-leaf rear sights, and parade hooks. A possible guess could be the Brazilian M1922 or M1935 short rifles manufactured by the Czechoslovakian Zbrojovka Brno company.
Machine Guns
MG 42
In the last episode, Antoine Roederer and Louis-Charles Kempf-de la Tour are seen handling an MG42.