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Difference between revisions of "Déjà Vu (1988)"
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|picture = Deja Vu 1988 poster.jpg | |picture = Deja Vu 1988 poster.jpg | ||
|caption = ''DVD Cover'' | |caption = ''DVD Cover'' | ||
− | |country = [[Image: | + | |country = [[Image:POL.jpg|25px]] Poland<br>[[Image:SOV.jpg|25px]] USSR |
|director = [[Juliusz Machulski]] | |director = [[Juliusz Machulski]] | ||
|date= 1988 | |date= 1988 | ||
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}} | }} | ||
− | '''Déjà Vu''' (original Polish title ''Deja vu'', Russian title ''Dezha vyu'') is a 1988 Polish-Soviet criminal comedy directed by [[Juliusz Machulski]]. The plot | + | '''Déjà Vu''' (original Polish title ''Deja vu'', Russian title ''Dezha vyu'') is a 1988 Polish-Soviet criminal comedy directed by [[Juliusz Machulski]]. The plot is set in 1925. Chicago mobster Mick Nitsch (who is actually Russian-born and named Mikita Nechyporuk) ([[Vladimir Golovin]]) became police informant in exchange for his freedom. He flees to Soviet Russia to escape vengeful mobsters whom he betrayed. The mob leaders send their best hitman, Johnny Pollack ([[Jerzy Stuhr]]), to the city of Odessa to take him out. |
{{Film Title}} | {{Film Title}} | ||
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[[Image:Deja Vu 1988-Nagant-3.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Pollack, dressed as the officer, threatens the hotel porter ([[Vitali Shapovalov]]).]] | [[Image:Deja Vu 1988-Nagant-3.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Pollack, dressed as the officer, threatens the hotel porter ([[Vitali Shapovalov]]).]] | ||
[[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | ||
− | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-5.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack loads the revolver with cartridges that he smuggled inside a collection of butterflies. These are not the Nagant's distinct 7. | + | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-5.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack loads the revolver with cartridges that he smuggled inside a collection of butterflies. These are not the Nagant's distinct 7.62x38mmR cartridges but rather more conventional pistol rounds.]] |
− | cartridges but rather more conventional pistol rounds.]] | ||
[[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-6.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack aims at an escaping Nechyporuk. The ejector rod is now in the correct place.]] | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-6.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack aims at an escaping Nechyporuk. The ejector rod is now in the correct place.]] | ||
[[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-7.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack holds his revolver during the filming of ''Battleship Potemkin'''s famous Odessa steps sequence. The ejector rod is again extended.]] | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Nagant-7.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack holds his revolver during the filming of ''Battleship Potemkin'''s famous Odessa steps sequence. The ejector rod is again extended.]] | ||
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== 1910 Mauser Pocket Pistol == | == 1910 Mauser Pocket Pistol == | ||
Pollack ([[Jerzy Stuhr]]) uses a [[Mauser Model 1910]] pocket pistol as a backup weapon. | Pollack ([[Jerzy Stuhr]]) uses a [[Mauser Model 1910]] pocket pistol as a backup weapon. | ||
− | [[File:MauserM1910.jpg|thumb|none|300px|1910 Mauser Pocket Pistol - 6. | + | [[File:MauserM1910.jpg|thumb|none|300px|1910 Mauser Pocket Pistol - 6.35x16mmSR]] |
[[Image:Deja Vu 1988-Mauser Mod10-1.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Pollack draws a Mauser Model 1910 pocket pistol that was hidden inside a book.]] | [[Image:Deja Vu 1988-Mauser Mod10-1.jpg|thumb|600px|none|Pollack draws a Mauser Model 1910 pocket pistol that was hidden inside a book.]] | ||
[[File:DejaVu-HD-MauserPocket-2a.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | [[File:DejaVu-HD-MauserPocket-2a.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | ||
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[[File:DejaVu-HD-Mosin-7.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack fires.]] | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Mosin-7.jpg|thumb|none|600px|Pollack fires.]] | ||
[[File:DejaVu-HD-Mosin-8.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Mosin-8.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | ||
− | [[File:Deja Vu 1988-Mosin-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|"Russian Army soldiers" with M91/30 rifles during ''Battleship Polemkin'' filming.]] | + | [[File:Deja Vu 1988-Mosin-4.jpg|thumb|none|600px|"Russian Army soldiers" with M91/30 rifles during ''Battleship Polemkin'' filming. The rifles used in this scene have the hoods on the front sight removed to make them look like original M1891 Dragoon rifles.]] |
== Mosin Nagant "Obrez" == | == Mosin Nagant "Obrez" == | ||
− | A [[ | + | A [[Mosin Nagant "obrez"]] is the weapon of Nechyporuk's henchman Shpan (Vladimir Nosyrev). |
[[File:Mosin-Nagan-obrez.jpg|thumb|none|350px|Mosin Nagant "obrez"]] | [[File:Mosin-Nagan-obrez.jpg|thumb|none|350px|Mosin Nagant "obrez"]] | ||
[[File:DejaVu-HD-Obrez-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] | [[File:DejaVu-HD-Obrez-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|]] |
Revision as of 05:40, 1 August 2020
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Déjà Vu (original Polish title Deja vu, Russian title Dezha vyu) is a 1988 Polish-Soviet criminal comedy directed by Juliusz Machulski. The plot is set in 1925. Chicago mobster Mick Nitsch (who is actually Russian-born and named Mikita Nechyporuk) (Vladimir Golovin) became police informant in exchange for his freedom. He flees to Soviet Russia to escape vengeful mobsters whom he betrayed. The mob leaders send their best hitman, Johnny Pollack (Jerzy Stuhr), to the city of Odessa to take him out.
The following weapons were used in the film Déjà Vu (1988):
Handguns
Nagant M1895
When Pollack (Jerzy Stuhr) runs out of weapons, he disarms an actor in the role of a Tsarist Army officer (Oleg Fedulov) during filming of Battleship Potemkin, taking his Nagant M1895 revolver. Nagant revolvers are also seen during the shootout in Nechyporuk's illegal casino. The revolver is an anachronistic post-1930 version.
1910 Mauser Pocket Pistol
Pollack (Jerzy Stuhr) uses a Mauser Model 1910 pocket pistol as a backup weapon.
Unknown pistols
Several mobsters in the Chicago shootout sequence are armed with semi-auto pistols that are seen only at a distance and cannot be identified.
Submachine Guns
PPSh-41 (Mocked-Up as M1921AC Thompson)
Police and mobsters in the Chicago shootout sequence use M1921AC Thompson submachine guns. They are actually modified PPSh-41 submachine guns, equipped with barrels with fake cooling fins and Cutts compensators, and characteristic Thompson-style furniture. Despite the high similarity, they can still be distinguished from a distance between the magazine and trigger group. This scene was filmed in Poland; the "classic" gangster's "Tommy Gun" couldn't be procured and the Soviet PPSh had to be mocked-up for it.
M1928A1 Thompson
A M1928A1 Thompson SMG is used by Nechyporuk (Vladimir Golovin), Mishka Yaponchik (Nikolai Karachentsov) and later Pollack (Jerzy Stuhr). This same weapon changes hands several times. According to the the moviemakers, the screen gun was able to fire semi-auto only, and actors only mimicked firing while the sound of full auto fire was added and muzzle flashes imitated by pyrotechnics.
Rifles
Mosin Nagant M1891/30
Mosin Nagant M1891/30 rifles with bayonets are seen in several scenes, notably on the shooting range, where Pollack (Jerzy Stuhr) shows real marksmanship, and during the filming of Battleship Polemkin.
Mosin Nagant "Obrez"
A Mosin Nagant "obrez" is the weapon of Nechyporuk's henchman Shpan (Vladimir Nosyrev).
Machine Guns
Maxim M1910
A Maxim M1910 is seen in Nechyporuk's hideout.
Other Weapons
Percussion Cap Musket
During the performing of Tosca at the Chicago Opera, soldiers escorting Mario Cavaradossi to the execution carry percussion cap muskets. The guns are most likely modern non-firing replicas, but it's hard to identify the base weapon.
Pollack's "Umbrella Gun"
Pollack (Jerzy Stuhr) used a custom gun disguised as an umbrella.
Shotgun in Case
In one scene, the Armenian Polakyans family erroneously take Pollack for their long-lost relative. In the scene in the train, Aram Polakyan (Murad Janibekyan), who is chosen to escort a drunk Pollack, carries a case for a disassembled shotgun and a bandolier with shotgun shells.