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Talk:Trespass (1992)

From Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
Revision as of 20:03, 26 January 2024 by MT2008 (talk | contribs)
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The 1911

It has Pachmyr grips, the rear sights match the AMT's exactly, and the slide is 6" with non-venitalted barrel ribbing. I'll try to match it. - Gunmaster45
What's weird is that in terms of its styling, it looks like a very old 1911, yet who was offering longslide 1911s before about 30 years ago? This might be something that was custom-built by the movie's armorer. -MT2008
If it is a custom gun built by the armorer, don't rule out the Hardballer. The slide could have been bead-blasted and blued. - Gunmaster45
Yeah, but that seems like kind of a weird modification to make. I can't think of any reason anyone would do that. Also note that the trigger is a standard M1911A1-style, not the longer trigger of the Hardballer. -MT2008
Not really. By remaking it blue, it makes it look more classic. And triggers can be swapped out easily enough. If someone was making a custom gun in an attempt to make it look classic, they'd most likely swap out the triggers for something more simple. - Gunmaster45
Look below who is back in Stop! Or My Mom Will Shoot. The famous 1911 long slide. And both films are filmed in the 1992... --Charly Driver 17:07, 13 July 2010 (UTC)
Sommwshardballer-1.jpg
Thanks for bringing this to my attention, Charly. And you're right; it may be the exact same gun in both movies (if it is from the same armory). Only problem is, it's not an AMT, so we still don't know the brand. -MT2008 01:34, 14 July 2010 (UTC)
I think that at this point (15 years after I originally started this page), my best guess as to the identity of this weapon is that it's probably an AMT Hardballer that was re-finished by a gunsmith. I considered the possibility that it might have started out as a regular 1911 that had its slide extended, similar to how Dash Mihok's Taurus PT99 in Romeo + Juliet had its slide cut in half and then extended beyond factory length. Ultimately, I finally concluded that the gun is a refinished AMT Hardballer based on the following details:
In the early-1990s, nobody else was making 7" 1911 slides besides AMT. (Long slide 1911 makers such as Caspian Arms and Safari Arms were in business then, but at the time, they had not yet started to make slides in that length, based on my research.)
The front sight and target rear sight are both definitely AMT-style, and built into the slide via reinforced ribbing (clearly visible in the last screencap that we have on the page).
The slide release appears to be stainless, which suggests that whatever gunsmith did the work on the gun blued only the slide and frame, but not the controls. (Likely: He was working on a short timeline to get the weapon ready for production use.)
It is worth pointing out is that the frame of the gun lacks many features found on the Hardballer series - namely, it lacks a match-style trigger and extended thumb and beavertail grip safeties, and of course (as the page notes), the gun has Pachmyr rubber grips instead of AMT grips. However, a plausible explanation is that the armorer simply replaced those features while the gun was disassembled for its re-bluing with stock 1911 trigger and safeties. It's pretty clear that they wanted this gun to have a long slide but otherwise look more like an older-style 1911, so replacing those controls would have been consistent with the overall design goal for the pistol. -MT2008 (talk) 20:03, 26 January 2024 (UTC)

The Long-Slide Gun

The gun could be a Western Arms Colt Hoag long-slide. 71.200.27.204 11:31, 22 November 2010 (UTC)

Western Arms is an airsoft gun maker; this is definitely not an airsoft gun, if that's what you're implying (I'm not even sure Western Arms made 1911 replicas back then, anyway). I did consider that this gun might have been a custom 1911 made by Jim Hoag, but I don't know when Jim Hoag started doing long slides. Anyway: The big give-away that this is an AMT Hardballer is the distinctive ribbing on top of the slide, which is also how the rear sight mounts to the gun. Jim Hoag 1911s don't have that style slide; only AMTs do. Also, the possibility that this gun was a Hoag custom job was discussed on the Colt forums many years ago, and they, too, rejected that idea. -MT2008 (talk) 20:03, 26 January 2024 (UTC)

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