Third Generation Smiths in TV & Film

In Good Guys Jack Bailey (Colin Hanks) carries a two-tone Smith & Wesson Performance Center .45 CQB.
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Double-bonus points for citing "The Good Guys" !!! While admitedly cheesy at times, it was largely a very funny and highly under-rated show, that was canceled very prematurely,IMO.
 
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I mean this more as an observation and hypothesis than any sort of criticism or accusation, but something just occured to me: Given the almost overwhelming proliferation of S&W semi-autos in TV and movies during this period, what do you think the chances are that S&W "greased the wheels'',so to speak? It's not at all far-fetched.....or unprecedented.
We know the cigarette companies were actively pushing their products in the movies of the mid 20th century, and later, it became an open buisness to have products and their logos prominently featured in movies and TV.
Producers could have easily used any number of pistol facsimiles in their productions, yet the 39/59 designs have been more than proportionately cast. The odds of this being mere coincidence would be very slim, IMO.
 
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There are genuine, known examples of this. Harry Sanford, the man behind the ATM guns and earlier, the original Automag pistols contacted Clint Eastwood and finagled the .44 Automag in to the role of "best supporting actor" in the movie Sudden Impact.
 
There are genuine, known examples of this. Harry Sanford, the man behind the ATM guns and earlier, the original Automag pistols contacted Clint Eastwood and finagled the .44 Automag in to the role of "best supporting actor" in the movie Sudden Impact.

Glock HAD to have done that in U.S. Marshals. The whole movie was an advertisement for Glock. That's where Tommy Lee Jones told Robert Downey to "get rid of that sissy Nickle pistol and get yourself a Glock". Then later when Downey got one he says "these things are so cool. You can shoot them underwater"

I don't think S&W paid for movies to use them. They were just so common in the 90's. they were the S&W revolver in the 50's. Everybody had them.

It's like the Beretta 92. It was THE 9MM of the 80's and 90's. Hardly a movie got made without one in it.
 
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At the risk of a thread drift... funny you say that about the Beretta 92.

A story was relayed by some Hollywood prop man that the famous 92 used by John McClane in the Die Hard series wasn't just the same model that was used in the Lethal Weapon series... but rather, it was actually the SAME pistol!

That one has a high round count!
 
Product placement is as big a part of a film as the actors. Many times scripts are written with a specific firearm in mind, other times it's "what would a cop in "x" city use" or "what would this type of bad guy use" and still other times it's a matter of what's available from the prop house.
 
At the risk of a thread drift... funny you say that about the Beretta 92.

A story was relayed by some Hollywood prop man that the famous 92 used by John McClane in the Die Hard series wasn't just the same model that was used in the Lethal Weapon series... but rather, it was actually the SAME pistol!

That one has a high round count!

It is. You can see the gun on the IMFDB. It looks really beat up. It's in some display. It was definitely used in more than 1 movie.
 
Double-bonus points for citing "The Good Guys" !!! While admitedly cheesy at times, it was largely a very funny and highly under-rated show, that was canceled very prematurely,IMO.

That .45 CQB/4563 PC gets my vote for best looking .45 ever.
 
A couple hours ago, I would've sworn i saw Angelina Jolie waving around a gen3 in one of her comic-book movies. I'm pretty sure the actor 'Common' (in the same movie) had one,too.
 
He used a Beretta 92fs for a couple of seasons. Even mentioned why he liked it. Manual safety and loading from open slide. Saved him in a gun grab when bad guy pointed it at him and it clicked instead of banged. He always carried it safety on. Now he's got a 5904 blued. Never explained the switch
Dekes lost his Beretta during a chase. At the end of that episode, Heddy gave him a S&W box and says "try not to lose this one".

I get the impression whoever wrote that is definitely into guns. The sub-plot was subtle enough that casual viewers don't catch it, but it goes like this:
  • Kensi- everyone likes Sigs. We all have Sigs. Why do you have that old Beretta? It's bulky. Get a Sig.
  • Dekes- I've carried my Beretta a long time. I've trained on a slide safety, my fingers know where to go. I'm not losing all that just to be cool. Sigs have a totally different layout.
  • <loses the Beretta, looks sad>
  • Heddy- here, take this Smith and keep your muscle memory. Same controls as Beretta, more compact like that snot-nosed kid's P228.
 
5904 on Big Bang Theory

[ame]https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=4POmPxa1Vpk[/ame]

Please note that

A. The decocker is in the SAFE position throughout the entire scene.

And

B. Penny racks the slide BEFORE inserting the magazine and still manages to chamber a round.
 
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