Travis Bickell, Harry Callahan or James Bond???

Dirty Harry made Smith & Wesson a household name. You can ask anyone who is completely clueless about guns, and they will immediately know what a Smith & Wesson .44 Magnum is and who is most famous for packing one. Not as many people know Travis Bickel (I haven't even seen Taxi Driver yet). As for Roger Moore, I believe his use of a .44 Magnum in Live and Let Die was a deliberate jab at Clint Eastwood. I never liked him as Bond either, so he would be last on any list of mine.
 
Dirty Harry made Smith & Wesson a household name. You can ask anyone who is completely clueless about guns, and they will immediately know what a Smith & Wesson .44 Magnum is and who is most famous for packing one. Not as many people know Travis Bickel (I haven't even seen Taxi Driver yet). As for Roger Moore, I believe his use of a .44 Magnum in Live and Let Die was a deliberate jab at Clint Eastwood. I never liked him as Bond either, so he would be last on any list of mine.

Of course the answer was Harry.
He's no doubt the initial reason I'm on this forum and own some S&W. So far all I own is S&W, but since I got on to the kick on owning, I've been going down a lot of rabbit holes, including movies that these were used in, among other revolvers, manufacture, reloading, and every other thing associated with owning a firearm, But the initial reason I will have to admit is "Dirty Harry".
The 29-2 6.5 is perfectly aesthetic.
 
Sgt Murtaugh? :D
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Yes, Murtaugh carried a non-P&R 4" Model 19 with Pachmayr Presentation grips.
 
Which one is the better gun handler?

I'm predisposed to go with Callahan, he practices and competes (Magnum Force).

Bickle is a bad guy and 007 isn't a gunfighter.

His wrist grabbing support hand makes me turn my head and cough every time I watch it. I know, it looks cooler to the a mis-informed audience, but Harry, really???
 
i dont get the point...

you have an english actor playing with a gun, who most likely crapped his pants at the idea of touching a gun.

An american actor who has always been in the category of "mentally impaired" play acting as a vigilante, ironically the first woke white knight charecter..

Or Clint Eastwood, who is visibly tired the **** out in each calahan film. The same weariness the charecter is supposed to have.


Harry is the only choice


Sean Connery was a Scot, a veteran, and certainly no wimp. Check him out.
 
Are you trying to imply that somebody other than Harry used one of these firearms?

Back at the SHOT show in 2012 Smith and Wesson had about a dozen firearms on display in their booth. This is one of the revolvers they brought with them

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Is that the actual gun used in the movie?
That would be one of the coolest things in the world to own that I can think of, but it is Obviously, and rightly in the S&W museum.
 
Sean Connery was a Scot, a veteran, and certainly no wimp. Check him out.

Yeah but, It was Roger Moore holding the 29 not Sir Sean. His summation of Roger Moore was spot on.
 
Yeah but, It was Roger Moore holding the 29 not Sir Sean. His summation of Roger Moore was spot on.

Connery is definitely Bond, but I did like Roger Moore's tongue in cheek style.
Live and let die was 1973. Probably the height of sales and Manufacture for the 29, so it could have a S&W product placement just to boost sales of the nickel, since they'd have the metal done and the blueing dept would have been backed up. Just a thought..
 
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Is that the actual gun used in the movie?
That would be one of the coolest things in the world to own that I can think of, but it is Obviously, and rightly in the S&W museum.
Yes it is

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It was a very nice display one of the things I actually remember from 12 years ago



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Yes even Murtaugh's Model 19 was on display


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Inspector Callahan for the win!

Bond is cool, but real hero's don't carry a PPk.

Bickle is nothing more than a perverted, taxi driving vigilante who saved a young prostitute. Hardly a hero.
 
Oh come on, he flew that BD-5J through that hangar!!!

Dirty Harry made Smith & Wesson a household name. You can ask anyone who is completely clueless about guns, and they will immediately know what a Smith & Wesson .44 Magnum is and who is most famous for packing one. Not as many people know Travis Bickel (I haven't even seen Taxi Driver yet). As for Roger Moore, I believe his use of a .44 Magnum in Live and Let Die was a deliberate jab at Clint Eastwood. I never liked him as Bond either, so he would be last on any list of mine.

Roger Moore was the "Saint", I like the model 29, but yeah, Shaun Connery is James Bond! and that snow flake Remington Steele, he's a real panty waist, and don't even get me started on Daniel Craig,,, and beside all that, Shaun was the real "Ladies Man" of the bunch, and I like nice guns, in fact there is a triple lock floating around that is the most gorgeous thing on the planet? but what on this rolling ball of rock and mud is more amazing than a beautiful "woman", and our boy Clint, he was kinda stuck with "Sondra"??
 
I believe Nick Nolte followed Clint's 44 Mag lead by having a 4" 629 in the original 48 Hours film.
 

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