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Bond firearms: Films

The scene from the novel Dr No is replayed more-or-less verbatim in the 1962 film, ensuring the Walther PPK a place in cultural history. Bond shows a great deal more fidelity to his side arm in the films than in the novels, even going so far as to take on an international arms dealer and hi-tech arms enthusiastic Brad Whitaker armed only with an eight-shot, 7.65 mm semi-automatic.

During the 1963 production of From Russia With Love, photographer David Hurn was commissioned to photograph the actors of the film in their costume. When the theatrical property Walther PPK did not turn up for the shoot, Hurn volunteered his own Walther LP 53 air pistol and said he would airbrush out the long barrel; the airbrushed stills appearing in a US “JAMES BOND IS BACK” poster. However, Renato Fratini a film poster artist saw the original stills of the weapon and used it in his UK posters with the weapon appearing in several more film posters up to The Man With the Golden Gun. On 14 February 2001, Hurn had his LP 53 (serial number 054159 )in its original presentation case and letter of provenance auctioned off at Christie’s where the weapon fetched US$20,437.41.

From Tomorrow Never Dies to Casino Royale, Bond used a Walther P99. However, in Quantum of Solace he reverted back to his Walther PPK (possibly a tribute to the classic Bond films).

Official films:

  1. Dr No
    • Unknown Beretta .25 caliber pistol, most likely the Beretta 418, as this is the gun which is used in this role in the book, but also possibly the Beretta 1934 or 1935, or the Beretta 950 Jetfire, which was introduced in 1953- the year the Bond character was “born”. Bond, reluctantly, has to hand this gun over to M
    • Walther PPK. Bond is forced to use the Walther PPK as his issued sidearm
    • Walther PP in at least one sequence on the island of Crab Key, Bond is seen with the longer barreled PP, but his is considered a continuity slip in the film
    • FN Model 1910 with suppressor. (This pistol was apparently used because there was no PPK in the prop department that could be fitted with a suppressor at the time)
    • Silenced Colt .45 or similar. Used by the Three Blind Mice assassins
    • Sten submachine gun. Used by Dr No’s men during Quarrel’s death and the decontamination scenes
    • Lee-Enfield No 4 bolt-action rifle. Seen in the hands of Royal Navy sailors towards the end of the film
    • L4A2. Used by Dr No’s men on the high powered boat when Bond meets Honey Ryder
  2. From Russia with Love
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • AR-7 “sniper” rifle, kept in his attache case. Originally chambered in .22 Hornet (Early US Air Force and Israeli Survival Rifle variants of the AR-5) and .22 Long Rifle for basic civilian usage
    • Flare gun. Used as a weapon in the boat scenes. This gun can be seen at Planet Hollywood, Orlando, Florida, where it is incorrectly labelled as being used in Thunderball. He used a pen flare from Q in that film
    • Mauser C96. Used by Red Grant in the gypsy bazaar to protect Bond from Krilencu’s men
  3. Goldfinger
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Walther P38. Used by several guards and Bond himself
    • M14. Seen carried by US Army soldiers during the gas attack
    • Mauser Kar98k rifle. Used by Auric Goldfinger’s men during the Fort Knox raid and gunfight
    • MP40. Used by Goldfinger’s guards in the gunfights in Switzerland and in Kentucky
    • Thompson M1A1 submachine gun. Used by US Army soldiers in the Fort Knox gunfight
  4. Thunderball
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Speargun. Used to kill Vargas and during the underwater battle. Compressed-air powered, it might be a Technisub Jaguar, or one of the Nemrod Commando range
  5. You Only Live Twice
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s main gun
    • Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun. Used to “kill” Bond at the start of the film
    • Lee-Enfield No 4 bolt-action rifle. Used by a Royal Navy honour guard at Bond’s “funeral” in Hong Kong
    • Lee-Enfield No 5 Jungle Carbine. Seen in the hands of one of Ernst Stavro Blofeld’s guards
    • Cigarette rocket. Used to kill one of Blofeld’s guards
    • MBAssociates Gyrojet rifle. Used by Tiger Tanaka and his ninja commandos on the raid on Blofeld’s base
    • Smith & Wesson Model 36 .38 caliber revolver. Used when killing an assassin
    • Webley Mk VI. Dropped by Blofeld, which Bond uses in the assault on the control room
  6. On Her Majesty’s Secret Service
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun. Used during the assault on Piz Gloria
    • SIG 510 battle rifle. Used by Ernst Stavro Blofeld’s forces at Piz Gloria through the entire film
    • SIG P210. Used by Blofeld himself
  7. Diamonds Are Forever
  8. Live and Let Die
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Smith & Wesson Model 29 .44 Magnum revolver. Used during the rescue of Solitaire
    • Smith & Wesson Model 36 .38 Special revolver. Used by Mr Big’s henchmen and by Rosie Carver
    • MAC-10. Used by Mr Big’s henchmen on the Voodoo island
  9. The Man with the Golden Gun
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • “Triggerless” rifle. Made by Portuguese gunsmith Lazar for an assassin with only three fingers. It was fired by squeezing a recessed trigger in the butt. Because it was designed to be fired with only three fingers, a person with a full hand would cause it to hit below where he was aiming, something which Bond made use of in threatening Lazar
    • M16 rifle. Seen carried by Hai Fat’s guards
    • Possibly a Derringer. Carried by Nick Nack
    • Francisco Scaramanga’s golden gun. A custom made, gold-plated single-shot handgun chambered in 4.2 mm caliber. The gun can be disassembled to avoid detection into a gold cigarette lighter, a gold cigarette case, a gold cuff link, and a gold pen. Bond does not actually use this gun
  10. The Spy Who Loved Me
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm, though in some scenes it appears to be the longer-barrelled PP
    • Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun. Used by British sailors during the battle on board the Liparus supertanker
    • M16 rifle. Used by American sailors during the battle on board the Liparus supertanker
  11. Moonraker
    • Wrist-Dart gun. Used by Bond on two occasions
    • Holland & Holland Royal side by side shotgun
    • Moonraker Laser. A laser gun that can be shot in space, used by the astronauts
    • M16 rifle. Used by Hugo Drax’s henchmen in the Aztec Temple Base/Launch Site
    • >MAC 10. Used by Jaws when chasing Bond in a speedboat in South America
  12. For Your Eyes Only
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Tokarev TT-33. Used by Milos Columbo
    • MP40. Used by men during boat scene
    • VZ 58 automatic rifle. Used by a guard at Hector Gonzales house
    • Luger. A henchman for Aristotle Kristatos is seem attempting detatch Bond’s climbing ropes from a cliff, using the butt of the pistol as a hammer
    • Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun. Seen in the hands of Columbo’s henchmen when assaulting Kristatos’ monastery-hideout
  13. Octopussy
    • Walther P5. Bond’s issued sidearm. He is clearly wielding a P5 in the taxi chase, but later tells Q “I appear to have misplaced my PPK.”. This confusion is most likely a script issue. It would appear that Walther asked the producers to have Bond use the new P5, which Walther was trying to market to German police agencies at the time. However, no one changed the script
    • VZ 58 automatic rifle. Bond takes this gun off one of Kamal Khan’s men and fires it while sliding down a banister
    • Lee-Enfield bolt-action rifle (both the No 1 MkIII* and the No 4). Used by Khan’s men at his palace in India
    • Steyr AUG. Wielded by General Orlov’s men during the train yard battle
  14. A View to a Kill
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Shotgun loaded with (non-lethal) rock salt which he uses to send off some of Max Zorin’s hired goons
    • Uzi. Used by Zorin and Scarpine when the mine workers are massacred
    • Smith & Wesson Model 36. Wielded by Zorin and crew when they break in and set fire to San Francisco City Hall
  15. The Living Daylights
    • Heckler & Koch MP5 paintball markers. Used by SAS guards during the mock Gibraltar operation
    • Silenced Heckler & Koch P9S. Carried by the imposter during the mock Gibraltar operation
    • Walther WA2000 sniper rifle. Bond uses this to shoot the rifle out of Kara Milovy’s hands
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • M1911 pistol. Carried by Austrian border policemen
    • Makarov PM. Carried by Czechoslovakian police, Necros (used to assasinate General Pushkin) and General Koskov’s second-in-command in Afganistan
    • Walther MP. Carried by Czechoslovakian police
    • Beretta M12. Carried by police forces in Tangier
    • Kalashnikov AKM automatic rifle. Bond takes this gun off a Russian soldier and uses it during the airfield battle
    • RPG-7. Wielded by Mujahideen in the airfield battle
    • Silenced Skorpion vz 61. Used by Pushkin’s men to break in to Brad Whitaker’s lair
  16. Licence to Kill
    • Taurus 92 9 mm pistol (a Brazilian copy of the Beretta Model 92FS 9 mm pistol, as per the film’s armorer in “The Making of Licence to Kill” by Sally Hibin), given to Bond by Felix Leiter during the opening sequence when Bond does not have a gun on him
    • CAR-15 rifle. Seen briefly being used by Leiter and the DEA agents chasing Franz Sanchez in the pre-title sequence
    • Heckler & Koch P9S. Seen used by one Sanchez’s henchmen, Braun
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Beretta 950 Jetfire. Carried by Pam Bouvier in a concealed leg holster, and used by Bond for his “family reunion” with Q
    • Speargun. Bond uses this to kill a guard on the Wavekrest
    • “Signature gun”, .220 (sic)(probably .220 Swift) sniper’s rifle that is disguised as pieces of a Hasselblad camera, and only responds to his palm print. Bond uses this gun in an attempt to kill Sanchez, but is thwarted by a ninja. When a ninja tries to use the gun himself, it won’t fire. The .220 is also tongue in cheek at the 220 roll film the gun can take when a camera
    • Mini-ERO, copy of an Uzi. Sanchez uses this when he tries to shoot Bond off of the tanker trucks during the final battle
    • Beretta 92FS. Milton Krest fires this weapon at Bond, unsuccessfully, when he jumps into the water after killing the deck guard
    • Walther P5. Seen used by Dario in the climax
    • FIM-92 Stinger man-portable SAM. Esed several times during the tanker chase
  17. GoldenEye
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Kalashnikov AKS-74U. Bond uses this gun on two separate occasions. Xenia Onatopp uses it to massacre the Severnaya facility
    • Kalashnikov AK-74. Bond takes this from a Russian soldier in Cuba. Xenia has one strapped to her back before Bond indirectly uses it to kill her. Alec Trevalyan wields one in the final battle with Bond. The folding stock version AK-74s that were seen were Chinese-made NORINCO Type 56/AKM rifles that were fitted with AK-74 muzzle breaks and with Russian-made, AKM magazines made of red bakelite
    • Browning Hi-Power. Used by Trevelyan during the chemical facility shootout
    • Browning BDM. Trevelyan uses this gun
    • Makarov PM. Used by a Russian pilot from the chemical facility, General Ourumov and Natalya Simonova
  18. Tomorrow Never Dies
    • Beretta AR70/90 rifle. Bond uses this during the opening sequence
    • Browning BDA9. Used by terrorist pilot during the opening sequence
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Sig Sauer P226. Used by Elliot Carver
    • Glock 17. Used by guards, and Carver in the last scene
    • Calico M950 submachine gun 9mm. Bond uses this gun to escape from Carver’s Media Headquarters in Saigon
    • Walther P99 9 mm. Bond takes this gun from the Chinese safehouse before he joins Wai Lin in searching for the stealth boat. (It became Bond’s new sidearm for the next three films)
    • Heckler & Koch MP5. Used by Carver’s men, and by Wai Lin
    • Heckler & Koch MP5K. Also used by Carver’s men—most notably in a failed attempt to break into Bond’s car. Bond uses this submachine gun during the final battle
    • Heckler & Koch P7. Dr Kaufman uses one to hold up Bond in his hotel room and to kill Paris. Bond later kills him with it after he is stunned by his phone’s taser
    • M60E4. Used by Stamper to gun down Devonshire survivors loaded with the ammunition used by the Chinese Air Force
    • M16 rifle variants used by Carver’s men. Stamper uses an M4 Carbine fitted with an M203 grenade launcher in the final battle. A henchman in the parking garage car chase also uses one, and one of the weapons that shatters the BMW’s windshield
    • Armsel Striker. One of the many weapons wielded by Carver’s men in the parking garage chase
  19. The World Is Not Enough
    • Walther P99. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • Heckler & Koch MP5K. Used by Renard’s men
    • Heckler & Koch G36. Used by Giulietta da Vinci at the start of the film
    • Steyr TMP. Used by Parahawks, Bullion, and Renard’s men
    • FN P90. Bond briefly uses this submachine gun during the shootout in the nuclear test facility. Renard wields this as well
    • Colt M1911A1. Used by Bond on two occasions
    • Cane Gun. Valentin Zukovsky can convert his walking cane into a single shot rifle. He uses it to free Bond from Elektra King
  20. Die Another Day
    • Walther P99. Bond’s issued sidearm
    • AK-47. Used by North Korean Army at the start of the film
    • Stechkin APS. Used by Zao
    • OICW. Used briefly by Colonel Moon in the DMZ sequence
    • Ingram MAC-10. Bond only uses this machine pistol during the hovercraft chase
    • Makarov PM. Used by Colonel Moon during the hovercraft chase and General Moon in the climax
    • Smith & Wesson Model 15. Bond borrows the revolver from a fellow agent while in Cuba
    • Heckler & Koch MP5K.Used by Gustav Graves men in Iceland with a silencer on it
    • Heckler & Koch G36. Used by one of Graves’ men in Iceland
    • Accuracy International AW sniper rifle. Used by Bond when he and Jinx infiltrate North Korea
    • Browning Hi-Power. In the sailboat scenes
    • Beretta M84 Cheetah. Jinx’s gun
  21. Casino Royale
    • Walther P99. Bond’s issued sidearm (in 9x19mm a.k.a. 9mm Parabellum)
    • Browning Hi-Power. Used by Bond in the embassy in Madagascar, taken from a local diplomat
    • Walther PPK was featured only in promotional photos
    • WASR 3. Used by the embassy guards in Madagascar
    • M4 Carbine. Used by the Miami-Dade Police at the Miami International Airport
    • Glock 17. Carlos steals this gun from a police holster in an equipment room at the Miami Airport
    • Jericho 941. Used by Adolf Gettler
    • Nailgun. Used by Gettler and Bond in the Venice scene
    • Sig-Sauer P226. Supressed versions used by Venice henchmen
    • Heckler & Koch USP. Used by Mollaka, and bathroom henchman
    • Heckler & Koch UMP, two UMP45 .45 Caliber models with suppressor. Used during the Venice scene leading to the drowning death of Vesper Lynd. A suppressed UMP9 9mm model used by Bond to maim Mr White
    • MAC-11. Used by one of the Venice henchman
  22. Quantum of Solace
    • Walther PPK. Bond’s main sidearm
    • SIG-Sauer P226. Bond uses this gun in climax scene. Removed from guard in elevator during his escape
    • M249 SAW. Used by villains in car chase scene
    • Rohrbaugh R9. Camille’s pistol
    • Heckler & Koch UMP. This gun was pictured in promotional shots for the film as well as the trailer. It was fitted with a suppressor. An unsuppressed version was used by Bond in the opening car chase. A UMP is also used by General Medrano’s guard on the yacht
    • Heckler & Koch G36. Some of Medrano’s men use this 5.56mm assault rifle in the boat chase
    • Heckler & Koch MP5 9mm MP5 submachine gun. Used by CIA officers in a bar in Bolivia, when they try to arrest Bond
    • M4 Carbine. Used by some CIA men
    • SG 540. Used by one of Medrano’s henchmen in the boat chase in Haiti

Unofficial films:

  1. Never Say Never Again
    • CZ Model 25. Bond uses this submachine gun in the opening sequence
    • Walther P5. Bond’s main gun. Coincidently, Roger Moore used the same make of gun in Octopussy, also released in 1983. Connery’s gun can be seen in Planet Hollywood in London, where it is inaccurately labelled as a Walther PPK
    • Ingram Mac 10. Used by Bond and Felix Leiter in the final battle
See also See also:
 
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