Isaiah 45:71

I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.
—Isaiah 45:71

July 26, 2013

James Bond's Pistol

 ALL RIGHTS AND CREDIT FOR THE FOLLOWING INFORMATION BELONG TO:



 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walther_PP

 http://www.originalprop.com/blog/2008/04/20/the-side-arms-of-james-bond-007-from-the-walther-ppk-to-the-p99/

 http://www.imfdb.org/index.php/James_Bond



and THE DUDE WHO OWNS THE GUN STORE



 "...The Walther PP (police pistol) series pistols are blowback-operated semi-automatic pistols.

They feature an exposed hammer, a traditional double-action trigger mechanism, a single-column magazine, and a fixed barrel which also acts as the guide rod for the recoil spring. The series includes the Walther PP, PPK, PPK/S, and PPK/E.

The various PP series are manufactured in either Germany or the United States.[1] Since 2002, the PPK variant is solely manufactured by Smith & Wesson in Houlton, Maine, United States, under license from Carl Walther GmbH Sportwaffen. In the past, this particular model has been manufactured by Carl Walther GmbH Sportwaffen...








Cartridge 7.65x17mm Browning SR (.32 ACP)
9x17mm Short (.380 ACP)
.22 Long Rifle
6.35x15mm Browning SR (.25 ACP)
9x18mm Ultra (PP-Super)
Action Straight blowback
Muzzle velocity 256 m/s (840 ft/s) (PP 9x17mm Short/.380 ACP)
320 m/s (1,049.9 ft/s) (PP 7.65x17mm Browning SR/.32 ACP)
305 m/s (1,000.7 ft/s) (PP .22 LR)
244 m/s (800.5 ft/s) (PPK/PPK/S 9x17mm Short/.380 ACP)
308 m/s (1,010.5 ft/s) (PPK/PPK/S/PPK-L 7.65x17mm Browning SR/.32 ACP)
280 m/s (918.6 ft/s) (PPK/PPK/S/PPK-L .22 LR)
325 m/s (1,066.3 ft/s) (PP-Super)
Feed system Magazine capacity:
PP: 10+1 (.22LR), 8+1 (.32 ACP)
7+1 (.380)
PPK: 8+1 (.22 LR), 7+1 (.32 ACP)
6+1 (.380).
Sights Fixed iron sights, rear notch and front blade






"...[Ian] Fleming had been issued a .25 ACP Baby Browning

during the Second World War when he was in Naval

Intelligence and felt it was an appropriate side arm for

an intelligence officer on an undercover mission.

In an interview published posthumously in the

December 1964 issue of Playboy Magazine, Fleming

admitted that he was not an expert in the field of

firearms, and "Quite honestly, the whole question of

expertise in these matters bores me. Obviously, I want

to know the facts. If a Gaylord holster is better than a

Berns-Martin, I want to know about it, but there is

where my interest rather ends." The reference would

be to the holsters of Chic Gaylord, a well-known holster

maker of the period who in fact DID make shoulder

holsters to suit Fleming's choice of pistol for Bond, the

Walther PPK.

M-60 machine gun


Cartridge 7.62×51mm NATO
Caliber 7.62 mm (0.308 in)
Action Gas-operated, short stroke gas piston,[2] open bolt
Rate of fire 500–650 rounds/min (rpm)
Muzzle velocity 2,800 ft/s (853 m/s)
Effective range 1,200 yd (1,100 m)
Feed system Disintegrating belt with M13 Links
Sights Iron sights



"Shortly before the publication of From Russia, With

Love in 1956, Fleming received a fan letter from an

author and gun collector, Geoffrey Boothroyd. He told

Fleming that he admired the Bond novels apart from

the hero's choice of weapon. Boothroyd felt the

Beretta 418 was "a lady's gun" with no real stopping

power.[2] He also objected to the choice of holster.

Boothroyd proposed that Bond should use a revolver

like the Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight. It had

no external hammer, so it would not catch on Bond's

clothes. The Smith & Wesson could be kept in a

Berns-Martin triple draw holster held in place with a

spring clip which would decrease Bond's draw time.

Boothroyd also said the suppressors Bond occasionally

used were rarely silent and actually reduced the gun's

stopping power.

Fleming thanked Boothroyd for his letter and made a

few points of his own in his reply. He felt that Bond

ought to have an automatic instead of a revolver.

Fleming agreed that the Beretta 418 lacked power, but

pointed out that Bond had used more powerful

weapons when necessary, such as the Colt M1911 .45

cal auto pistol he uses in Moonraker. Fleming also said

that he had seen a silenced Sten gun during the war

and the weapon had hardly made a whisper.

Ultimately Boothroyd recommended the Walther PPK

7.65 mm as being the best choice for an automatic of

that size, with its ammunition available everywhere. He

suggested, however, that 007 ought to have a revolver

for long-range shooting. Fleming asked Boothroyd if he

could lend his illustrator, Richard Chopping, one of his

guns to be painted for the cover of From Russia, With

Love. Boothroyd lent Chopping a Smith & Wesson .38

revolver that had the trigger guard removed for faster

firing.

Fleming had Bond's Beretta caught in his trousers at

the end of From Russia, With Love, an event that

almost costs the secret agent his life. In the next

novel, Dr. No, a Major Boothroyd recommends that

Bond switch guns. Major Boothroyd chose the Walther

PPK 7.65mm after testing the Walther PPK, the

Japanese M-14, the Russian Tokarev, and the Sauer

M-38.

Bond keeps his Walther PPK automatic in a Berns-

Martin triple-draw shoulder holster, which was a split-

front spring-retention holster adaptable only to

revolvers.[3] The design of the holster was centered

around the cylinder of a revolver, where the spring clip

would "grip" the pistol. This mistake was possibly due

to an error in Fleming's notes, transposing the Walther

PPK for the Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight to

which the Berns-Martin holster was suited.

Fleming lore says that Fleming had bought such a

holster and had it sent to Jamaica

It has been argued over the years that Q-branch could

have modified this legendary holster to accommodate

automatics, but the company's brochures of the

period were marked "no shoulder holster made for

automatics..."


Novel     Year     Firearms
Casino Royale     1953   

    .25 Beretta automatic with a skeleton grip, Bond's

issued sidearm.
    Colt Police Positive .38 with sawn barrel. Bond keeps

one under his pillow while he sleeps.
    long-barreled Colt Army Special .45 probably

referring to the Colt New Service revolver,[original

research?] which Bond keeps under his Bentley's

dashboard.
    .35 calibre gun carried by the SMERSH gunmen.

Live And Let Die     1954   

    Beretta .25 with skeleton grip, Bond's issued

sidearm.
    Colt Detective Special. Bond takes this off Tee-Hee's

corpse and uses it to kill two more of Mr. Big's men in

the car park.
    Remington Model 30 carried by "The Robber," a

minion of Mr Big.
    Champion speargun. Bond uses this to fend off an

octopus during his swim to Mr. Big's island.

Moonraker     1955   

    .38 Colt Detective Special, Bond's gun he uses when

training at the Services Shooting Gallery.
    .25 Beretta, Bond's issued sidearm.
    long-barrelled .45 Colt Army Special which Bond

keeps under his Bentley's dashboard.
    Luger, Hugo Drax's sidearm.

Diamonds Are Forever     1956   

    .25 Beretta automatic with skeleton grip, Bond's

issued sidearm.
    .38 Police Positive carried by Wint. Other henchman,

Kidd, also has one while in Spectreville.
    .45 Colt, carried by Kidd. Actually a Colt New

Service, as the Army Special was not chambered in

.45" caliber.
    Two long-barrelled revolvers with ivory butts, carried

by Seraffimo Spang in Spectreville.
    Jeep mounted Bofors 40 mm gun.

From Russia, With Love     1957   

    .25 Beretta automatic, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Darko Kerim's 88 Winchester sniper rifle concealed

in a walking stick. Used to assassinate Krilencu.
    Red Grant's .25 electric gun hidden inside a

hollowed-out copy of War and Peace.

Dr. No     1958   

    Walther PPK, Bond's new issued sidearm.
    .25 Beretta. James Bond is forced to hand this gun

over to Admiral Sir Miles "M" Messervy, his superior.
    Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight for "long-

range work." Bond decides to take this to Crab Key

island instead of the PPK as there will be no time for

close encounters.
    Spandau. This weapon is on the boat that went in

search of Bond, Quarrel, and Honeychile Rider.
    Smith & Wesson .38. Bond finds this gun on Crab

Key and uses it to kill three of Doctor No's men.
    US Army Remington Carbine 300, the gun Bond

finds on Doctor No's men.

Goldfinger     1959   

    Bond carries his Walther PPK in a hollowed-out copy

of "The Bible to be Read as Literature."
    long-barrelled Colt .45 which Bond keeps in a trick

compartment under the driver's seat in his Aston

Martin.
    Bazooka used by US forces.
    Bond finds a Colt .25 and a Luger belonging to

Goldfinger and one his guard on the plane.

For Your Eyes Only     1960   
"From a View to a Kill"       

    long-barrel .45 Colt Bond's issued sidearm as he

hunts for a Russian spy.
    Luger, Russian spy sidearm.
    22 Target Pistol, Mary Ann Russell's sidearm.

"For Your Eyes Only"       

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm
    Savage 99F. Bond is given the gun by an R.C.M.P.

police Colonel, a "Colonel Johns:" "Never send a man

when you can send a bullet."
    Tommy Guns carried by Gonzales men.
    Crossbow carried by Judy Havelock.

"Quantum of Solace"       

    No gun is mentioned or used.

"Risico"       

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Spearguns. Carried by Columbo's men.
    Luger, The side arm carried by Columbo's men.
    Unknown Light machine gun being used by one of

Kristatos's men.

"The Hildebrand Rarity"       

    Champion speargun. Bond used this to kill a

Stingray in the Seychelles.

Thunderball     1961   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Colt .25. Sidearm of Emilio Largo.

The Spy Who Loved Me     1962   

    As this book is told from the point of view of the

"Bond girl," Bond's gun is not identified.
    Smith & Wesson Police Positive. Bond gives this gun

to Vivienne Michel "in case she needs it."
    Submachine gun. Bond mentions in an anecdote

that he used a submachine gun on his last mission in

Canada, and that he fired from the hip which is "the

correct way to fire" an automatic weapon.
    Bond keeps a gun under his pillow as he sleeps, but

this gun is never identified.

On Her Majesty's Secret Service     1963   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    German Schmeisser. This is used by the Unione

Corse in the assault on the Piz Gloria.

You Only Live Twice     1964   

    Walther PPK, which Bond is not allowed to take with

him when he faces Dr. Guntram Shatterhand.
    Japanese M-14 carried by a Japanese policeman.

The Man With The Golden Gun     1965   

    A cyanide gun with which a brainwashed Bond

almost assassinates Admiral Sir Miles "M" Messervy,

his superior.
    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Scaramanga's gold-plated single-action Colt .45

that fired silver-jacketed, 24-ct gold dum-dum bullets.
    Scaramanga's gold-plated Derringer that fired

venom-coated bullets.

Octopussy and The Living Daylights     1966   
"Octopussy"       

    Dexter Smythe recounts an incident after World War

II where a Webley Revolver is used.

"The Property of a Lady"       

    No gun is mentioned or used, though the cyanide

water pistol from The Man With The Golden Gun is

mentioned.

"The Living Daylights"       

    AK-47, used by the KGB assassin Trigger. Bond

identifies it as a "Kalashnikov," but incorrectly as a

"submachine gun"; the AK is an assault/automatic rifle.

Bond quips that it would turn the target into

"strawberry jam."

"007 in New York"       

    No gun is mentioned or used.


Kingsley Amis

Colonel Sun is a novel by Kingsley Amis published by

Jonathan Cape on 28 March 1968 under the

pseudonym "Robert Markham". Colonel Sun is the first

James Bond continuation novel published after Ian

Fleming's 1964 death. Before writing the novel, Amis

wrote two other Bond related works, the literary study

The James Bond Dossier and the humorous The Book

of Bond.


Novel     Year   
Colonel Sun     1968   
Firearms
    4000 model rocket launcher
    9x19mm Parabellum Luger, silenced version used

by thugs.
    Beretta M 1934, Lee-Enfield rifle, Thompson, and

Mills Bombs, all used by Listas.
    Stokes Mortar, used by Col. Sun's gang.
    Sawn-off Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight,

carried by De Graaf.

John Gardner

On 20 March 1974 an attempt was made to kidnap

HRH The Princess Anne. The Walther PPK of the police

officer protecting her jammed and was subsequently

withdrawn from service. When John Gardner was asked

to write a new series of James Bond continuation

novels, one of the first things he decided was to

update Bond's trusty Walther PPK. Gardner devoted

two pages in his first James Bond novel Licence

Renewed to the debate over whether to use a revolver

or an automatic, and what make and model, before

finally settling on an older FN M1903 in 9 mm Browning

Long (9x20mmSR). Even Bond himself admits that it is

an old gun. The original hardback cover illustration by

Richard Chopping shows the FN pistol.

After criticism from fans for choosing an old gun,

Gardner replaced the gun three more times,

eventually sticking to the ASP 9 mm for the rest of the

series. As he intended to downplay the gadgets in his

books, Gardner compensated by bringing to the series

a colorful arsenal of weapons from around the world.

Novel     Year     Firearms
Licence Renewed     1981   

    FN M1903 9 mm. Bond chooses this to replace his

Walther PPK, which is now banned by the service.
    Ruger Super Blackhawk .44 Magnum. Bond keeps

one of these (illegally) in his Saab 900 Turbo, and uses

it during a car chase, firing it through his car's

gunports.
    Antique dueling pistol.
    Colt Python .357 Magnum. Bond uses this briefly in

an airborne shootout with Murik's men.
    MBA Gyrojet.

For Special Services     1982   

    Heckler & Koch VP70 9 mm. After criticism from

fans over the choice of an old gun, Gardner replaced

Bond's FN M1903 with a more modern DAO 9 mm

polymer pistol.

Icebreaker     1983   

    Heckler & Koch P7 9 mm becomes Bond's issued

sidearm in this adventure.

Role of Honour     1984   

    ASP 9 mm. Gardner finally settled on the ASP as

Bond's issued sidearm .

Nobody Lives Forever     1986   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm .

No Deals, Mr. Bond     1987   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm .

Scorpius     1988   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm .
    Browning Compact 9 mm

Win, Lose or Die     1989   

    Browning 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

Licence to Kill     1989   

    Walther P38K, Bond's issued sidearm.

Brokenclaw     1990   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

The Man from Barbarossa     1991   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

Death is Forever     1992   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

Never Send Flowers     1993   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

SeaFire     1994   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

GoldenEye     1995   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm. This was used in

place of the PPK (which is used in the movie) to better

fit Gardner's continuity, AK-74, Browning BDM, Uzi.

COLD     1996   

    ASP 9 mm, Bond's issued sidearm.

Raymond Benson
Walther P99 used in the later Brosnan and early Craig

films

When James Bond expert Raymond Benson was asked

to take over writing the series, he briefly gave Bond

back his Walther PPK. Benson also brought the series

in line with the films and concurrently replaced Bond's

PPK with the Walther P99 in the film novelization

Tomorrow Never Dies. However, in some following

books Bond would use both weapons: the PPK for

concealment, and the P99 for situations that did not

require a concealed weapon.
Novel     Year     Firearms     Notes
Blast from the Past (short story)     1997   

Walther PPK; Browning 9mm Cheryl Haven's weapon;

Uzi carried by Adolf.   
Zero Minus Ten     1997     Walther PPK   
Tomorrow Never Dies     1997     Walther PPK
Walther P99     Unlike the film, where Bond finds

the gun in the field, Bond is officially issued the P99 by

Q-Branch.
The Facts of Death     1998     Walther PPK
Walther P99     Bond uses both, dependent on the

situation. This would be the case for the remainder of

the Benson novels.
"Midsummer Night's Doom" (short story)   

1999     Walther P99   
"Live at Five" (short story)     1999     Walther P99   
The World Is Not Enough     1999     Walther PPK   

Bond does not use the P99 in this novel, despite being

his weapon of choice in the movie.
High Time to Kill     1999     Walther PPK
Walther P99   
Doubleshot     2000     Walther PPK
Walther P99   
Never Dream of Dying     2001     Walther PPK
Walther P99   
The Man with the Red Tattoo     2002     Walther PPK
Walther P99   
Die Another Day     2002     Walther P99   
Young Bond/Charlie Higson
Novel     Year     Firearms
SilverFin     2005   

    .22 Browning Rifle, used by Bond in a school

shooting competition.
    Derringer, sidearm of 'Meatpacker'.
    Hunting Rifle and Shotgun, used by the Hellebores

and MacSawney.

Blood Fever     2006   

    9mm Beretta, sidearm of Zoltan the Magyar
    Unknown rifle, picked up by Bond during a firefight

but not fired as it wasn't loaded.
    Thompson submachine gun, supplied to Ugo

Carnifex by Zoltan the Magyar.

Double or Die     2007   

    Apache[Note 1], used by the Smith brothers on

numerous occasions.

Also unnamed pistols picked up from the sailors
Hurricane Gold     2007   

    MP 28, used by El Huracan's men.
    Unknown revolver, used by Bond who picked it up

from a dead Mexican police officer.
    Unknown rifle, used by Mexican soldiers and Mrs

Glass henchmans.

By Royal Command     2008   

    Tokarev TT-33, used by Cristo Orabessa.
    Enfield revolver, used by Bond while escaping Baron

von Schlicks castle.
    Luger P08 pistol, favored weapon of Vladimir

Wrangel.

    ^ The Apache is a combination of a revolver, knife,

and a knuckle duster that was used by the Apache

gang in 19th century Paris.

Sebastian Faulks
Novel     Year     Firearms
Devil May Care     2008     Walther PPK Bond's main

gun.

Jeffery Deaver
Novel     Year     Firearms
Carte Blanche     2011     Walther PPS .40 S&W

Bond's main gun.



Films

Eon Productions 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 U.K. 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 in excess of US

$435,000.[7][8]

A link to the Internet Movie Firearms Database's

category that shows all of the guns used in every

James Bond film to date is found here.

http://www.imfdb.org/index.php/James_Bond

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).
Film Title     Year     Firearms
Dr. No     1962   

    Beretta Model 1934, Bond handed this to Q when he

was forced to use a Walther PPK. This prop, in .380

ACP, was used to represent the .25 ACP Beretta 418

from the novel.[9]
    Walther PP, although it is called a Walther PPK, Bond

is seen with the longer barreled PP in Dr. No.[10]
    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.)
    Colt Model 1911A1, suppressed version used by the

Three Blind Mice assassins and Professor R.J. Dent,

though Bond calls it a "Smith and Wesson" in the film.

In the scene where Bond is firing at Dr. No's 'Dragon'

he begins firing the PPK then the gun switches mid

scene to an M1911 pistol (with an incorrectly

functioning slide).
    Walther P38, used by one of the Three Blind Mice

assassins.
    Colt Police Positive, used by Quarrel
    Smith & Wesson Model 10, used by Dr. No's guards
    Sten Gun, used by Dr. No's men during Quarrel's

death and the decontamination scenes
    Smith & Wesson Centennial Airweight in .38 Special

that Bond uses on Crab Key
    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.

From Russia with Love     1963   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm. Also used by

Kerim Bey, head of MI-6's "Station T" in Turkey, and by

some Soviet agents on the train, perhaps because

Makarov PM's weren't available for the film.
    AR-7 "sniper" rifle, kept in his attache case.

Chambered in .22 Long Rifle. Q identifies it as ".25

caliber."
    MP40, Carried by SPECTRE guards on Blofeld's boat.

Also seen in the hand of a SPECTRE assassin sent to

kill Bond via helicopter and later by the assassins sent

to kill Bond via boats.
    Mauser C96, Used by Red Grant in the gypsy bazaar

to protect Bond from Krilencu's men.
    Walther P38, Soviet guard at the Russian consulate

fires one during Bond's attack.
    Llama XVIII Especial, Grant pulls this pistol from an

ankle holster and uses it to intimidate Bond on the

Orient Express. Rosa Klebb also draws one, with pearl

grips, during her last-ditch attempt to steal the Lektor

from Bond's hotel room.
    Very Flare Gun, used as a weapon in the boat

scenes to ignite gasoline in the water. This gun can be

seen at Planet Hollywood, Orlando, Florida, where it is

incorrectly labeled as being used in Thunderball. He

used a pen flare from Q in that movie.
    Beretta 418, When Tatiana Romanova picks up Rosa

Klebb's dropped gun it has become a Beretta, she

uses it to kill Klebb.

Goldfinger     1964   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Walther P38, used by several guards and Bond

himself.
    MP40, used by Goldfinger's guards in the gunfights

in Switzerland and in Kentucky
    Mauser Karbiner 98k rifle, used by Goldfinger's men

during the Fort Knox raid and gunfight.
    Smith & Wesson Model 22, carried by Pussy Galore

while inside the air plane she and Bond are flying to

Goldfinger's ranch in Kentucky.
    M14, seen carried by US Army soldiers during the

gas attack.
    Thompson M1A1 submachine gun used by US Army

soldiers in the Fort Knox gunfight.
    Gold-plated Colt Official Police used by Goldfinger.

Thunderball     1965   

    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. Domino uses this to shoot Largo at

the film's climax.
    Browning A-5, Used by Bond on Palmyra, he states

it's a gun more suited for women, and shoots a clay

pigeon from the hip.
    Colt Detective Special. Largo almost shot Bond with

this one, but Domino harpooned him before he got to

fire a shot.

You Only Live Twice     1967   

    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 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.
    MP40, Used by several of Blofeld's guards and

briefly seen in the hands of Tiger Tanaka during the

volcano battle.
    Smith & Wesson Model 36 .38 caliber revolver, used

when killing an assassin
    Webley Mk IV dropped by Blofeld, which Bond uses in

the assault on the control room

On Her Majesty's Secret Service     1969   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun, used during the

assault on Piz Gloria.
    SIG 510 battle rifle, used by Blofeld's forces at Piz

Gloria through the entire film.
    Browning Hi-Power, used by Blofeld himself.

Diamonds Are Forever     1971   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    M16 rifle used by Blofeld's guards in the opening

sequence.
    Thompson submachine gun, used by Felix Leiter's

men when rescuing Willard White.
    Madsen Model 1950, used by Blofeld's guards in the

oil rig battle.
    Short-barreled Smith & Wesson Bodyguard. Used by

Blofeld. Peter Franks uses this one as well.

Live and Let Die     1973   

    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 Kananga's henchmen and by Rosie Carver.
    MAC 10, used by Kananga's henchmen on the

Voodoo island.
    Shark gun used by Kananga, Bond manually

activates one bullet and shoves it down Kananga's

throat,that inflates him,killing him.

The Man with the Golden Gun     1974   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    "Triggerless" rifle, made by the 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.
    2-barreled Remington 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.

The Spy Who Loved Me     1977   

    AR-18, used by skiing KGB assassins in pretitle

sequence.
    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Beretta Model 1951, used by Sandor on the rooftop

in Cairo.
    Beretta Model 70, used by Bond when he

investigates the pyramids.
    Beretta 950 Jetfire, used by Anya Amasova

throughout the movie.
    Astra Model 357 (with a compensator), used by Jaws

when chasing Bond and Anya in a car in Sardinia.
    Astra Model 902 (Spanish copy of the Mauser C96

with fixed internal twenty-round magazine), also used

by Jaws when chasing Bond and Anya.
    Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun, used by the British

sailors during the battle on board the Liparus

supertanker
    MGC M16 (replica of the American M16 rifle), used

by the American sailors during the battle on board the

Liparus supertanker.

Moonraker     1979   

    Smith & Wesson Model 38 Bodyguard carried by the

Flight attendant in pretitle sequence.
    German MP40 used by thug during the Venice boat

chase.
    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.
    MAC 10, Used by Jaws when chasing Bond in a

speedboat in South America.
    M16 rifle, Used by Hugo Drax's henchmen in the

Aztec Temple Base/Launch Site.

For Your Eyes Only     1981   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm. Also used by

Loque in Cortina and on the beach after he's killed Lisl

with his GP Buggy.
    Samopal vz. 58 automatic rifle (metal folding stock

version), used by a guard at Hector Gonzales' house.
    Smith & Wesson Model 39, used by some of men at

Gonzales' house, and by one of Columbo's men.
    MAT 49, used by two guard's at Hector Gonzale's

house.
    Barnett Commando Crossbow, used by Melina to kill

Gonzales.
    Uzi, used by one of Hector Gonzales' men trying to

break into Bond's car, and by one of Loque's men in

the boat scene. Also used by General Gogol's guard in

the helicopter.
    Biathlon rifle, used by Erich Kriegler.
    Beretta Model 1951, used by motorcyle assassins in

Cortina.
    Luger P08, used by Claus at the beach. Loque briefly

has one that is kicked out of his hand and

commandeered by Columbo and one of his men.

Apostis is seen attempting to detach Bond's climbing

ropes from a cliff, using the butt of the pistol as a

hammer.
    Tokagypt 58, used by Milos Columbo and one of his

men.
    AR-18, used by Loque and one of his warehouse

guards and by some of Kristatos' henchmen at the

monastery.
    Barnett Wildcat Crossbow, picked out by Melina in

Cortina and used by her at St. Cyrils.
    Sterling L2A3 sub-machine gun, seen in the hands

of Milos Columbo's henchmen when assaulting

Kristatos' monastery-hideout.

Octopussy     1983   

    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. This same gun is used by Connery in the

competing "Never Say Never Again" released the

same year.
    MGC M16 (replica of the American M16 rifle), used

by the South American soldiers at the start of the

movie.
    Colt Junior, Sidearm of Octopussy and seen in the

title-sequence.
    SKS, Carried by marching soldiers and by guards

outside Kremlin Art Depository. Also used by some of

Kamal Khan's men at his palace in India.
    BSA Scorpion Air Pistol (used as a dart firing

tranquilliser gun), carried by Octopussy's women.
    Lee-Enfield bolt-action rifle (No. 4 Mk I), used by

Kamal Khan's men at his palace in India.
    Type 56 assault rifle (export model), used by soldiers

accompanying General Orlov to India in helicopter. Also

used by some of the soldiers, and the boarderguards

in GDR.
    Armi Jager AP-80 (replica of the Soviet Kalashnikov

AK assault rifle), carried by most of the soldiers in

GDR.
    Steyr AUG, wielded by General Orlov's men during

the train yard battle.
    Samopal vz. 58 automatic rifle (both standard fixed

stock and metal folding stock versions), carried by a

few soldiers in GDR, both standard fixed stock and

metal folding stock versions are seen. Metal folding

stock versions are seen carried by some of Kamal

Khan's men at his palace in India. Bond takes this gun

off one of Kamal's men and fires it while sliding down a

banister.
    Smith & Wesson Model 36, used by Octopussy to

blow the lock off the base of the circus cannon,

revealing the atomic bomb inside.

A View to a Kill     1985   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Type 56 assault rifle (export model), carried by the

Soviet commander of the skiing troops in Siberia. Also

used by two troopers firing at Bond while he's

searching the body of 003.
    AK assault rifle (rubber guns), used by the Soviet

troops who is chasing Bond in Siberia.
    Samopal vz. 58 automatic rifle (metal folding stock

version), used by the Soviet soldier in the helicopter.
    TT-33 pistol, used by one of the henchmen

interrupting Bond and Sir Godfrey Tibett while they

investigate Zorin's laboratory under his stable in

France.
    Smith & Wesson Model 19 wielded first by May Day

driving Bond's Rolce Royce after the horse race and

later by Zorin and her, again, when they break in and

set fire to San Francisco City Hall
    Tokagypt 58, wielded by Scarpine after the horse

race and later used to knock Bob Conley unconscious

in the mine.
    Colt Model 1903 Pocket Hammerless, drawn by

Venz (Dolph Lundgren) in his acting debut.
    Remington Model 31 shotgun with a hunting barrel

and loaded with (non-lethal) rock salt which Bond uses

to send off some of Max Zorin's hired goons.
    Heckler & Koch P9S, wielded by some of Zorin'z

hired goons at Stacey's house.
    Uzi both used by Zorin and Scarpine when the mine

workers are massacred.
    Smith & Wesson Model 36, used by Hans Mortner to

fire at Bond and Stacey at the Golden Gate Bridge.

The Living Daylights     1987   

    Heckler & Koch MP5 paintball markers, used by SAS

guards during the mock Gibraltar operation.
    Suppressed 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.
    Smith & Wesson Model 36, carried by butler at the

MI6 safehouse and taken by Necros.
    MAC 10, carried by a man at the MI6 safehouse.
    Star Model B carried by a Czechoslovakian

policeman chasing Bond near the Austrian boarder.
    Walther MPK carried by Czechoslovakian police.
    AKM assault rifle (both Hungarian AK-63 D and

Soviet AKMS variants), used with RPG attachments by

pursuing Czechoslovakian military near the Austrian

boarder. And without by Soviet soldiers in Afghanistan.

Bond takes this gun off a Russian soldier and uses it

during the airfield battle.
    CZ 83, Necros (used to assassinate Pushkin) and

Koskov's second-in-command in Afghanistan.
    Beretta M12 carried by police forces in Tangier.
    AK assault rifle (both standard fixed stock and metal

folding stock versions), both variants carried by some

of Kamran Shah's Mujahideen fighters. Kamran Shah

carries a folding stock variant. Some are also carried

by Soviet guards at the Afghan airfield.
    Karabiner 98k, carried and used by several

Mujahideen fighters.
    RPD, carried by a Mujahideen fighter.
    Mosin Nagant Model 1891/30, carried by the Chief of

Snow Leopard Brotherhood.
    Short Magazine Lee-Enfield (SMLE), carried and

used by many of the Mujahideen fighters.
    RPG-7 wielded by Mujahideen in the airfield battle
    Colt Model 733 (fitted with a transparent bullet-proof

shield), used by Brad Whittaker.
    Suppressed Skorpion vz. 61, used by Pushkin's men

to break into Brad Whittaker's lair.

Licence to Kill     1989   

    Taurus PT92 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.

Sidearm of Milton Krest who fires this weapon at Bond,

unsuccessfully, when he jumps into the water after

killing the deck guard
    CAR-15 rifle, seen briefly being used by Felix Leiter

and the DEA agents chasing Sanchez in the pre-title

sequence.
    Heckler & Koch P9S seen used by one Sanchez's

henchmen, Braun.
    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Heckler & Koch MP5 (actually chopped and

converted Heckler & Koch HK94A3), used by Dario in

the pre-credits sequence and later by a guard at

Milton Krest's warehouse. Also used by Krest's men on

his boat, and by one of Sanchez' guards at his house.
    Micro Uzi. used by one of Sanchesz' men, Perez.

Sanchez uses this when he tries to shoot Bond off of

the tanker trucks during the final battle.
    Ruger Security Six, Ed Killifer draws this gun at

Krest's warehouse.
    Speargun. Bond uses this to kill a guard on the

Wavekrest.
    Smith & Wesson Model 66, Dario grabs this gun

from one of his henchemen and uses it to fire at Bond

and Pam as they get away on the boat.
    "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 Franz 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.
    Beretta 950 Jetfire, carried by Pam Bouvier in a

concealed leg holster, and used by Bond for his "family

reunion" with Q.
    Walther P5 seen used by Dario in the climax.
    FIM-92 Stinger man-portable SAM, used several

times during the tanker chase.

GoldenEye     1995   

    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    AKS-74U. Bond uses this gun on two separate

occasions. Xenia uses it to massacre the Severnaya

facility.
    AK-74 assault rifle. Bond takes this from a Russian

soldier in Cuba. Xenia has one strapped to her back

before Bond indirectly uses it to kill her. Trevalyan

wields one in the final battle with Bond. The folding

stock version AK-74s that were seen in GoldenEye

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 BDA. Used by Trevelyan during the

chemical facility shootout.
    CZ 52. Used by Zukovsky when Bond visits his bar.
    Browning BDM. Trevelyan uses this gun
    Makarov PM. Used by a Russian pilot from the

chemical facility, General Ourumov and Natalya.
    D-10T 100 mm rifled gun. Fired from the T-55 tank

at Trevalyn's train.

Tomorrow Never Dies     1997   

    Heavily modified AR-18 rifle. Bond uses this during

the opening sequence.
    Browning BDA, Used by terrorist pilot during the

opening sequence.
    Walther PPK, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Sig Sauer P229 Used by 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.
    Makarov PM. Weapon carried by General Chang's

man.

The World Is Not Enough     1999   

    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.
    Heckler and Koch MP5K. Renard uses this one when

he escapes the nuclear test facility.
    Colt Model 1911A1, used by Bond on two occasions.

Also used by Elektra King during the final battle.
    SIG-Sauer P228, used by Renard on the submarine

to order his men to keep the sub at level.
    Cane Gun. Zukovsky can convert his walking cane

into a single shot rifle. He uses it to free Bond from

Elektra King.

Die Another Day     2002   

    Walther P99, Bond's issued sidearm.
    Type 56-1 assault rifle, Used by North Korean Army

at the start of the film.
    AKMS assault rifle, Used by North Korean Army at

the start of the film, some dressed up as AKS-74s
    Stechkin APS, Used by Zao.
    Heckler & Koch G36K dressed up as an 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 10, Bond borrowed the

revolver from a fellow agent while in Cuba.
    Heckler & Koch MP5K. Used by Gustav Graves men

in Iceland with suppressors.
    Heckler & Koch G36. Used by one of Gustave

Graves men in Iceland.
    Accuracy International AW sniper rifle, used by Bond

when he and Jinx infiltrated North Korea, though they

never get to fire it.
    Browning Hi-Power, in the sailboat scenes.
    Beretta 84FS Cheetah, Jinx's gun used at the Isla

Los Organos clinic and when onboard Gustav Graves'

plane.
    Beretta 3032 Tomcat, Jinx's gun used at the ice

palace in Iceland.

Casino Royale     2006   

    Walther P99, Bond's issued sidearm (in 9x19mm

a.k.a. 9mm Parabellum).
    Heckler & Koch USP Compact, Used by Mollaka, and

bathroom henchman.
    Browning Hi-Power, used by Bond in the embassy in

Madagascar, taken from a local diplomat.
    Walther PPK was featured in promotional photos.

Also used by Bond during the fight with Fisher

completing his first kill and commence Craig's first

prologue in the gunbarrel sequence. Also used by a

Steven Obanno's thug in the Splendid Hotel.
    AK assault rifles, used by Ugandan "freedom

fighters".
    AKM assault rifles, used by some of the Ugandan

"freedom fighters".
    Type 56-1 assault rifles, used by some Ugandan

"freedom fighters".
    WASR 3, used by the embassy guards in

Madagascar.
    Glock 17, Carlos steals this gun from a Police holster

in an equipment room at the Miami Airport.
    Colt Law Enforcement Carbine, Used by the Miami-

Dade Police at the Miami International Airport.
    Sig-Sauer P226, Suppressed versions used by

Venice henchmen.
    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.
    Jericho 941, Used by Gettler.
    Nailgun, Used by Gettler and Bond in the Venice

scene.

Quantum of Solace     2008   

    Heckler & Koch UMP. This gun was pictured in

promotional shots for the movie as well as the movie's

trailer. It was fitted with a suppressor. An unsuppressed

version was used by Bond in the opening car chase.
    M249 SAW, used by villains in car chase scene.
    Walther PPK, Bond's main sidearm.
    SIG-Sauer P226, used by Mr. White's sleeper agent

Craig Mitchell. Bond also uses this gun in climax scene.

Removed from guard in elevator during his escape.
    Rohrbaugh R9, Camille's pistol.
    Uzi, used by dock guards in Haiti.
    Heckler & Koch G36, Some of General Medrano's

men use this 5.56mm assault rifle in the boat chase.
    Heckler & Koch MP5K-PDW with UMP-style stocks,

used by General Medrano's guard on the yacht. Also

used by CIA officers in a bar in Bolivia, when they try to

arrest Bond.
    Heckler & Koch MP5, used by CIA officers in a bar in

Bolivia, when they try to arrest Bond.
    Colt Model 933, used by some CIA men in Bolivia.
    SG 540, used by one of General Merdrano's

henchmen in the boat chase in Haiti.
    SIG P210, Bond acquires the SIG P210 with gold

inlayed engraving from General Medrano's room when

he tries to rescue Camille. Bond uses it to aid their

escape when he sees a hydrogen fuel cell that he

blows up to create a route out. He later uses it to

threaten Greene before leaving him in the desert.

Skyfall     2012   

    Walther PPK/S, Bond's newly issued sidearm. This

time in 9mm Short (.380 ACP) rather than the usual

7.65 mm (.32 ACP). Q provides Bond with a signature

version that only his palm print can activate to shoot.
    Walther PPK. Bond uses this in the pre-titles

sequence, but throws it away when it doesn't have any

more ammo.
    Glock 18. Patrice's gun that fires depleted uranium

shells.
    Olympic Arms K23B Tactical assault rifle. This is Eve

Moneypenny's gun in the pre-titles sequence.
    Custom sniper rifle. Patrice uses this one before he

falls to his death.
    Bond's father's hunting rifle was provided for the film

by Anderson-Wheeler gun makers. The rifle was a

double barreled 500 Nitro. [11]
    Heckler & Koch HK416. 10.4 inch barrel variant used

by Silva's men during the attack on Skyfall and used

by Bond after retrieving it from one of their bodies.
    John Rigby Dueling pistol. Silva and Bond use one to

when Silva invites Bond to shoot a glass off Severine's

head.

Non-Eon films
Title     Year
Never Say Never Again     1983   

    CZ Model 25. Bond uses this submachine gun in the

opening sequence.
    Walther P5, Bond's main gun. Coincidentally, 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 labeled

as a Walther PPK.
    Ingram MAC 10. Used by Bond and Felix Leiter in the

final battle.

Casino Royale     1967   

    1903 Springfield. Used in a failed attempt to

execute James Bond.
    Backwards-firing Walther PPK. Used by George Raft

who accidentally shot himself with this one.
    Sten Gun Mark 5. Used by Dr. Noah's guards.
    Submachine gun used by Vesper Lynd To kill Evelyn

Tremble.
    Colt M1911 with silencer. Used by SMERSH agents

to kill Le Chriffe.



  

 

 

 

 

 










































































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