Dude it's Okay and I notice in the Movie Dogs Of War it was used as a Mock-Up for the Uzi and Also the Mock-Up Version of this is also seen in the Action/Comedy Movie Stripes in 1981
Its was Just One Time... No Big Deal, plus it isn't that Distinguishable when its like All over the Place and Constantly Moving... Unless you have a Keen Eye, it ain't That Obvious, again not really a Big Deal, you still Did a amazing job in this Video
Meet the UZI family Or the Line of Uzi relatives These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family 1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia 2) PM 63 Rak from Poland 3) Uzi from Israel 4) ASMI from India 5) Milkor BXP from South Africa 6) MCEM 2 from UK 7) HK MP7 from Germany 8)MSMC from India 9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA 10) Nambu type 2A from Japan 11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia 12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico 13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland 14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again 15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan 16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia 17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again 18)Ruger MP 9 from USA 19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy 20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina 21) STAR Z 84 from Spain 22)STAR Z 75 from Spain 23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada 24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR 25) vladas model 92 26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany 27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria 28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy 29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US 30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia 31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine 32) ELF SMG from Ukraine 33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine 34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden 35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA 36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan 37)PP 90 from USSR 38)PP 93 from Russia 39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia 40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden 41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA 42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru 43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK 44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland 45)STK CPW from Singapore 46)MPS prototype from South Africa 47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
I was waiting for The Terminator clip saying "The UZI nine millimetah" fun fact it was originally scripted that the terminator acquired semi- auto variants of his weapons and would later be seen converting them to full auto in his hotel room.
Jason Douglas and the rest Meet the UZI family Or the Line of Uzi relatives These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family 1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia 2) PM 63 Rak from Poland 3) Uzi from Israel 4) ASMI from India 5) Milkor BXP from South Africa 6) MCEM 2 from UK 7) HK MP7 from Germany 8)MSMC from India 9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA 10) Nambu type 2A from Japan 11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia 12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico 13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland 14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again 15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan 16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia 17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again 18)Ruger MP 9 from USA 19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy 20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina 21) STAR Z 84 from Spain 22)STAR Z 75 from Spain 23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada 24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR 25) vladas model 92 26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany 27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria 28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy 29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US 30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia 31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine 32) ELF SMG from Ukraine 33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine 34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden 35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA 36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan 37)PP 90 from USSR 38)PP 93 from Russia 39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia 40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden 41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA 42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru 43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK 44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland 45)STK CPW from Singapore 46)MPS prototype from South Africa 47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
Ah, The Wild Geese. An absolute cavalcade of screen talent, from big names to great character actors. I think it might even be Roger Moore's best movie!
@@mbr5742 Not sure how the woke crowd would handle Limbarni's speech about how we need each other, and how there is no future unless it is together. A world without racism would leave the wokerati with nothing to do and no enemy to fight. To me, that is what makes the Wild Geese so good. It would've been easy just to make a straight action flick, but then you put in a South African white guy and a black African leader in the middle of it for tension. They started off disliking each other, and ended up as brothers. Someone always chops onions in the room when I watch this movie.
Allegedly in the Six Day War, Israeli soldiers would trade their FALs for Uzis due to its reliability. The FAL’s shortcomings in the harsh environment lead to the development of the Galil
I’d love to see a follow up on the MAC 10&11, the American contemporary of the Uzi. Also another great chance to talk about Layer Cake. Also I think someone had a Mini-Uzi during the warehouse raid.
As long as an Uzi sneaks in to make up for the Die Hard 3 MAC-10 slipping in :P As for Layer Cake, IMFDB doesn't list a Mini-Uzi for the film, but IIRC the main focus in that scene is Gazza with the MAC-10, so maybe there's one in someone else's hands?
Meet the UZI family Or the Line of Uzi relatives These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family 1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia 2) PM 63 Rak from Poland 3) Uzi from Israel 4) ASMI from India 5) Milkor BXP from South Africa 6) MCEM 2 from UK 7) HK MP7 from Germany 8)MSMC from India 9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA 10) Nambu type 2A from Japan 11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia 12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico 13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland 14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again 15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan 16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia 17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again 18)Ruger MP 9 from USA 19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy 20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina 21) STAR Z 84 from Spain 22)STAR Z 75 from Spain 23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada 24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR 25) vladas model 92 26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany 27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria 28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy 29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US 30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia 31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine 32) ELF SMG from Ukraine 33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine 34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden 35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA 36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan 37)PP 90 from USSR 38)PP 93 from Russia 39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia 40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden 41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA 42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru 43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK 44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland 45)STK CPW from Singapore 46)MPS prototype from South Africa 47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
The Mini-Uzi is my favorite variant of the Uzi. As my fictitious superhero alter-ego, I wield two Mini-Uzis alongside a modernized/modified BAR and two Springfield Hellcats. Admittedly, I will, on occasion, operate the M-U's with one in each hand. The accuracy remains about the same (as if being used w/ both hands) thanks to the Six Million Dollar Man style bionic arms that make up part of my superpowers.
Brilliant to see “Cockneys VS Zombies” here, that’s a true British classic and possibly the best depiction of the British in film of the past century. The East End was saved thanks to this film.
The Israeli series "Valley of Tears" heavily features Uzis used by the IDF during the Yom Kippur War, including using jungle-style magazine couplings. Highly recommend.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq a former colleague was a quartermaster/regimental company Sargent major who supervised the sale of Centurian tanks including spares to the IDF.. great tanks..
Factory issue put 2. 25 round mag’s to L shape. (I have one. )It was mid 90’s still in IMI catalogue for extra acsessory. Got the sale’s catalogue too😊
But was it accurate? I have never seen any platoon anywhere with just submachine guns aside from those Soviet squads that relied heavily on PPSH guns and even they still had guys with Mosins and a DP-28. It would be easy for a filmmaker to just get a bunch of Uzis and not do any research on what weapons were actually issued.
My dad got to try out an Uzi at Fort Bragg in the mid 60s, before they became famous in the 1967 Six Day War. He and other SF troops who got to handle the weapon pronounced it "YOO-zee".
The Uzi is a great close quarters weapon. I've never had the thumb safety slip on one. I suppose if it were improperly assembled it could. As far as being easy to convert the automatic. The model A is fairly simple. A registered auto sear and a $200 permission slip from the batfe is about it. The 10,5" standard barrel length is great for ranges out to about 350 meters. The 16,25" civilian model really milks the last bit of power out of the round. I've spent many years with the Uzi and have it as my rucksack weapon. The barrel takes only a few seconds to tighten in place and with a folding stock it turns into a very manageable weapon. Uziel Gal truly was a blessing. Most folks don't know that he spent time in prison for carrying a concealed weapon. Thanks for the awesome video.
I was trained on the Uzi in the german military. It`s so simple to handle and take care of. You can easyly fire double round "bursts" and I managed to hit targets up to 150m distance reliable. I really enjoyed shooting it.
Another note, the secret service agent with the Uzi during the Reagan assassination attempt had it in a briefcase. It wasn't in his jacket. There are pictures showing the discarded briefcase on the internet.
I need prop auction site footage of one specific Micro Uzi: a fully automatic modified Uzi pistol with a special unknown compensator. So far, it appeared in Batman Returns, Rapid Fire, Total Recall, Predator 2, The Running Man, Class of 1999, Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection, and Hell Comes to Frogtown.
Nice work as always. Such an iconic weapon I remember as a kid having a water squirting full size Uzi. It came with 3 magazine's and I glued them in an L shape Israeli style for a quick reload. Seeing Hardy Kruger in The Wild Geese clips prompts me to suggest The FN FAL in movies. Even though that was probably supposed to be an R 1.
05:21 even before ww2 a magazine in the pistol grip SMG already existed, tho only as a prototype. The Japanese Experimental Model 1 (often mislabled Type 1 or if you're BFV Type 2A) feeding from 30 or 50 round mags and intended to be used by mechanised troops. For images search for "南部式機関短銃" and for a game depicting it check Battlefield V tho they got a bunch of details wrong (Making it closed bolt, holding it wrong, giving it a way too high RoF and the lack of the metal handguard).
@@pierpaologuidi7686 also during the war the German Wimmersperg Spz, tho not a SMG also with the mag as the pistol grip. And in 1942 the British Viper machine carbine. There's a bunch of examples during WW2, but as far as I know the Model 1 is the first being pre-war (unless you count machine pistols like the full auto Luger experiment during WW1).
Meet the UZI family Or the Line of Uzi relatives These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family 1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia 2) PM 63 Rak from Poland 3) Uzi from Israel 4) ASMI from India 5) Milkor BXP from South Africa 6) MCEM 2 from UK 7) HK MP7 from Germany 8)MSMC from India 9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA 10) Nambu type 2A from Japan 11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia 12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico 13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland 14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again 15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan 16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia 17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again 18)Ruger MP 9 from USA 19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy 20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina 21) STAR Z 84 from Spain 22)STAR Z 75 from Spain 23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada 24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR 25) vladas model 92 26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany 27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria 28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy 29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US 30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia 31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine 32) ELF SMG from Ukraine 33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine 34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden 35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA 36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan 37)PP 90 from USSR 38)PP 93 from Russia 39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia 40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden 41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA 42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru 43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK 44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland 45)STK CPW from Singapore 46)MPS prototype from South Africa 47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
Colleague of mine is a former German soldier used the uzi known as the mp2. It discharges if dropped due to its open heavy bolt design. He found out the hard way when he accidentally dropped his uzi during a training exercise. Fortunately noone got hurt.
I heard jokes about the gun, I think it had a special name I can't remember. I think it was smething along the lines of "tankers grenade". Usually used in tanks because of their compact size, the joke was that a loaded gun thrown into a window of a builing would clean the room by accidental discharges, similar to a grenade.
One thing about the military/full auto version of the Uzi for sale in the US, technically speaking, it isn't illegal to buy, it's just difficult. Any fully automatic gun is available for sale in the US, it just has to have been made by 1986. But you wouldn't find them in a typical gun store and you have to jump through a few extra hoops with the ATF and payu for a $200 tas xtamp. Because of the 1986 restriction, fully automatic firearms are limited in number and are pretty expensive as a result as well. But in 1984, Arnie, as the Terminator, technically should have been able to buy a full auto UZI, I'm just not sure that many gun stores would have carried them.
Not in California, which is not included in the 27 States that allows the sale and transfer of NFA Title II weapons to civilian with the enhanced federal background check, a letter of approval by the buyer’s local Chief of Police or Sheriff on department letterhead, and the $200 federal tax stamp.
Even better irony is that Israeli army used in it's early years a lot of ww2 era german guns and equpment. Helmets, mausers 98k, mp40s, Bf109s and so on.
My father fought the Syrians in the 6 day and you kippur wars, with an Uzi. He saw it as his personal weapon and speaks very fondly of it, preferring it over the FN‘s of his comrades. Having one, especially with a folding stock, was the ultimate status symbol among IDF infantry these days (according to him)
Ok, sure. The same was said of the M1 Carbine by GIs, but it wasn't actually reality. It would suck to be stuck in a trench in the desert with enemy firing at you from 400yd. away and you only have Uzis to fire back with.
Enjoyed the video. Pretty accurate info. Got my first one in 83 and have one now. It can be the right tool for the right job. The open bolt means the SMG will almost never over heat. Later from Texas.usa.
The Secret Service agent at the Reagan assassination had the Uzi concealed in a brief case, not on his body. A photo exists of an open case near him and the form-fitting insert can be seen. In 'The Dogs of War' most of the black troops in the cargo ship scene are armed with Mac-10's that have been mocked up to look like the Uzi.
I've expexted the "Da Uzi 9 millimeta" scene to be right at the start and waited the whole time for it :D Also, the gun in Die Hard with a vengeance is not an Uzi it's a Mac-10 or Mac-11.
Meet the UZI family Or the Line of Uzi relatives These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family 1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia 2) PM 63 Rak from Poland 3) Uzi from Israel 4) ASMI from India 5) Milkor BXP from South Africa 6) MCEM 2 from UK 7) HK MP7 from Germany 8)MSMC from India 9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA 10) Nambu type 2A from Japan 11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia 12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico 13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland 14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again 15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan 16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia 17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again 18)Ruger MP 9 from USA 19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy 20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina 21) STAR Z 84 from Spain 22)STAR Z 75 from Spain 23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada 24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR 25) vladas model 92 26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany 27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria 28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy 29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US 30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia 31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine 32) ELF SMG from Ukraine 33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine 34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden 35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA 36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan 37)PP 90 from USSR 38)PP 93 from Russia 39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia 40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden 41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA 42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru 43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK 44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland 45)STK CPW from Singapore 46)MPS prototype from South Africa 47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
The Uzi "instruction" scene from Dogs of War has always been a favorite of mine, thanks for including it. Now I need to track down Cockneys vs. Zombies...
Full auto Uzi's were legal and still are if registered. By 1986 they banned any new ones for sale which makes the ones on the market "pre 1986" very expensive...
It's no coincidence that you see on the photo of the creator him holding it along with an MP40. They pretty much gave him the latter and said: we want something shooting the same ammunition, just as accurate, but more compact, but with the same barrel length.
Meet the UZI family Or the Line of Uzi relatives These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family 1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia 2) PM 63 Rak from Poland 3) Uzi from Israel 4) ASMI from India 5) Milkor BXP from South Africa 6) MCEM 2 from UK 7) HK MP7 from Germany 8)MSMC from India 9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA 10) Nambu type 2A from Japan 11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia 12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico 13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland 14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again 15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan 16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia 17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again 18)Ruger MP 9 from USA 19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy 20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina 21) STAR Z 84 from Spain 22)STAR Z 75 from Spain 23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada 24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR 25) vladas model 92 26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany 27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria 28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy 29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US 30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia 31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine 32) ELF SMG from Ukraine 33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine 34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden 35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA 36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan 37)PP 90 from USSR 38)PP 93 from Russia 39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia 40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden 41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA 42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru 43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK 44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland 45)STK CPW from Singapore 46)MPS prototype from South Africa 47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
On Uzi security, I was expecting to see that scene from True Lies when the girl drops the Uzi in the staires and it shots as it bounces down and somehow shoots every terrorists running in the scene... silly but appropriate lol.
I used to periodically rent the standard UZi SMG at a full auto rental range in Glen Burnie, MD. It used to be $40 for the Uzi and four loaded 25-round magazines. I probably had five firing sessions to myself, and a couple more where I took a friend and we each fired two magazines. It’s a fun gun to shoot.
The Uzi carbine is incredibly fun to shoot. I have an Action Arms SBS semi auto Uzi and it's a handy little carbine, altho not nearly as fun as the select fire variant, which costs 10 to 15 times as much. I see full transferrable Uzi's going for 15 to 20k and up in 2022.
Great video as ever, the amount of work you put in on these is amazing. It must take hours! I thought for a moment I had caught you out, thought I saw a couple of scenes with Ingrams in the mix. But no, you're good! 🙂
I like Uzis. Nice and slow. Gives me time to actually hit what I’m aiming at. (Oh, I fired one once - so that means I’m an expert, right!,?.) Great work JJ. A difficult job done very well.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq Yeah. You did good, mate. Have you tried comparing your early vids and recent ones? There’s a marked fluidity and relaxation in the later ones. More confidence in the presentation essentially. “Ahrite I’m jonny” to “Ahhhhriiite. I’mmm Jonny!” Nice:)
I always think of UZIs as gangster weapon. Mainly because of movie depiction but logically, they are light and concealable; perfect for hit-and-run drive-by shooting. I’ve also seen movies where gangs outside the US use UZIs. I’ve only seen used by Chinese/Hong Kong Triads and maybe Japanese Yakuza. I also noticed the current US military alone rarely use submachine guns, if they do, they’re probably for specific missions take place inside buildings or jungles. My guess is with the standard use of carbines; smaller and lighter than traditional rifles but still fire the same powerful rifle rounds.
The Uzi is sometimes associated with Drive By Shootings because it seen by Criminals who are a part of Gangs when one their own is killed as a revenge for their deaths or a Hit to eliminate a rival gang member
I was a teen living in Chicago in the 80s, and yep, Uzis were very popular. Mostly civilian versions (some converted) but also black market military ones. The last place I lived before I took off for California was Cicero, IL, famed for Al Capone and racism. There was a drug dealer at the end of my block, he'd park his car in an alleyside driveway with the trunk open and sit next to it in a lawnchair, cooler at his side. He was 17, a cousin of kids I knew well, and he recognized me from those days. I got embroiled in a conversation he struck up and he proudly showed off the full military Uzi he kept in the open trunk. His up-supplier had given it to him as a bonus. I made sure never to walk that route again.
@@frostfive3991 MAC-10s and -11s were both also popular. You could pick up the civilian version of either pretty cheap at gun stores back in the 80s. TEC-9s were even cheaper, so many wannabes had them. Ruger made the Camp Carbine both in 9mm and .45 ACP. The 9mm version used Smith & Wesson 59/459 magazines. Also cheap, and the innocuous looking wooden stock could be easily replaced with a black nylon folding one.
The Uzi, the "we bought it now you have to suffer it" submaschine gun of the West German Army. It survived there for political reasons. Switching to the MP5 would have made a lot more sense since the MP5 and G3 are identical in drill, assembly/disassembly, problem handling etc.
@@patriotenfield3276 They experimented with quite a few MPs back in the late 50s/early 60s. Some police forces used Walter TMP for a time. All except the BW went MP5 later, by the 1980s only tze army had Uzi. Not a bad gun but with conscripts the SA80 approach of "one system for all" is better.
Die Uzi, war und ist eine Schrottwaffe, da wir während meiner BW Zeit, anfang der 80er Jahre auch mit Polizeikräfte zusammen auf dem Schießplatz waren, und diese meistens Neidvoll auf unsere Verpflegung schauten, da Sie so etwas nicht hatten, aber großen Kohldampf, hat der Spieß oft einen kleinen Deal gemacht. Sie konnten bei uns Mitessen, und wir also das Unteroffizierkorps mit Ihren HK MP-5 und unserer Munition schießen. Die Heckler &Koch, war im Gegensatz zur Uzi eine absolute Präzisionswaffe, leicht zu bedienen und tragen, die hätten wir auch gerne gehabt.
@@ag2938 I would not call the Uzi a bad weapon, it did exactly the job it was build for. It just was a bad choice for the west german army. And that's because they used the G3 as a rif,e back then so the MP5 would have reduced needed training time/allowed for more time spend on what was in operation, cleqning, imediate action, safety etc basically one weapom. Always a good idea in a conscript army.
It´s still popular in Hollywood, Colin Farrell is packing a micro Uzi in the latest Batman movie and it was very popular in Hong Kong action cinema of the 80´s/90´s, specially in all the John Woo movies, where Chow Yun-fat was mowing down hordes of bad guys, with mini Uzis. In real life though, the HK MP-5 proved to be better suited for military comando & tactical law enforcement units.
As soon as I saw the Uzi come up in the poll and win, I knew the Wild Geese would show up. Vastly underrated and great movie--and more than just action and big names.
@@mbr5742 It's rare here in the States, unless you're a Roger Moore fan or happened to be around when it came out. I have quite a few friends who are big war movie fans, and I was the only one who had ever seen it.
My dad was in a tank battalion as a communications specialist in the late 70s in tge german army and he once told me the uzi had essentially no felt recoil to him (granted the other guns he was shooting such as the g3 and mg3 were full powered cartriges and he is 1,97m)
@4:08 This whole time, I had no idea that the old arcade video game “Operation: Thunder Bolt” was essentially based off true to life events. I mean, I have been familiar with the Entebbe Raid in Uganda, but never put the two together. That game was an absolutely awesome upgraded sequel to the first game like it “Operation: Wolf”. The first game had a full size Uzi and only one player. The sequel had mini Uzis, was two player simultaneous gameplay, and arguably much more difficult to complete the game; it wasn’t one of those machines where all you had to do was pump it full of quarters and you’d eventually win. No, you had to kill the last terrorist AND safely free the pilot he was using as human shield, or you’d end up stuck there unable to take off to safety.
The MAC-10 definitely slipped into the video in one scene. I do apologize 🙏
Dude it's Okay and I notice in the Movie Dogs Of War it was used as a Mock-Up for the Uzi and Also the Mock-Up Version of this is also seen in the Action/Comedy Movie Stripes in 1981
Oh how the mighty have fallen
Its was Just One Time... No Big Deal, plus it isn't that Distinguishable when its like All over the Place and Constantly Moving... Unless you have a Keen Eye, it ain't That Obvious, again not really a Big Deal, you still Did a amazing job in this Video
Meet the UZI family
Or the Line of Uzi relatives
These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family
1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia
2) PM 63 Rak from Poland
3) Uzi from Israel
4) ASMI from India
5) Milkor BXP from South Africa
6) MCEM 2 from UK
7) HK MP7 from Germany
8)MSMC from India
9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA
10) Nambu type 2A from Japan
11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia
12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico
13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland
14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again
15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan
16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia
17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again
18)Ruger MP 9 from USA
19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy
20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina
21) STAR Z 84 from Spain
22)STAR Z 75 from Spain
23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada
24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR
25) vladas model 92
26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany
27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria
28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy
29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US
30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia
31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine
32) ELF SMG from Ukraine
33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine
34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden
35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA
36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan
37)PP 90 from USSR
38)PP 93 from Russia
39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia
40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden
41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA
42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru
43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK
44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland
45)STK CPW from Singapore
46)MPS prototype from South Africa
47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine
That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
Oh my goodness, I’m actually shaking and crying right now. Johnny you fiend
Nah it’s ok we all make mistakes, it was funny to see. Have a nice day!
I was waiting for The Terminator clip saying "The UZI nine millimetah" fun fact it was originally scripted that the terminator acquired semi- auto variants of his weapons and would later be seen converting them to full auto in his hotel room.
Fun Fact:
The Uzi design was inspired by a Czechoslovakian design called ZK-476. It was a rival to the Sa vz. 23 which lost it out during trials.
Is it me or are so many famous guns based of elusive Czech designs
Jason Douglas and the rest
Meet the UZI family
Or the Line of Uzi relatives
These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family
1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia
2) PM 63 Rak from Poland
3) Uzi from Israel
4) ASMI from India
5) Milkor BXP from South Africa
6) MCEM 2 from UK
7) HK MP7 from Germany
8)MSMC from India
9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA
10) Nambu type 2A from Japan
11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia
12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico
13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland
14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again
15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan
16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia
17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again
18)Ruger MP 9 from USA
19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy
20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina
21) STAR Z 84 from Spain
22)STAR Z 75 from Spain
23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada
24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR
25) vladas model 92
26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany
27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria
28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy
29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US
30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia
31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine
32) ELF SMG from Ukraine
33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine
34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden
35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA
36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan
37)PP 90 from USSR
38)PP 93 from Russia
39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia
40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden
41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA
42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru
43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK
44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland
45)STK CPW from Singapore
46)MPS prototype from South Africa
47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine
That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
The czechs always seem to make something really good that needs just a few tweaks
Also Varsow Pact so West no issua, Uzi had it’s place.. German Jew Gotthard Glas alias Mr Uzi
Everyone loves Czechnology!
Ah, The Wild Geese. An absolute cavalcade of screen talent, from big names to great character actors.
I think it might even be Roger Moore's best movie!
imagine that movie in a cinema today 😂😂😂 impossible
@@BratislavMetulski Non negative portrait of an LGBT person, two POC as Important characters, a "understanding my errors" racist - might work
The Wilde Geese 2" has a better story about the Rudolf Hess kidnap from Spandau prison Berlin.
Live and let die for me
@@mbr5742 Not sure how the woke crowd would handle Limbarni's speech about how we need each other, and how there is no future unless it is together. A world without racism would leave the wokerati with nothing to do and no enemy to fight.
To me, that is what makes the Wild Geese so good. It would've been easy just to make a straight action flick, but then you put in a South African white guy and a black African leader in the middle of it for tension. They started off disliking each other, and ended up as brothers. Someone always chops onions in the room when I watch this movie.
can you do one witth the DSHK heavy machine gun?
Y E S
I agree on that
Yeah the Dushka or Shavak aircraft variant would be a dope vid.
KPV is a rare gem though
@@patriotenfield3276 true but if we do see an episode of one it would be cool
Allegedly in the Six Day War, Israeli soldiers would trade their FALs for Uzis due to its reliability. The FAL’s shortcomings in the harsh environment lead to the development of the Galil
Ak-47 from Arabs
I would never trade a rifle for a submachine gun unless the rifle was Chauchat-levels of unreliable.
the main problem with the FAL , was that it didn't have a bottle opener , unlike the Galil , which remedied this serious shortcoming !!!!
It's controllable recoil. I've fired a full auto uzi and it has a good amount of control unlike the AK which just wants to climb.
@@fluttzkrieg4392 *American .30-06 Chauchat-levels of unreliable.
The French 8mm Lebel Chauchat was one of the best.
"Be proud Mr. Woo!" - Lo Wang when Dual wielding Uzis (Shadow Warrior, 1997)
I think my dingy hanging out!
The UZI Submachine Gun was my Favourite Submachine Gun of All time.
GI Joe Snake Eyes 🫡 packed a Mini Uzi.
Reason for akimbo popularity in movies and - especialy - games is simple:
Double the gun, double the fun.
Lol
“… easier to achieve the ‘wall of warm lead’ effect…?”
I’d love to see a follow up on the MAC 10&11, the American contemporary of the Uzi. Also another great chance to talk about Layer Cake. Also I think someone had a Mini-Uzi during the warehouse raid.
As long as an Uzi sneaks in to make up for the Die Hard 3 MAC-10 slipping in :P
As for Layer Cake, IMFDB doesn't list a Mini-Uzi for the film, but IIRC the main focus in that scene is Gazza with the MAC-10, so maybe there's one in someone else's hands?
Meet the UZI family
Or the Line of Uzi relatives
These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family
1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia
2) PM 63 Rak from Poland
3) Uzi from Israel
4) ASMI from India
5) Milkor BXP from South Africa
6) MCEM 2 from UK
7) HK MP7 from Germany
8)MSMC from India
9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA
10) Nambu type 2A from Japan
11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia
12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico
13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland
14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again
15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan
16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia
17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again
18)Ruger MP 9 from USA
19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy
20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina
21) STAR Z 84 from Spain
22)STAR Z 75 from Spain
23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada
24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR
25) vladas model 92
26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany
27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria
28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy
29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US
30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia
31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine
32) ELF SMG from Ukraine
33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine
34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden
35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA
36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan
37)PP 90 from USSR
38)PP 93 from Russia
39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia
40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden
41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA
42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru
43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK
44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland
45)STK CPW from Singapore
46)MPS prototype from South Africa
47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine
That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
@@Del_S my mistake, the tall fat member of Dukes gang has a full sized Uzi in greenhouse heist.
The Mini-Uzi is my favorite variant of the Uzi.
As my fictitious superhero alter-ego, I wield two Mini-Uzis alongside a modernized/modified BAR and two Springfield Hellcats.
Admittedly, I will, on occasion, operate the M-U's with one in each hand. The accuracy remains about the same (as if being used w/ both hands) thanks to the Six Million Dollar Man style bionic arms that make up part of my superpowers.
Gotta love 'Lord of War' movie and the Uzi. Thank you Israel!
Chuck Norris doesn't fire his gun, the bullets runs away from him
He uses guns as a sign of mercy.
Thumbs up for featuring the Wild Geese!
Perfect weapon for driveby Shooting
Especially Hickock45 driving a bicycle and drive by with supressed Uzi
Brilliant to see “Cockneys VS Zombies” here, that’s a true British classic and possibly the best depiction of the British in film of the past century.
The East End was saved thanks to this film.
The Israeli series "Valley of Tears" heavily features Uzis used by the IDF during the Yom Kippur War, including using jungle-style magazine couplings. Highly recommend.
Thanks so much for adding this! I had made a note to include that one but got swamped going through so many movies and forgot.
Its a masterpiece of a series! Absolutely stunning!
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq a former colleague was a quartermaster/regimental company Sargent major who supervised the sale of Centurian tanks including spares to the IDF.. great tanks..
Factory issue put 2. 25 round mag’s to L shape. (I have one. )It was mid 90’s still in IMI catalogue for extra acsessory. Got the sale’s catalogue too😊
But was it accurate? I have never seen any platoon anywhere with just submachine guns aside from those Soviet squads that relied heavily on PPSH guns and even they still had guys with Mosins and a DP-28. It would be easy for a filmmaker to just get a bunch of Uzis and not do any research on what weapons were actually issued.
My dad got to try out an Uzi at Fort Bragg in the mid 60s, before they became famous in the 1967 Six Day War. He and other SF troops who got to handle the weapon pronounced it "YOO-zee".
The Uzi is a great close quarters weapon. I've never had the thumb safety slip on one. I suppose if it were improperly assembled it could. As far as being easy to convert the automatic. The model A is fairly simple. A registered auto sear and a $200 permission slip from the batfe is about it. The 10,5" standard barrel length is great for ranges out to about 350 meters. The 16,25" civilian model really milks the last bit of power out of the round. I've spent many years with the Uzi and have it as my rucksack weapon. The barrel takes only a few seconds to tighten in place and with a folding stock it turns into a very manageable weapon. Uziel Gal truly was a blessing. Most folks don't know that he spent time in prison for carrying a concealed weapon. Thanks for the awesome video.
Thanks so much love hearing some real world experience.
Americans have a "Rucksack Weapon"? Is that a thing?
Uzi are also popular in Asian countries especially in 80's movies up to 2000's. Especially in Philppines and Japanese Movies
I was trained on the Uzi in the german military. It`s so simple to handle and take care of. You can easyly fire double round "bursts" and I managed to hit targets up to 150m distance reliable. I really enjoyed shooting it.
Another note, the secret service agent with the Uzi during the Reagan assassination attempt had it in a briefcase. It wasn't in his jacket. There are pictures showing the discarded briefcase on the internet.
The Wild Geese...one of my all time fave films 🙂 thanks
it was also used in the George A. Romero movie Day of the dead.
Great content as usual Johnny and then you throw in 'Hell Comes to Frogtown', I gotta dig that out and watch it again, its hilarious thanks fella 😆
I've always wanted to see that movie.
It's a movie you either love or hate. I think it's brilliant for what it is lol
I need prop auction site footage of one specific Micro Uzi: a fully automatic modified Uzi pistol with a special unknown compensator.
So far, it appeared in Batman Returns, Rapid Fire, Total Recall, Predator 2, The Running Man, Class of 1999, Delta Force 2: The Colombian Connection, and Hell Comes to Frogtown.
I've had the pleasure of shooting a full auto Israeli Uzi. It was a very interesting weapon, very slow to what I'm used to.
Nice work as always. Such an iconic weapon I remember as a kid having a water squirting full size Uzi. It came with 3 magazine's and I glued them in an L shape Israeli style for a quick reload. Seeing Hardy Kruger in The Wild Geese clips prompts me to suggest The FN FAL in movies. Even though that was probably supposed to be an R 1.
05:21 even before ww2 a magazine in the pistol grip SMG already existed, tho only as a prototype.
The Japanese Experimental Model 1 (often mislabled Type 1 or if you're BFV Type 2A) feeding from 30 or 50 round mags and intended to be used by mechanised troops.
For images search for "南部式機関短銃" and for a game depicting it check Battlefield V tho they got a bunch of details wrong (Making it closed bolt, holding it wrong, giving it a way too high RoF and the lack of the metal handguard).
In ww2 the arma guerra 43 pistol grip is the magazine
@@pierpaologuidi7686 also during the war the German Wimmersperg Spz, tho not a SMG also with the mag as the pistol grip.
And in 1942 the British Viper machine carbine. There's a bunch of examples during WW2, but as far as I know the Model 1 is the first being pre-war (unless you count machine pistols like the full auto Luger experiment during WW1).
@@wolf_7479 thanks for the info, I imagine is a common cheap way to resolve 2 needs with 1
The Uzi was inspired form that gun.
Meet the UZI family
Or the Line of Uzi relatives
These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family
1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia
2) PM 63 Rak from Poland
3) Uzi from Israel
4) ASMI from India
5) Milkor BXP from South Africa
6) MCEM 2 from UK
7) HK MP7 from Germany
8)MSMC from India
9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA
10) Nambu type 2A from Japan
11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia
12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico
13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland
14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again
15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan
16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia
17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again
18)Ruger MP 9 from USA
19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy
20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina
21) STAR Z 84 from Spain
22)STAR Z 75 from Spain
23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada
24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR
25) vladas model 92
26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany
27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria
28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy
29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US
30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia
31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine
32) ELF SMG from Ukraine
33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine
34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden
35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA
36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan
37)PP 90 from USSR
38)PP 93 from Russia
39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia
40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden
41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA
42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru
43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK
44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland
45)STK CPW from Singapore
46)MPS prototype from South Africa
47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine
That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
Colleague of mine is a former German soldier used the uzi known as the mp2. It discharges if dropped due to its open heavy bolt design. He found out the hard way when he accidentally dropped his uzi during a training exercise. Fortunately noone got hurt.
I heard jokes about the gun, I think it had a special name I can't remember. I think it was smething along the lines of "tankers grenade". Usually used in tanks because of their compact size, the joke was that a loaded gun thrown into a window of a builing would clean the room by accidental discharges, similar to a grenade.
Depicted in True Lies tumbling down stairs.
@@thomasjoyce7910 in True Lies it was a Mac 10
One thing about the military/full auto version of the Uzi for sale in the US, technically speaking, it isn't illegal to buy, it's just difficult. Any fully automatic gun is available for sale in the US, it just has to have been made by 1986. But you wouldn't find them in a typical gun store and you have to jump through a few extra hoops with the ATF and payu for a $200 tas xtamp. Because of the 1986 restriction, fully automatic firearms are limited in number and are pretty expensive as a result as well. But in 1984, Arnie, as the Terminator, technically should have been able to buy a full auto UZI, I'm just not sure that many gun stores would have carried them.
Not in California, which is not included in the 27 States that allows the sale and transfer of NFA Title II weapons to civilian with the enhanced federal background check, a letter of approval by the buyer’s local Chief of Police or Sheriff on department letterhead, and the $200 federal tax stamp.
There's another iconic B film that used the Uzi, Surf Nazis Must Die. Ironically, it's the eponymous surf nazis using the Israeli built weapon
Even better irony is that Israeli army used in it's early years a lot of ww2 era german guns and equpment. Helmets, mausers 98k, mp40s, Bf109s and so on.
I like how you explicitly called out The Matrix as the only scenario in which twin weapons is a good idea.
This was a gun I used in Left 4 Dead a lot. So cool. Also love the Terminator clips and Chuck Norris part.
Your videos are awesome. They also include movie titles to watch after.
Thanks Jonathan!
My father fought the Syrians in the 6 day and you kippur wars, with an Uzi. He saw it as his personal weapon and speaks very fondly of it, preferring it over the FN‘s of his comrades. Having one, especially with a folding stock, was the ultimate status symbol among IDF infantry these days (according to him)
How's your dad doing?
nowadays we miss folks like him in central europe.
Ok, sure. The same was said of the M1 Carbine by GIs, but it wasn't actually reality. It would suck to be stuck in a trench in the desert with enemy firing at you from 400yd. away and you only have Uzis to fire back with.
@@ossian108 he’s doing very fine, approaching 75 now. Thanks for asking ^^
@@gideon9096 Good, good :)
My dad is 76 and didn't fight in any war because his parents stayed in Poland after Shoah.
Regards to you, and your dad :)
Yes, such classics as Samurai Cop and Deadheat.
Enjoyed the video. Pretty accurate info. Got my first one in 83 and have one now. It can be the right tool for the right job. The open bolt means the SMG will almost never over heat. Later from Texas.usa.
The Secret Service agent at the Reagan assassination had the Uzi concealed in a brief case, not on his body. A photo exists of an open case near him and the form-fitting insert can be seen. In 'The Dogs of War' most of the black troops in the cargo ship scene are armed with Mac-10's that have been mocked up to look like the Uzi.
I've expexted the "Da Uzi 9 millimeta" scene to be right at the start and waited the whole time for it :D
Also, the gun in Die Hard with a vengeance is not an Uzi it's a Mac-10 or Mac-11.
Oh shoot I think you're right. Good eye!
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq Thanks :) But still great video as always!
Meet the UZI family
Or the Line of Uzi relatives
These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family
1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia
2) PM 63 Rak from Poland
3) Uzi from Israel
4) ASMI from India
5) Milkor BXP from South Africa
6) MCEM 2 from UK
7) HK MP7 from Germany
8)MSMC from India
9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA
10) Nambu type 2A from Japan
11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia
12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico
13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland
14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again
15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan
16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia
17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again
18)Ruger MP 9 from USA
19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy
20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina
21) STAR Z 84 from Spain
22)STAR Z 75 from Spain
23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada
24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR
25) vladas model 92
26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany
27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria
28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy
29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US
30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia
31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine
32) ELF SMG from Ukraine
33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine
34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden
35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA
36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan
37)PP 90 from USSR
38)PP 93 from Russia
39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia
40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden
41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA
42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru
43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK
44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland
45)STK CPW from Singapore
46)MPS prototype from South Africa
47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine
That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
Yes, the infamous *paperweight.*
luv the aesthetic look of the uzi....
nice video!
The Terminator was made before ‘86, so the full auto version could’ve been bought new over the counter, minus the Form 4 turn around time
Shortly before his death the gun shop owner mentioned the waiting time...
One of the best things about actors is that their films go down in history.
If I remember correctly, Uziel didn’t want it named after him, but they did anyway
'Hard Ticket to Hawaii' is the eighties' camp gift to the world.
Absolutely
Uzi shoots very fast like I played on Left 4 Dead game and then when I used it I cleared the whole zombie horde with the Uzi that's gone is so cool😎
Glad to see you didn’t miss Samurai Cop!
Fun fact there is a gun shop near my house in PA where Uzbek Gal visited multiple times.
Good vid, no politics, just good info
Fun fact: in the 70's up to the mid 90's the Garda Siochana (Irish police) detective and armed units were armed with Uzi's
The Uzi "instruction" scene from Dogs of War has always been a favorite of mine, thanks for including it. Now I need to track down Cockneys vs. Zombies...
Thank you for making history entertaining
As always Johnny, another fantastic video. Thank you
Munich Is a very good movie that not much people know about
Full auto Uzi's were legal and still are if registered. By 1986 they banned any new ones for sale which makes the ones on the market "pre 1986" very expensive...
It's no coincidence that you see on the photo of the creator him holding it along with an MP40. They pretty much gave him the latter and said: we want something shooting the same ammunition, just as accurate, but more compact, but with the same barrel length.
Fun Fact: If you search for "oozie nein milimetah" you will come across the clip in Terminator where the T-800 is at the gun store buying its Uzi.
Will you be covering the phased plasma rifle(40w) in future videos?
It's just what you see, pal.
Hopefully there's going to be a video that focuses on the Heckler and Koch MP5 that's been featured in so many action movies?.
With Regards.
Good job Johny
Meet the UZI family
Or the Line of Uzi relatives
These are the telescopic/overhung bolt submachine guns family
1) Vz 23 from Czechoslovakia
2) PM 63 Rak from Poland
3) Uzi from Israel
4) ASMI from India
5) Milkor BXP from South Africa
6) MCEM 2 from UK
7) HK MP7 from Germany
8)MSMC from India
9)MAC 10 and MAC 11 from USA
10) Nambu type 2A from Japan
11) Cobra SMG from Rhodesia
12)Mendoza HM3 From Mexico
13)PM 84 Glauberyt from Poland
14)PM 98/ PM 06 from Poland again and again
15) Mineba PM 09 from Japan
16)Kommando LDP from Rhodesia
17) Sanaa 77 from Rhodesia again and again
18)Ruger MP 9 from USA
19)Beretta CX4 Storm from Italy
20)FMK 3 SMG from Argentina
21) STAR Z 84 from Spain
22)STAR Z 75 from Spain
23) Celini Drum SM 9 from UK / Canada
24)Rukavishnikov experimental SMG from USSR
25) vladas model 92
26) Mauser MP 57 from West Germany
27)Steyr MPI 69/81 from Austria
28) Armaguerra OG 42 from Italy
29) Magpul FMG 09 from the US
30 ) SR 2M Veresk from Russia
31) Goblin SMG from Ukraine
32) ELF SMG from Ukraine
33)TASCO 7ET9 7ET10 from Ukraine
34) Viking SMG from USA/Sweden
35)SOCIMI Type 821 from Italy/USA
36)T 77 SMG from Taiwan
37)PP 90 from USSR
38)PP 93 from Russia
39) AEK 919K Kashtan from USSR/Russia
40)CBJ MS Saab Bofors dynamics from Sweden
41) PP 2000 FROM RUSSIA
42)MGP 15/84 SMG from Peru
43) Viper Number 3 prototype from UK
44) brugger and Thomet MP 9 from Switzerland
45)STK CPW from Singapore
46)MPS prototype from South Africa
47) MKS Carbine from Ukraine
That's it . that's all I know. If anyone know any telescopic/ overhung bolt submachine guns, please let me know in the reply comments.
Ok a Steyr TMP too
I think u forgot about CBJ-MS
On Uzi security, I was expecting to see that scene from True Lies when the girl drops the Uzi in the staires and it shots as it bounces down and somehow shoots every terrorists running in the scene... silly but appropriate lol.
In addition to these videos being informational, they’re also introducing me to loads of cool movies I’ve never heard of
Uzi liked this video.
Not to be confused of a Main Character from Murder Drones.
#UziMurderDrones
I used to periodically rent the standard UZi SMG at a full auto rental range in Glen Burnie, MD. It used to be $40 for the Uzi and four loaded 25-round magazines. I probably had five firing sessions to myself, and a couple more where I took a friend and we each fired two magazines. It’s a fun gun to shoot.
The Survivors is a great movie! Rip Jerry, Robin, and Walter.
The Uzi carbine is incredibly fun to shoot. I have an Action Arms SBS semi auto Uzi and it's a handy little carbine, altho not nearly as fun as the select fire variant, which costs 10 to 15 times as much. I see full transferrable Uzi's going for 15 to 20k and up in 2022.
Great video as ever, the amount of work you put in on these is amazing. It must take hours! I thought for a moment I had caught you out, thought I saw a couple of scenes with Ingrams in the mix. But no, you're good! 🙂
I always loved the boat scene in "the dogs of war". I would have been disappointed if you hadn't shown it.😉
sidefact, in the original book they used mp40. 😆
You included some Andy Sidaris films, you sir are AWESOME!
I don't mess around
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq Wish they had more scenes with the Uzi in bikinis... or less (especially Hope Marie Carlton)
Love all those Naked Gun scenes.
10:29 damn didn’t notice that, I always thought that the rubber bands were for added grip
I like Uzis. Nice and slow. Gives me time to actually hit what I’m aiming at. (Oh, I fired one once - so that means I’m an expert, right!,?.)
Great work JJ. A difficult job done very well.
Thanks brother it was a challenging one. So much footage and sooo many Uzi look a likes.
@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq Yeah. You did good, mate. Have you tried comparing your early vids and recent ones? There’s a marked fluidity and relaxation in the later ones. More confidence in the presentation essentially. “Ahrite I’m jonny” to “Ahhhhriiite. I’mmm Jonny!” Nice:)
Wild Geese and Dogs of War two great mercenary movies.
You do know that chuck Norris kept a spare uzi & ammunition in his beard.😉😂
Now that's a fact.
awesome videos, love to see one on the German Gewehr 43 or also known as the K43
6:40 gosh that was one of my favorite scenes as a kid.
3:05
I didn't know that Richard Hammond was in this anime, and performing his Scandi Flick no less.
Awesome,using wild geese for the thumbnail.
The Naked Gun movies are legendary, just like the UZI itself.
I always think of UZIs as gangster weapon. Mainly because of movie depiction but logically, they are light and concealable; perfect for hit-and-run drive-by shooting.
I’ve also seen movies where gangs outside the US use UZIs. I’ve only seen used by Chinese/Hong Kong Triads and maybe Japanese Yakuza.
I also noticed the current US military alone rarely use submachine guns, if they do, they’re probably for specific missions take place inside buildings or jungles. My guess is with the standard use of carbines; smaller and lighter than traditional rifles but still fire the same powerful rifle rounds.
Hollywood = reality ?
A Frank Drebin! That made my day, always hilarious. Love Nielsen.
The Uzi is sometimes associated with Drive By Shootings because it seen by Criminals who are a part of Gangs when one their own is killed as a revenge for their deaths or a Hit to eliminate a rival gang member
More appropriate weapon for this type of shootings will be MAC 10
Ain't it normally MAC-10s at the time?
@@frostfive3991 It can be but sometimes the Uzi is sometimes seen in the hands by Gang members around the 80s and the Early 90s
I was a teen living in Chicago in the 80s, and yep, Uzis were very popular. Mostly civilian versions (some converted) but also black market military ones.
The last place I lived before I took off for California was Cicero, IL, famed for Al Capone and racism. There was a drug dealer at the end of my block, he'd park his car in an alleyside driveway with the trunk open and sit next to it in a lawnchair, cooler at his side.
He was 17, a cousin of kids I knew well, and he recognized me from those days. I got embroiled in a conversation he struck up and he proudly showed off the full military Uzi he kept in the open trunk. His up-supplier had given it to him as a bonus. I made sure never to walk that route again.
@@frostfive3991 MAC-10s and -11s were both also popular. You could pick up the civilian version of either pretty cheap at gun stores back in the 80s.
TEC-9s were even cheaper, so many wannabes had them.
Ruger made the Camp Carbine both in 9mm and .45 ACP. The 9mm version used Smith & Wesson 59/459 magazines. Also cheap, and the innocuous looking wooden stock could be easily replaced with a black nylon folding one.
The Uzi, the "we bought it now you have to suffer it" submaschine gun of the West German Army. It survived there for political reasons. Switching to the MP5 would have made a lot more sense since the MP5 and G3 are identical in drill, assembly/disassembly, problem handling etc.
West Germany already had the Mauser MP 57
@@patriotenfield3276 They experimented with quite a few MPs back in the late 50s/early 60s. Some police forces used Walter TMP for a time. All except the BW went MP5 later, by the 1980s only tze army had Uzi. Not a bad gun but with conscripts the SA80 approach of "one system for all" is better.
Die Uzi, war und ist eine Schrottwaffe, da wir während meiner BW Zeit, anfang der 80er Jahre auch mit Polizeikräfte zusammen auf dem Schießplatz waren, und diese meistens Neidvoll auf unsere Verpflegung schauten, da Sie so etwas nicht hatten, aber großen Kohldampf, hat der Spieß oft einen kleinen Deal gemacht. Sie konnten bei uns Mitessen, und wir also das Unteroffizierkorps mit Ihren HK MP-5 und unserer Munition schießen. Die Heckler &Koch, war im Gegensatz zur Uzi eine absolute Präzisionswaffe, leicht zu bedienen und tragen, die hätten wir auch gerne gehabt.
@@ag2938 I would not call the Uzi a bad weapon, it did exactly the job it was build for. It just was a bad choice for the west german army. And that's because they used the G3 as a rif,e back then so the MP5 would have reduced needed training time/allowed for more time spend on what was in operation, cleqning, imediate action, safety etc basically one weapom. Always a good idea in a conscript army.
@@mbr5742 The TMP is from Steyr Mannlicher, which is an austrian company.
my mom used to carry one during her service at the IDF
It´s still popular in Hollywood, Colin Farrell is packing a micro Uzi in the latest Batman movie and it was very popular in Hong Kong action cinema of the 80´s/90´s, specially in all the John Woo movies, where Chow Yun-fat was mowing down hordes of bad guys, with mini Uzis.
In real life though, the HK MP-5 proved to be better suited for military comando & tactical law enforcement units.
Jackie Chan's The Protector - Danny Aiello "I never go anywhere in southeast asia without an UZI"
For comparison matters the uzi weights the same as a Kalashnikov rifle
I love how (almost) the first movie you show is The Naked Gun ! 🤣
Lots of good detail Johnny. I'll keep it in mind on my next secret mission
The Miami Vice bad guys weapon of choice, thanks for the video.👍
Hey Johnny how fast does the uzi shoot let me know how fast does the Uzi shoot I really love to have one of those Uzi for protection
the chuck norris really cracks me up!!
As soon as I saw the Uzi come up in the poll and win, I knew the Wild Geese would show up. Vastly underrated and great movie--and more than just action and big names.
Is it underrated? At least here in germany it is well known and still shows up in TV on occasions.
@@mbr5742 It's rare here in the States, unless you're a Roger Moore fan or happened to be around when it came out. I have quite a few friends who are big war movie fans, and I was the only one who had ever seen it.
My dad was in a tank battalion as a communications specialist in the late 70s in tge german army and he once told me the uzi had essentially no felt recoil to him (granted the other guns he was shooting such as the g3 and mg3 were full powered cartriges and he is 1,97m)
Nice vid as always…yep, I noticed the Mac 10 but it is Emilio Estevez not Easteban.
How you did not mentioned the delta force with Chuck Norris??!
I love that clip in True Lies when Jamie Lee Curtis' character drops an uzi and clears the room while it tumbles down the stairs. Hilarious!
In the Rhodesian Army we said routinely, "It's only good for clearing crowded telephone phone booths.
Nice and Uzi does it everytime
@4:08 This whole time, I had no idea that the old arcade video game “Operation: Thunder Bolt” was essentially based off true to life events. I mean, I have been familiar with the Entebbe Raid in Uganda, but never put the two together. That game was an absolutely awesome upgraded sequel to the first game like it “Operation: Wolf”. The first game had a full size Uzi and only one player. The sequel had mini Uzis, was two player simultaneous gameplay, and arguably much more difficult to complete the game; it wasn’t one of those machines where all you had to do was pump it full of quarters and you’d eventually win. No, you had to kill the last terrorist AND safely free the pilot he was using as human shield, or you’d end up stuck there unable to take off to safety.