Mac Game Tough Guy Guns

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Tough Guys
Theatrical Release Poster
Country USA
Directed byJeff Kanew
Release Date1986
StudioTouchstone Pictures
Silver Screen Partners II
Bryna Productions
DistributorBuena Vista Distribution
Main Cast
CharacterActor
Harry DoyleBurt Lancaster
Archie LongKirk Douglas
LAPD Sgt. Deke YablonskiCharles Durning
Richie EvansDana Carvey
Leon B. LittleEli Wallach
BelleAlexis Smith
SkyeDarlanne Fluegel


Tough Guy resists knockback up to 19 units. However, it was indirectly buffed in Ultimate due to Bowser's higher weight and the universal knockback reduction in all rapid jabs.

Tough Guys is a 1986 comedic crime film directed by Jeff Kanew (V.I. Warshawski) and marked the final pairing of legendary actors Burt Lancaster and Kirk Douglas, who star in the film as Harry Doyle and Archie Long, two aged criminals who are released from prison after a 30 year sentence and decide to pull off one last heist.


The following weapons were used in the film Tough Guys:

  • 1Revolvers
  • 2Pistols
    • 2.1M1911A1
  • 3Submachine Guns
  • 4Shotguns
  • 5Assault Rifles
  • 6Sniper Rifles


Smith & Wesson Model 19 Snub Nose

During the scene in the bank two robbers (Larry Mintz and Dick Hancock) are armed with Smith & Wesson Model 19 Snub Nose revolvers. Harry and Archie disarm them and somehow manage to keep the guns for themselves, using the revolvers during the armored track robbery and the highjacking on the train. In Harry's dream Sgt. Deke Yablonski (Charles Durning) holds same looking revolver. The same revolvers are also seen in hands of LAPD officers, Sheriff deputies and Border Patrol agents.

Mac Game Tough Guy Guns

Mac Game Tough Guy Guns 2017

Smith & Wesson Model 19 Snub Nose (right side) - .357 Magnum.
Archie and Harry hold their revolvers in a promotion still.
A robber (Larry Mintz) holds his revolver.
He threatens Harry. The grip can be seen.
Now the situation has changed to the opposite.
Archie picks up the revolver of incapacitated robber.
Harry aims his revolver at armored truck guard. Due to a continuity error in this scene his revolver switches from Model 19 to Model 36 and then back again.
In Harry's dream Yablonski, dressed as the train engineer, aims the supposed Model 19.
Harry holds the revolver during the highjacking of the train.
A deputy at the right aims his revolver.
A Border Patrol agent aims his revolver at approaching train.

Smith & Wesson Model 36

During the armored truck robbery Harry's Smith & Wesson Model 19 switches to Smith & Wesson Model 36 due to a continuity error, and then back again. Archie holds the Model 36 in Harry's dream. Sgt. Deke Yablonski's (Charles Durning) revolver also appears to be the Model 36.

Smith & Wesson Model 36 - .38 Special
Harry surprises the armored trucj guard with his revolver.
Belle (Alexis Smith) disarms Yablonski, taking him for a hitman.
Archie holds the Model 36 in Harry's dream.

Smith & Wesson Model 15

What appear to be Smith & Wesson Model 15 revolvers are seen in hands of LAPD officers, Sheriff deputies and Border Patrol agents. A retired criminal Jimmy Ellis (Nathan Davis) also carries the S&W Model 15.

Smith & Wesson Model 15 - .38 Special
Jimmy Ellis draws his revolver when Harry and Archie remember him about the 'old good time'.
A police officer fires the supposed Model 15.
Two men at the left and the one at the right are armed with supposed S&W Model 15 revolvers.

Colt Python

The first armored truck guard holds Colt Python revolver.

Colt Python with 4' Barrel and factory wood grips - .357 Magnum
The guard at the left holds the Python.

Various revolvers

Some revolvers are seen only partially so they hardly can be identified.

A revolver with engraved grips is partially seen during the opening credites.
A holstered revolver of a prison guard is seen at the left.

M1911A1

An M1911A1 is partially seen during the opening credits. In the final scene several sheriff deputies and border patrol agents are armed with M1911s. The Mexican police captain (Rick Garcia) carries a bright chrome plated M1911.

Pre-War Colt M1911A1 - Commercial Model known as the 'Colt Government Model' - .45 ACP. This has a deep Colt factory blued finish, common for commercial variants before and after the war.
A magazine and lot of pistol and revolver cartridges are seen during the opening credits.
A pearl grip of holstered 1911 is seen.
A sheriff deputy (at the left) aims his 1911 at approaching train.
Border Patrol agents aims their 1911s at approaching train.
The Mexican captain holds his bright 1911.

Toy M1911A1

When Harry and Archie visit their old buddy Dick Schultz (Simmy Bow), the latter draws the M1911A1 on them. Next moment the pistol reveals itself as a toy gun.

Schultz opens the door. The pistol is tucked in his pants.
Schultz aims his pistol..
.. that appears to be a toy.

Uzi

The second armored track guard carries Uzi SMG. He is disarmed by Archie who uses the Uzi during the train highjacking.

Mac game tough guy guns 2
IMI Uzi with buttstock collapsed - 9x19mm
Archie takes the Uzi from the guard.
Archie holds the Uzi.
Archie fires.

Double Barreled Shotgun

Elderly, short-sighted hitman Leon B. Little (Eli Wallach) carries the Sawed-Off Double Barrel Shotgun throughout the moive. In the scene in the train his gun is briefly hold by Richie Evans (Dana Carvey).

Stevens 311R (sawed-off) - 12 gauge
The first appearance of Leon B. Little.
Leon fires his shotgun in the scene in the train.
Richie holds Leon at gunpoint with his own gun.
The sawed-off stock is seen.

Mossberg 500

Mossberg 500 shotguns are used by LAPD officers and sheriff deputies.

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Mossberg 500 'Persuader' with standard five-shot magazine tube - 12 gauge
The Mossberg 500 is seen in the police car.
What appears to be the Mossberg 500 is seen at the far right.

Remington 870

LAPD officers and sheriff deputies also use Remington 870 shotguns.

Remington 870 Police Magnum Riot Shotgun - 12 gauge
A police officer fires his shotgun.
A deputy holds the Remington 870.
Another deputy with the Remington 870.

Colt AR-15A2 Sporter II

Various law enforcement agencies personnel use M16 assault rifles. They appear to be semi auto Colt AR-15A2 Sporter II, identified by the combination of A1 upper receiver, slabside (screw pin) lower receiver and heavy barrel.

Colt AR-15A2 Sporter II, early model with A1 upper receiver and magazine removed - 5.56x45mm
A SWAT officer appears from the car with AR-15 Sporter in hands.
SWAT officers with AR-15s on the bridge. A sniper in center is armed with bolt action rifle.
A close view of the AR-15 Sporter in hands of a SWAT officer.
A SWAT officer fires his AR-15 in semi auto mode. The spent brass is seen in midair.
Another good view of the AR-15 Sporter.
A Sheriff's deputy holds the AR-15 Sporter with sniper scope.
Mexican policemen aim their M16s (supposedly the same AR-15 Sporters) at the background.

Steyr SSG 69

A police sniper is armed with what appears to be a Steyr SSG 69.

Steyr SSG 69 PI with 10-round magazine - 7.62x51mm NATO
A sniper is seen in center.
He aims the rifle.
Another view of the gun.
Retrieved from 'http://www.imfdb.org/index.php?title=Tough_Guys&oldid=1119668'



Teddy Atlas was Mike Tyson’s first real boxing trainer and started molding the future heavyweight champion when he was only 12-years-old. Atlas was only Tyson’s trainer for three years, which included highs and lows. The most talked-about moment of Teddy’s training tenure of a young Mike Tyson was the time Atlas put a gun to Tyson’s head.

Teddy Atlas was first introduced to the young boxing phenom was when Tyson was 12-years-old. The veteran trainer Atlas and legendary boxing manager Constantine “Cus” D’Amato saw the sky-high potential in Tyson, and they personally took the young boxer under their wings.

Atlas appeared on the Joe Rogan Experience in September of 2018 and discussed in-length his experience dealing with Mike Tyson since the boxer was 12-years-old. “Tyson, when I first had him, he was 190 pounds nothing but muscle, 12-years-old,” Atlas said of the young Mike Tyson. Atlas said Tyson was “mentally weak” at 12-years-old for a fighter, and had “residual stuff from his upbringing.” Go for mac game.

“He used to hide in between abandoned building walls in Brownsville, it was a rough place. He used to hide between walls to not get picked on,” Atlas said. “And I believe when you do that, you never get outside of that wall to a certain extent. You’re always hiding in that wall for the rest of your life.”

“He was as strong a guy as you’re ever gonna see, but he was as weak of a person as you’re ever gonna find,” Atlas told Joe Rogan.

Atlas was Tyson’s trainer when 15-year-old Tyson was boxing in the 1981 Junior Olympic Games. A video shows Teddy consoling a sobbing Mike Tyson before a boxing match against Joe Cortez, in which Tyson knocked him out nine seconds into the fight with a devastating left hook.

Teddy Atlas claims that he pulled a gun on Mike Tyson when the boxer was 15-years-old. Teddy alleges that Tyson grabbed the butt of the 11-year-old niece of Atlas and told the girl all of the sexual things he wanted to do to her.

RELATED: 12-Year-Old Mike Tyson Was Knocking Out Grown Men – Look Back At His Amateur Fights And Rise To Heavyweight Champ

Atlas gave an interview with Dan Le Batard on his ESPN show Highly Questionable and talked about the moment he put a gun to Tyson’s head.

“Tyson had gone after a family member who was 11-years-old, a girl, and he had been pushing the boundaries more and more and more,” Teddy said. “His restrictions or care about how he treated other people became less and less.”

“I put him out of the gym for his behavior in school. What he was doing, threatening students, and basically putting his hands on girls in the hallways,” Atlas said. “He knew how to push those parameters. He understood the streets. He understood those rules, those laws. He understood people in those ways. Under those conditions, what he could get away with it.”

“Tyson was thinking that he could get away with more and more improper behavior,” Atlas added. “It pushed it into one day, I come home, and I find out that my wife and sister-in-laws are crying because what he did to an 11-tear-old girl in my family. Took him on his word for the things he wanted to do to the 11-year-old girl, in a sexual way.”

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“So I got a gun and went and confronted him. I told him, ‘You made a choice to do this, whether or not you think you’re hurting me or you think you’re sending a message to me. You did send a message to me. You sent a message to me you don’t give a damn about other people, that you don’t care if you behave like an animal,'” Teddy told Tyson.

“You will never do it again. You’ll be dead if you ever do it again. There won’t be a conversation. You won’t be seeing me. You won’t even know that there will be repercussions. You’ll just be gone. Understand that very clearly because It’s important for my family and obviously you,” Atlas threatened Tyson.

“I put the gun in his ear, and he didn’t seem like he understood it at that moment,” Teddy claims. “So I pulled it out of his ear and pulled the trigger,” Atlas claims. “Missing him on purpose, and he understood it after that. It wasn’t a threat. It was to make it clear that I wouldn’t have to be in that position again, and either was he.”

RELATED: 53-Year-Old Mike Tyson Shows He’s Still Got It – Legendary Boxer Flashes Lightning-Quick Moves In Video

In a December 2019 interview with London Real, Teddy Atlas once again recalled the moment he put a gun to Mike Tyson’s head. The interviewer asked, “What’s going through your mind when you pull a gun on Mike Tyson, that’s a scary thing to do?”

“You know what’s scarier? Having an 11-year-old girl, who had been approached by him, told by him what he was going to do to her, everything else,” Atlas replied. “Knowing that, and not doing something about that. And not stopping him. Knowing that I could do something. Knowing that the next time he might rape her. Or he probably will.”

“He told her what he was going to do to her, and she was 11-years-old,” Atlas said. “And he did it partly out of meanness. Evil, to a certain degree, that he wanted to get back at me because I put him out of the gym, and I was having that problem with Cus over the disciplining of him. And that’s the first time Cus and I was at ends, we were partners. He was doing that street thing, showing who has the power.”

“So don’t do it with my family, don’t do it with somebody innocent, don’t do it with somebody who can’t protect themselves, somebody whose weak,” said Teddy Atlas. “Don’t do that. Do it with me direct.”

“What was scary was me living with that not doing nothing about it. That’s scary. Not blowing his brains out, that wasn’t scary for me at that moment,” Atlas says. “I’m not proud of it at all. At all. At all.”

“God helped me to make sure it didn’t happen. And I’m grateful for that. I’m grateful for that, and I’m cognizant of what it could have been,” Teddy continued. “I’m cognizant that I wasn’t gonna go and hide because I didn’t want to face that because it was uncomfortable, it was scary. And it was scary. I was going to do something about it, and make sure that I did what I thought I had to do, protect my family at that time.”

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“It was a stupid thing and maybe a selfish thing because my family would have suffered,” Atlas said. “But I was willing to suffer, I was willing to lose my life, whether through incarceration or whatever, to do what I thought had to be done at that moment.”

Tyson gave an interview on In Depth with Graham Bensinger from his Las Vegas home in 2010, where he gave his account of why Atlas pulled a gun on him and why their relationship deteriorated.

“It wasn’t necessarily because I flirted with his niece or touched her butt or something,” Tyson said. “Teddy wanted me to go back with him. Teddy was leaving Cus, and I wasn’t leaving Cus. He wanted me to come back with him. That’s really, basically what happened. I wasn’t leaving to go with him. Leave Cus and go to New York and train. Whatever the situation was. That’s what Teddy always wants to tell people. He wants people to think he is a tough guy, he’s a mafia guy.”

“I’m not in the mood to prove that I’m a tough guy. I’m not a tough guy. Do you think he’s a tough guy? I know he talks tough, but do you think he’d ever come to my face and say that’s he’s a tough guy man-to-man to me? Sounds like he would. But he’s got everyone fooled that he is a tough guy. But no, he won’t.

“I’m 15-years-old, this guy however old he is, 26, he pulls a gun on me and didn’t even shoot me. So that tells you how much of a tough guy he is. He pulled a gun on me and didn’t even shoot me. If I pulled one on him, God knows those bullets are not going in the air.”

“He is supposed to be killing me with him and his mafia uncle since, I don’t know, since I was 16,” the former undisputed heavyweight champion said in the interview. “They were supposed to be getting me or doing something. I’m still here.”

Tyson said Cus D’Amato liked Mike more than Atlas, which caused Teddy to have a jealousy of him. “Cus liked me more than he liked him. He don’t like that. That’s just what it is.”

In 2011, Graham Bensinger told Business Insider that after he asked Tyson about the Teddy Atlas gun situation, the boxer shut down.

“We were told we had an hour, but that if things were going well, we could stay longer. I prepared 16 pages of questions. I asked him a question about his trainer [Teddy Atlas] holding a gun to his head when he was 15, and he was noticeably irritated by that,” Bensinger told the publication. “After that, everything I asked was, ‘I don’t know.’ The interview was over. He went out back by his pool, where his pigeons are. I was maybe on page 7 of my questions, and I thought, this is the debut episode of the second season. We could have done better, and it was my fault.”

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“I said to his assistant, ‘do you think I could just go out back and thank him?’ I did, and that turned into a three-hour conversation — no cameras, just us getting to each other. Two hours in, he said, ‘let’s do another interview.'”

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In the summer of 2013, Mike Tyson and Teddy Atlas put aside their differences and the gun incident to have a friendly reunion. After not talking to one another for two decades, the two men hugged it out.

Tyson said he approached Teddy because “life is short.” “I made amends with everybody. I owe it to my sobriety to make amends,” Tyson said.

Atlas told Fight Hype in 2013, “It wasn’t like Mike was coming there with FOX cameras and some of the other affiliations that he has going on. He came in as himself to say what he said, and at the end of the day, I recognized that and like I just said, I think we have accountability to be responsible for our actions and we also have the responsibility as human beings to look at somebody that made a mistake and consider where they are coming from and consider that they are human, and if they really mean what they say. And if they do, you know what?”

“Mistakes are a part of being a human being, just like chasing dreams and standing up for your family,” Atlas continued. “It’s all part of being a responsible human being; well, forgiving somebody at the right time. And I think that now was probably the right time.”

“Anytime somebody does something wrong, and in this case seriously wrong, and then time goes by, and they admit that they are wrong and they take responsibility for that mistake, I think it’s a reason to at least consider forgiving them,” Tyson’s former trainer added. “And you don’t have to. You don’t have to forgive anyone; you don’t have to do anything, but I think when a person makes a step to say that they were wrong and they come to you, it gives you a reason to look at what they are doing and to think that they have looked at what they have done and that they have taken accountability for what they have done and responsibility for what they have done and they wished that they didn’t.”

“I just listened to him, and for me, I was concentrating on observing in my mind where he was coming from and how sincere it was. And I thought it was sincere, and I just listened to the words, and the words were basically, ‘I was wrong, and I’m sorry.’ That’s it, and that’s all you can ask for,” Atlas said of the reconciliation.

RELATED: Gripping Throwback Video Of Mike Tyson Crying Before Fight Then Becomes Fearless Monster