The cautionary story of a WWII war souvenir pistol, and how it made its way from a battlefield in France to deadly uses in an American home and the underworld.The cautionary story of a WWII war souvenir pistol, and how it made its way from a battlefield in France to deadly uses in an American home and the underworld.The cautionary story of a WWII war souvenir pistol, and how it made its way from a battlefield in France to deadly uses in an American home and the underworld.
- Gun Owner #7
- (uncredited)
- Johnny's Mom
- (uncredited)
- Johnny's Dad
- (uncredited)
- Gambler
- (uncredited)
- Johnny
- (uncredited)
- Gun Shop Proprietor
- (uncredited)
- Bouncer at Gambling House
- (uncredited)
- Officer George Evans
- (uncredited)
- Little Boy Who Shoots Rusty
- (uncredited)
Featured reviews
The style of the film is unique. The plot, however, is a bit familiar. "Winchester 73" has a lot of similarity as does the old "Hawaii Five-O" episode "Diary of a Gun" (1975). However, despite familiarity, the story is well written and a convincing argument that folks need to be much, much, much more careful if they're going to own a gun. Keep that thing locked up...with no chance anyone else will be able to get to it!
By the way, Barbara Billingsley is in a small role in the film--long before she starred on "Leave it to Beaver" or learned to speak Jive ("Airplane").
Did you know
- TriviaThe plot conceit of following a gun through multiple owners would be co-opted two years later for the feature Winchester 73 (1950).
Tony Taylor appears uncredited in both films: in Souvenirs of Death (1948) he is "Little Boy Who Shoots Rusty"; in Winchester 73 (1950) he is "Boy".
- GoofsThe narrator states the gun, a Mauser 1934, is .38 caliber. It was actually made in .32 ACP (aka 7.62 Browning).
- Quotes
Mauser Pistol: [narrating] As a war trophy, however, my story began in 1944, on a battlefield in northern France. The victorious Allies were marching through now, and my first owner, Herr Lt. Von Bider, was face down in the mud - a matter of indifference to me, since my sole function is to puncture the human body. It appeared I was to have a new owner.
- Crazy credits[Closing Credit] Today, souvenirs of World War II repose in hundreds of thousands of homes. Some of them are potential killers . . . a menace to children . . . ready tools for the underworld. All citizens should cooperate with their law enforcement officers to keep from the hands of the criminals these Souvenirs of Death. J. Edgar Hoover
- ConnectionsFollowed by The Fabulous Fraud (1948)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Passing Parade No. 66: Souvenirs of Death
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 10m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1