Most notably, it appeared in Clint Eastwood’s Heartbreak Ridge (1986) and John McTiernan’s 1987 action classic Predator, where Arnold Schwarzenegger himself toted it in several scenes. Stembridge rented out Tony’s “Little Friend” to other films and TV shows over the years. “I didn’t want it because I didn’t want to have a problem with the ATF or anybody! It was easier just to get it out of my possession,” says Zemansky. Still, after Scarface wrapped, the fake M203s were sold off to Stembridge Gun Rentals, an armory that supplies weapons to Hollywood productions. “We put a sleeve in to accept what kind of cartridge we wanted.” Because the fabricated weapons weren’t capable of firing actual 40mm grenades ( Zemansky recalls that it was outfitted to fire shotgun shells), they weren’t subject to the same onerous regulations as a real M203. “I basically manufactured one that looks exactly like the real one except that I put a different trigger system in so it would fire a blank cartridge,” says Zemansky, who had five duplicate launchers made for the production. The launcher is not technically illegal to possess (or at least it wasn’t in California in the early ‘ 80s), but it is classified as a “destructive device” under the National Firearms Act and requires a special license to own. But Tony’s had to be fabricated by the studio props department because Scarface prop master John Zemansky couldn’t find a manufacturer willing to sell him an actual, live-firing M203. The M203 grenade launcher was introduced in 1969 and used extensively by the U.S.
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