More Buck 110 Sightings in Movies and on Television

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Did any see "CSI: Miami" on Monday? The kid who turned out to be the killer carried a Buck 110 and used it for the killing. Curiously, the medical examiner referred to the stab wounds as "shallow," from which the CSIs deduced it was a pocket knife. That makes me wonder what kind of wounds the technical advisors have seen that are deeper than what could be made with a 110!

Also, I saw a movie called "Survival Island" on DVD, which wasn't very good, BUT one of the characters did have a Buck 110, which played a significant role in the story until the other male character got his own knife (which I could not identify). More importantly, the lead female role was played some chick named Kelly Brook who has one of the best bodies I've ever seen in my life. She's built like a an actual woman! (and I'm pretty sure "they" were "real").
 
Actually they referred to the wounds as shallow because they were not inflicted with alot of force, they thought a woman had done the killing, which would have had less strength. They deduced it was a pocketknife because the stab wounds showed that the blade had a nailnick, which led them to the son.

Apparently in the world of CSI:Miami, only juveniles carry pocketknives?????

Guess they don't know about the "U.S. Army" issue Buck 110 on LOST?

yuk yuk
 
yea i didnt know they could tell ifn it had a nail nick or not , thats getting pretty technical
goose that avatar is killer that one i would even take home to mother:D
 
Another sighting ...

"Final Days of Planet Earth" ... Gil Bellows character "Walker" carries Buck 110 that he uses to cut into this "thing" that turns out to be some kind of food for giant alien praying mantises. It's also features some subtle but surprisingly pro-RKBA messages in the movie.
 
Actually they referred to the wounds as shallow because they were not inflicted with alot of force, they thought a woman had done the killing, which would have had less strength. They deduced it was a pocketknife because the stab wounds showed that the blade had a nailnick, which led them to the son.

You're right, of course. Thanks for the correction.
 
The wounds showed a nail nick? How's that happen? I don't watch the show.

I saw that "Lost"...that was funny.

PS; "Hi" TLC...

YO!

Not sure how they explained it, but they had a blood smear that showed a crescent shaped place with no blood, where the nail-nick wold be.

The funniest part to be is what would the odds be that a suburban yuppy 16 year old from Miami would carry a Buck 110 for a pocket knive???????????
 
YO!
...
The funniest part to be is what would the odds be that a suburban yuppy 16 year old from Miami would carry a Buck 110 for a pocket knive???????????
Yep, at 16 I was carrying a 110 around, but for quick work it would've been my butterfly knife or switch.

Never bring a knife to a gunfight is my creedo regarding that jazz. But I would never do anything like that so what the hell...whirled peas.

Have had several butters' that have broken or been given away over the decades, but I retained the two Benchmade Balisongs (one first issue the other an early issue too) and the Spyderco from when they were first released. Awesome fun.

That would be too cool for school if Buck made a butterfly.
 
Now I remember what happened in the CSI: Miami episode. It wasn't the wounds that showed the nail nick. It was the blood pattern on the clothing where the kid wiped the knife clean.

Does this redeem my previous mistake? ;)
 
They flash that stuff so fast across the screen, it's hard to catch it. I just happen to have it taped so could pause it.

That and pause it everytime they showed Emily Proctor!!!!!!! :D
 
And another . . .

In the horror movie "Feast," the character known as "Heroine" beats the crap out of "Beer Guy" when he's trying to leave the relative security of the bar (which would endanger everyone). After she has him on the floor, she pulls a Buck 110 from her pocket and holds it to his throat while "reasoning" with him.
 
Reviving an old topic I started long, long ago . . .

Sunday I was watching episodes of an old Canadian sci-fi/horror series from 2007 called "Blood Ties." In episode 2, the desk guy at one of the main character's apartment building is shown whittling a vampire-killing steak with . . . you guessed it . . . a Buck 110.

That dude was squared away!
 
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