1967 Opel Rekord [C]
1967 Opel Rekord [C] in Ошибка Тони Вендиса (Tony Wendice's Mistake), Movie made for TV, 1981 
Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin: 
![1967 Opel Rekord [C]](/i313945.jpg)
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Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Comments about this vehicle
| Author | Message |
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◊ 2010-06-30 14:11 |
1967 Opel Rekord C |
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◊ 2010-06-30 14:19 |
Opel as US-police ??? |
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◊ 2010-06-30 14:22 |
Very strange,but for sure Rekord C. |
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◊ 2010-06-30 21:38 |
Filmed in America? Then it's sureley the Mexican assembled Opel Olimpico, as the C-Rekord never was exported to the USA. ![]() |
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◊ 2010-06-30 21:42 |
Shape of the license plate doesn't look American, though... |
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◊ 2010-06-30 21:43 |
Uuuh, not to forget: it it was filmed in Europe, it could be real, because there the US Army had indeed used sometimes local made cars, especially for their Military Police. Imagine the many shots of the "Checkpoint Charlie" in Berlin. The most MP-cars, parked besides the legendary barrack in the middle of the Friedrichstraße, were German Ford's like P3, P7, up the the Sierra. Ford's, which weren't sold in the USA. |
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◊ 2010-06-30 21:45 |
Obviously not filmed in America. It was never sold there, too: /vehicle_313946-Mercedes-Benz-T2.html |
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◊ 2010-06-30 21:47 |
Sorry, this is a Soviet TV movie made by Moldova Film, so the location is probably in Chisinau. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1522761/companycredits Most of the vehicle shots are stock footage of New York. |
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◊ 2017-08-22 23:39 |
As and the USSR. His military representatives in both West and East Germany preferred a large black Opel Records. |
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◊ 2017-08-26 09:25 |
Especially the SOXMIS were known for using Opel Rekord http://www.redcap70.net/SOXMIS.htm http://bfg-locations.editboard.com/t2244-soxmis-smlm-frankfurt-am-main-1978-1980 When I made my military service at the Bundeswehr in 1990/1991 in every guardhouse there were hanging notices with photos of the actually known SOXMIS-cars. When the soldiers went out for maneuvers, they always got instruction, what they have to, when they see a SOXMIS-car, as an immediately rapport to the diciplanarian, who has to made and immediate call to the MAD, the West German Military Intelligence Service. But more important was the messaging to the Allied Forces (where I was stationated, the British). I had annother idea. When I've participated at one large maneuver, I had a lettered large envelope, addressed to my grandmother in my backpack. I hoped, when I would see a SOXMIS-car, that somehow I could pick a license plate and throw it into the next letterbox (because at such in incident, when such al plate would have been stolen, all luggage and cars of the soldiers around would have been ransacked) |



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