The Owen Gun - In the Movies

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • A brief overview of the Owen Submachine Gun (Owen Machine Carbine) and some of the few productions it's featured in.
    More War Movie Content: / johnnyjohnsonesq
    Request a review: johnnyjohnsonreviews@gmail.com
    Other Movies Featured:
    The Cowra Breakout 1984
    Railway man 2013
    Attack Force Z 1982
    Allied 2016
    World of Guns: Gun Disassembly (Video Game)
    Cod: Vanguard (Video Game)
    Danger Close: The Battle of Long Tan 2019
    Soldier of Orange 1977
    #guns #ww2 #australia

Комментарии • 407

  • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
    @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +207

    Just an FYI I'm using the term ANZAC ambiguously to refer to any joint Aussie Kiwi forces. This is generally okay but ANZAC does more specifically refer to the Australian and New Zealand Army Corps.

    • @AussieBattleCat
      @AussieBattleCat Год назад +9

      This is how you should use ANZAC :) Thanks for another great video I have a couple new films to watch :)

    • @atfjacknz
      @atfjacknz Год назад +10

      At least you don't use ANZAC to just mean Australia, as many do.

    • @JackTalyorD
      @JackTalyorD Год назад +6

      Almost a great biscuit.
      200 gm/1.5cups/300 mls flour
      400 gm/3 cups/600 mls wholemeal flour
      40 gm/5 tbls sugar
      20 gm/3 tbls milk powder
      1.5 gm/good pinch salt
      220 mls water
      Or
      1 1/4 cups plain flour, sifted
      1 cup Rolled Oats
      1/2 cup caster sugar
      3/4 cup Coconut
      150g unsalted butter, chopped
      2 tbsp golden syrup or treacle
      1 1/2 tbsp water
      1/2 tsp Bicarbonate Soda.
      Bake @ 170 dreg C Bake for 12 minutes or until golden brown.
      Should give you something between hard tack and a sweet biscuit.
      Something they came up with on the beaches of Turkey.
      They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old: Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning We will remember them.

    • @Skipper.17
      @Skipper.17 Год назад +2

      The ANZAC corp only existed twice. On Gallipoli during the First World War and in Greece and Crete during the Second World War. There was no ANZAC Corp in the pacific because the kiwis were still in the Middle East and Italy at the time the 6th and 7th divisions were in New Guinea with the 9th division who followed after the battle of el elamein. As an Australian it irritates me when the two countries are just lumped in together instead of giving each country the individual respect it deserves.

    • @JackTalyorD
      @JackTalyorD Год назад +2

      @@Skipper.17 we found the John Curtin supporter in the comments.
      I mean it's only Singapore the 8th division wasn't that important was it

  • @inductivegrunt94
    @inductivegrunt94 Год назад +336

    The Owen Gun, an All Australian Gun. Shame it's not well known because of the Thompson and Sten. The Owen deserves more love. And this is coming from an American.

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 Год назад +14

      Gets my vote...must look up all my long lost relatives who were deported there from Ireland in the penal days...

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Год назад +5

      Actually I have long known and admired the Owen.

    • @dudedog884
      @dudedog884 Год назад +2

      @@bigblue6917 Actually nobody cares.

    • @paleoph6168
      @paleoph6168 Год назад +6

      @@dudedog884 Actually I do care, and so does @Big Blue.

    • @gone547
      @gone547 Год назад +5

      The Owen gun was admired and appreciated by those who counted, the men who used them.

  • @marco8414
    @marco8414 Год назад +703

    Contrary to popular belief, the magazine on the Owen gun isn't actually on the top, it's just the normal view from an Australian perspective that makes it look that way.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Год назад +49

      As someone once said about the pineapple upside down cake. In Australia it was just called the pineapple cake.

    • @garfieldsmith332
      @garfieldsmith332 Год назад +30

      Australians call the rest of the world "The Lands Up Over".

    • @Bane2TuffAtBall
      @Bane2TuffAtBall Год назад +7

      Well in that case it should be invisible because Australia doesn’t exist.

    • @gooraway1
      @gooraway1 Год назад +2

      Are you joking it is on top, it is the Sten gun with the side magazine and the Owen is not a Sten held sideways.

    • @marco8414
      @marco8414 Год назад +15

      @@gooraway1 it’s a joke about how Australia is upside down because they’re on the “bottom” of the Earth.

  • @bagelsforbreakfast4014
    @bagelsforbreakfast4014 Год назад +147

    As a half Australian and personally being named Owen, I have to say that this gun is the best sub-machinegun out there.

    • @michaelversace456
      @michaelversace456 Год назад +1

      Which half?

    • @bagelsforbreakfast4014
      @bagelsforbreakfast4014 Год назад +3

      @@michaelversace456 My mom's side. Her Grandfather was shot through the side defending New Guinea from the Japanese which means he could have used this gun and just might be the reason I was named Owen. Not likely but possible

    • @michaelversace456
      @michaelversace456 Год назад

      @@bagelsforbreakfast4014 You do realise that being American, Australian, Kiwi, Canadian are nationalities not ethnicities right?

    • @josedorsaith5261
      @josedorsaith5261 3 месяца назад

      ​@@michaelversace456
      Where did he say that?

  • @doueven
    @doueven Год назад +63

    I am an Australian and my Surname is Owen. Evelyn Owen the designer or the Owen Submachine gun was a distant relative of mine. Distant cousin of my Grandfather and Great Uncle. My Grandfather, his brother and all the cousins all fought in some capacity in WW2, funnily enough my Great Uncle used this very gun while fighting in the Solomon Islands and Bougainville, although he told me when I was a small child that he picked it up off a dead fella that didn't need it. He originally had a Lee-Enfield 303.
    He said the gun was perfect, never jammed on him. And went into great detail of the damage it did to Japanese soldiers......

  • @TheAKgunner
    @TheAKgunner Год назад +66

    I like the Owen. It’s as simple a design as you can make and have it still work. It’s as close to soldier proof as any gun I’ve seen.

  • @GrahamWKidd
    @GrahamWKidd Год назад +49

    Danger Close is such an amazing movie. Fantastic record of Australian IMT (Infantry Minor Tactics), and Arty FO'ing.

    • @wattlebough
      @wattlebough Год назад +1

      Just a pity the guy playing Kiwi FO Morrie Stanley was cast in the role and not a character actor. The guy didn’t have any resemblance in his mannerisms to the later interviews of Stanley.

  • @ifanramadhana7833
    @ifanramadhana7833 Год назад +52

    I think this would only be interesting to Indonesians but Owen appears in a lot of 70s and 80s war film about Indonesian National Revolution. Usually it was carried by senior officer such as then Lt. Colonel Suharto (future President of Indonesia) in the movie Serangan Fajar (Attack at Dawn) about General Attack of 1 March at Yogyakarta, which is then a occupied capital of Indonesian Republic. I remember it was in several movie such as Janur Kuning (set in the same backdrop as Serangan Fajar), Kereta Api Terakhir (fictional story based on how Indonesians try to bring all the locomotive to new capital of Yogyakarta) and Pasukan Berani Mati (Suicide Troops, another fictional story on group of rebels commit suicide mission on Dutch territory). The usage of Owen is based on real life that this gun is so desirable that usually officer welds it. Shame that many old Indonesian war movie didn't have an official release since VCD era in 2000s, while story and effect might not be the best, but it's unique and I think you can tell a lot of story from it.

    • @MultiDivebomber
      @MultiDivebomber Год назад

      Janur Kuning is better in terms of filmography, political aspects aside

  • @MayumiC-chan9377
    @MayumiC-chan9377 11 месяцев назад +5

    my husband owns one from his time in South Africa when he showed me i thought it was Rhodesian because of its paint job Green and yellow. My husband calls it “his treasure” it nearly matches his FAL he inherited from his uncle who fought in the Rhodesian bush war.

  • @thekhoifish0146
    @thekhoifish0146 Год назад +120

    British: “why is the Sten so bad? How do we fix this?”
    Australians: “lol this right side up magazine is great”

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 Год назад +2

      Strewth....the strewth hurts....

    • @GameFuMaster
      @GameFuMaster Год назад +3

      In down under, everything is upside down :P

    • @User_Un_Friendly
      @User_Un_Friendly Год назад

      @@GameFuMaster Especially after some yummy Aussie beer. 😅

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 Год назад +1

      @@User_Un_Friendly the tinies are in the fridge...

    • @User_Un_Friendly
      @User_Un_Friendly Год назад

      @@eamonnclabby7067 Actually, I’m drinking some ginger beer right now. I’m having my real beer later. 🙂

  • @nandinhocunha440
    @nandinhocunha440 Год назад +17

    Sten "who are you?"
    Owen "I'm you but better"

  • @jdelark6428
    @jdelark6428 Год назад +10

    The most gloriously simple, inelegant and reliable bit of metal piping to exist in the Australian armoury :)

  • @Garage-uj7pv
    @Garage-uj7pv Год назад +19

    Another great video Johnny, thanks for the shout-out for "Danger Close" too. The reliability factor in close jungle fighting can't be underestimated I think. The "Digger's Darling" was the right weapon in the right place at the right time for sure.

  • @leopoldthedigger7062
    @leopoldthedigger7062 Год назад +17

    This was probably the BEST smg of the war

  • @DieselMcBadass1
    @DieselMcBadass1 Год назад +21

    such an underrated gun. Some of the camp patterns they came up with were damn cool too!

  • @John-tj9to
    @John-tj9to Год назад +19

    Hey man thanks for the Australian shout out I'm Australian so it's good to get the spotlight on us for once as we supported the Brits and Americans alot during both world wars but we often just get lumped in with the Brits as part of the empire which noticeably Canada doesn't despite being the same as us.

    • @dudedog884
      @dudedog884 Год назад

      Salty little Australian desperate for attention, quiet down and go back to your hole 🤣🤏

    • @trevorlewis847
      @trevorlewis847 Год назад +2

      Canadians mostly ignored by poms like australia and just about every other empire troops, we were all English as far as they were concerned in the press, make the poms feel good, england alone against the Bosch according to English history mate🤔and them alone😢😅

    • @seanbryan4833
      @seanbryan4833 Год назад +2

      The Aussies were the first ones to stop the Japanese, at Milne Bay and the Kokoda track. I'm a Yank, but I appreciate what Australia did in WWII.

  • @SeanDahle
    @SeanDahle Год назад +5

    If I had to pick one 9mm submachinegun from WW2 to use in combat this would be it. Reliable, has select fire, comes with a foregrip, easy to disassemble and clean, easy to reload, and a comfortable stock 👍

  • @battlejitney2197
    @battlejitney2197 Год назад +7

    FINALLY, some well deserved recognition of this unique firearm! And the film Danger Close is an excellent film!

  • @ryansalmon6938
    @ryansalmon6938 Год назад +35

    About 10 years ago an old guy walked into the local police station (UK) with one of these and handed it in to my dad at the front desk. Said he was searching through his attic and found it! Unfortunately it ended up being destroyed. My old man took a picture with it and as I recall it still had some of the yellow/green cam paint on it.

    • @inyrmind
      @inyrmind Год назад +16

      I know the law is the law but it hurt to read that it was destroyed, especially since it still had the camo on it.

    • @discipleofdagon8195
      @discipleofdagon8195 Год назад +12

      Didn't even commit it to a museum, heartbreaking

    • @planescaped
      @planescaped Год назад +2

      The classic rule of -I found a machine gun- what?

    • @trolllife1431
      @trolllife1431 Год назад +3

      The Brits are such good sheep.They do what they're told.Been sheared all the way to the skin.

    • @connoisseur9069
      @connoisseur9069 2 месяца назад

      ⁠​⁠@@trolllife1431I’m British and I agree with that lmao

  • @BHuang92
    @BHuang92 Год назад +13

    Intersting Fact:
    The Owen Gun qualities were appealing to the Americans which McArthur requesting several of them for their use.

    • @snakeplissken2148
      @snakeplissken2148 Год назад

      probably to have a look at em. but they werent any better than a sten or a greasegun.

    • @vsvnrg3263
      @vsvnrg3263 Год назад

      @@snakeplissken2148 owes dont jam.full stop. johnny used a small part of official army footage where they didnt just lightly drizzle sand over the gun. they dunked it in mud. they did it to the sten and tommy too. they jammed, of course. the owen didnt. go looking for the footage. its on youtube. then get back to me and i'll accept your apology for not fully understanding the importance of this gun in beating the japs back from australia's borders.

  • @brada2354
    @brada2354 Год назад +3

    My grandfather used to make the barrels on these fine weapons in ww2, the weapon is close to my families heart.

  • @bigblue6917
    @bigblue6917 Год назад +29

    When I first saw the Owen submachinegun I thought it was just a variation of the Sten. But the more I read about it the more I realised how much better it was. For one thing come the 1960s the Sten had been replaced by the Sterling SMG, a very much better version. Whereas the Aussies still had the Owen.
    They also came up with a fighter during WW2 which would have given the Spitfire, P-51, FW-190 and a number of tohers a run for their money if it had gotten into production. They even built a tank. No not the Bob Semple tank. The other one. The AC1 Sentinel, of which there was three versions. And its successor the AC3 Thunderbolt

    • @bradster1708
      @bradster1708 Год назад +11

      The plane you mention is the CA-15 Kangaroo and used a Rolls Royce griffon engine. By the time it was developed jet fighters had taken over. What is even more amazing is that until 1936, Australia had no aircraft industry to speak of. War brought on the creation of the Commonwealth Aircraft Corporation. They also licence built F-86 Sabres with 50% more thrust. That factory in Melbourne still exists and is now owned by Boeing, one of those products being the flaps and ailerons for all 787 aircraft made using an Australian patented technique for making carbon fibre parts more cheaply and efficiently. Basically using raw carbon fibre rather than expensive pre-preg carbon, no autoclave required.
      Hope you don't mind the rantings of a proud Aussie. Cheers mate!

    • @wufongtanwufong5579
      @wufongtanwufong5579 Год назад +7

      @@bradster1708 From what i have read it was an amazing fighter. Like you said the jet era had arrived and Australia had to make a choice of either adopting the new jet technology or sticking with the prop plane. They couldn't really afford to do both. They wisely choose the Jet. The funny thing was. During the Korean war Australia was building (under license) it own P-51's. They also developed it's own bomber/torpedo bomber. Along the lines of the British beaufort bomber. Only it was faster. had twice the range and was capable of dive bombing. It was passing its test but suffered a serious crash during landing causing the whole project to be scraped. Upon investigation the cause of t he failure was due to sabotage. I wish i could remember the name of the plane.

    • @wufongtanwufong5579
      @wufongtanwufong5579 Год назад +9

      The Sentinel was an amazing tank for a country that had never developed a tank before. Yeah it had its faults but still... Like when the thetankchieftian ( I think that his yt channel) said to lindybeige. When lindybiege said it was not a very good tank. the Chieftain replied. No. But it was a lot better than a lot of other countries first attempt at building a tank.
      Two things about the Sentinel. It was the first tank to have it's hull made up of one single cast. (Something which is standard practice now) And Australia due to a lack of zinc had to develop a new armoured alloy. So not bad for a small countries first attempt at building a tank. Especially when it was fighting a powerful enemy on its door step

    • @bradster1708
      @bradster1708 Год назад +4

      @@wufongtanwufong5579 you have some good knowledge there, kudos. Look up the CAC Boomerang, an emergency fighter that went from concept to fly aircraft in less than 2 months (from memory). Scored no combat victories but established itself as an excellent close support aircraft. Also look up Boeing Loyal Wingman, an Aussie developed drone designed to operate in conjunction with modern fighter aircraft. Thanks for your input, good useful stuff and I am also a fan of Lindy Beige and The Chieftan.

    • @stephencox4224
      @stephencox4224 Год назад +6

      @@wufongtanwufong5579 The Australian Sentinel Tank was actually the Inspiration for up gunning the Sherman tanks with the 17 Pounder by the British that in turn led to the development of the late war Sherman Easy Eight model, The sentinel was the first Tank that was upgraded to a higher velocity Gun anywhere in the Allied World.
      Of course the Germans beat all to it when they decided an 88mm Flak Gun could be useful in a tank and so right they were as many Russians found out to their demise at the shell of one a good 500 metres before they could even remotely return fire and still not effectively for another 250 metres.

  • @FlyWithMe_666
    @FlyWithMe_666 Год назад +9

    3:18 Guy firing full auto next to a crowd - hey! let’s throw some sand in his eyes! 😂

    • @mfactor88
      @mfactor88 Год назад

      probably a grub politician

  • @Gungho1a
    @Gungho1a Год назад +24

    Numbers were supplied to US forces in the SWPA. Interestingly, the design allows a calibre change simply by changing the front barrel assembly. Further, later models had a bayonet fitting added, which was continued in the design of the Owen's successor, the F1. Finally, the Owen (and F1) are technically 'machine carbines', according to the design nomenclature originally produced. Last point, but not specifically about the weapon, but relevant...the australian 9mm parabellum round used by the Owen and the F1 were both supercharged (I can't comment on the WW2 loading though, just Vietnam era onwards), giving the projectile a muzzle velocity slightly over 1400 fps, which was well above velocities for other handgun and SMG rounds at the time. The F1 combined a lot of feedback and features derived from australian tactical doctrine and experience...it was intended to be able to shoot someone, stab them or beat them to death, a truly fine close quarters all-rounder.

    • @liammeech3702
      @liammeech3702 Год назад

      SWPA?

    • @danielponiatowski7368
      @danielponiatowski7368 Год назад +4

      the f1 used the pistol grip/trigger mechanism from the FN SLR as well i think. when i was a kid in western aus i handled an F1 at an army display, the soldier asked me if i was going to join the army after school. i said nah im joining the RAAF, he snatched his gun back an told me to fuck off.

    • @liammeech3702
      @liammeech3702 Год назад

      @@danielponiatowski7368 rofl

  • @FlashPan73
    @FlashPan73 Год назад +4

    Also saw this gun in the Australian family soap that was timed during WW2 (The Sullivans) when I was a kid in the early 80s. I remember in the few/random scenes of the actual war some guys were using these and I honestly thought was a cheap/badly made prop from the likes of Dr Who from the 70s....little did I know then about this weapon.

  • @SKY_-kr8ks
    @SKY_-kr8ks Год назад +7

    You’re an absolute legend for talking about this weapon Aussie approved👍🏻🇦🇺

  • @husbandsonfollowerleader9133
    @husbandsonfollowerleader9133 Год назад +9

    Yeah, Johnny. Another good one dude. Keep it up.

  • @CranialExtractor
    @CranialExtractor Год назад +2

    Went to the Australian War Museum in Canberra. Wonderful museum. Great exhibits. Tons of amazing artifacts including some Owens. Top notch.

  • @oldmate3152
    @oldmate3152 Год назад +6

    The Owen gun is definitely one of my top guns, i'd love to fire one some day. i'm also somewhat distantly related to Evelyn Owen.

  • @jedi_yt365
    @jedi_yt365 Год назад +4

    Was a great surprise to see you making a video about Australia, friendly reminder that Anzac is Australia and New Zealand (Australian New Zealand army corpj

  • @pontiusporcius8430
    @pontiusporcius8430 Год назад +1

    You made vanguard look somewhat competent in its weapon customization and not even by accident. Bravo.

  • @domm138
    @domm138 Год назад +3

    iirc Owen was only 23 y.o. when he finished designing his gun
    the gun was already rejected by the australian army before Owen's neighbor, a factory manager, found the prototype Owen gun that he'd left by the side of his house one day randomly
    fortunately, his neighbor was able to arrange a proper demonstration and the rest is in the video

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +2

      Ian from forgotten weapons tells the story well

    • @domm138
      @domm138 Год назад

      @@JohnnyJohnsonEsq where do you think i heard it from?

  • @GrahamWKidd
    @GrahamWKidd Год назад +8

    Johnny, By the time I was in, the Owen was out, but we had it's successor the F1 and it was hands down my favourite small arms. I loved every shoot I ever had with the F1, and if I do say so myself I was a pretty good shot with it.
    Though the 9 mm was a bit underpowered.
    You should absolutely do a vid on the F1.
    Also, you can absolutely use ANZAC in that way.

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +2

      Thanks Graham! Will most definitely make an F1 video down the line for ya

    • @martinreinhold6589
      @martinreinhold6589 Год назад

      @@JohnnyJohnsonEsq I would be very suprised if you could find any F1 movie footage. Possibly "The Odd Angry Shot" or the "Vietnam" mini series but I'm not even sure about that. I used the F1 by the way and unlike Graham W Kidd I thought is was a dog. Hard to hit anything with and used to run up and right when you fired it.

    • @sheriff0017
      @sheriff0017 Год назад

      ​@@martinreinhold6589 I've seen the F1 used in the miniseries Blue Murder, though not fired. It was used in a payroll robbery. It also featured in a single episode of Sea Patrol, inexplicably being held like a pistol.
      You won't see it in the Odd Angry Shot. I haven't seen Vietnam, but I will say that the F1 wasn't popular with infantry units. In the infantry, the preferred replacement for the Owen was the M16. F1s tended to be relegated to non-infantry units.
      It got tossed into the video game Rising Storm 2: Vietnam for Australian Scouts, Commanders, and Combat Engineers. Only the latter would be accurate. The remainder most likely get it for balance purposes. Giving them M16s would be factually accurate, but would also make them much more powerful. Parenthetically, the Australian Machine Gunner is given an L2A1 Automatic Rifle, another non-infantry weapon, rather than the M60.

  • @spamviking
    @spamviking Год назад +2

    I worked with a guy who was an extra in Danger Close (Bravo Company Radio Man), he got a full few seconds of screen time to himself too, but he had an SLR not the Owens. According to him, they all wanted an Owens gun rather than the SLRs but there weren't enough to go around.

  • @jurgentreue1200
    @jurgentreue1200 4 месяца назад +2

    The Owen gun was so well loved by Australian soldiers, it was nick named 'Digger's Darling'. Digger is the term for an Australian infantryman.

  • @plaguecrow754
    @plaguecrow754 Год назад +7

    The Owen gun is basically taking something with an use like a mag, and adding another use to it.

  • @nursestoyland
    @nursestoyland Год назад +2

    I legit attempted to search this up on my kindle, and whaddya know it, it’s here!

  • @bobmetcalfe9640
    @bobmetcalfe9640 Год назад +2

    Apparently Americans in Vietnam liked to get their hands on an Owen If they could because they regarded it as a quality weapon. When I was a cadet we had the Stirling from memory, which looked very much like the Sten but was much higher quality. With a magazine at the side or on the top you can get down a lot lower. :) There was a similar POW incident in NZ, but no one escaped although some were shot. It was covered up at the time.

    • @alexlanning712
      @alexlanning712 Год назад

      Also there was a bit of bartering going on in New Guinea(WWII) and the Malayan Emergency

    • @gregdzialo9998
      @gregdzialo9998 Год назад

      But, it would probably have been extremely difficult to get sufficient 9mm ammunition from American logistics for an ordinary "grunt" (infantryman) to serve in the field. Nevertheless, the vid describes a caliber change is possible with a barrel change but doesn't specify if .45ACP barrels would have been made available for the Americans, although that ammunition would have been readily available. The only 9mm SMG used by Americans in Vietnam that I can easily think of, but in small numbers by MACV/SOG & Navy SEALs, was the Swedish K. There may be another I'm missing & can't remember but maybe someone else knows.

  • @rikhellum5652
    @rikhellum5652 Год назад +1

    My grandfather swore by it. Claimed it was the most indestructible gun of the war. The most reliable automatic gun in the New Guinea campain. Thats saying something.

  • @anotherjones5384
    @anotherjones5384 Год назад +2

    My grandfather was an Australian militia member in WW2 and after he joined, before being shipped to New Guinea he had to help with cleaning up Japanese suicides after the Cowra breakout which included them throwing themselves under trains and cutting their throats with barbed wire

  • @ianashby1449
    @ianashby1449 Год назад +2

    The Owen sub machine is an interesting weapon saw one at the museum in Auckland last year

  • @the2wheelsnowman
    @the2wheelsnowman Год назад +1

    I was beginning to wonder if you where gonna reference danger close. You did not disappoint

  • @paleoph6168
    @paleoph6168 Год назад +6

    3:22
    "Oi, watch it there!"

  • @nathankindle282
    @nathankindle282 Год назад +1

    I was actually first introduced to the Owen by a fiction book of all things. The books name is Monter Hunter International, by Larry Correa. In the book, the main character comes to find out that monsters are real, and world governments are aware of this fact, but keep it a secret, and most governments, including the US, on top of their government run teams, have secret bounties on monsters that mercenary companies get for killing monsters. The main character, Owen Zastava Pitt, according to the book, his father was a green beret in Vietnam and named him after the Owen submachine gun, that saved his life in the jungles of Vietnam. Real interesting series of books. The author is a gun enthusiast and actually used to own his own gun store, so you don't get the common errors that other authors make

  • @ja37d-34
    @ja37d-34 Год назад +16

    Danger Close is such a good movie!

  • @predetor911
    @predetor911 Год назад +2

    Thank you for including Danger Close, such a good action film and one of the first times I saw the Owen Gun.

  • @kirkmarrie8060
    @kirkmarrie8060 Год назад +3

    Outstanding historical presentation! Never knew. Thank you!!!

  • @billludbey501
    @billludbey501 Год назад +2

    Many years after the 2nd World War they where building a swimming pool at Canungra jungle training camp and dog up all these Owen sub machine guns that had been buried after the War,the the sub machine guns where stipped down and cleaned reassembled and they still worked as good as the day they were buried

  • @seanlander9321
    @seanlander9321 Год назад +2

    The spent cartridges ejecting through the bottom of the gun, gives two other distinct advantages: 1. Less interruption to sighting and 2. Less interference to the soldier alongside.
    (Btw, the Thompson was an unreliable nightmare of a weapon).

  • @stefanmilisavljevic8941
    @stefanmilisavljevic8941 8 месяцев назад +1

    The Owen gun is like the ak-47 both a very reliable event in tough weather conditions as a Australian, it’s very cool the see some love for an Aussie gun

  • @thatguybrody4819
    @thatguybrody4819 Год назад +4

    Pretty much everyone loved the Owen except for the Australian Brass that absolutely did not want it. They tried to keep it out of the military but we're forced to give it a fair chance and ever since tried to get rid of it. They were willing to force worse submachine guns onto their soldiers out of spite.

  • @hfd_blackrose.of.darwin
    @hfd_blackrose.of.darwin Год назад +7

    As an Aussie who loves the Owen gun, this is the best submachine gun we ever had during the Second Great War. I used it in Day of Infamy D-Day Roblox game to massacre an entire German marauding platoon to the point of being called a hacker in the game.

  • @maxrockatanksyOG
    @maxrockatanksyOG Год назад +1

    As an Aussie gun owner- i got to fire one of these, running a few magazines through it.
    Much like the Steyr i used in the Army, the Owen really does not suit me & my Ape like arms; the M4 style rifles far better suit me.
    At the time, i guess it was a great gun that suited the needs required, and it was fun to shoot something that was older than my Father

  • @vincentpadula4543
    @vincentpadula4543 7 месяцев назад +1

    There is a 1940's movie of the Owen SMG compared to the Sten, the Tomphson and German Machine Pistol being tested under sand storm, dropped into mud pool etc. The Owen was the ONLY SMG that kept firing - ALL others jammed immediatly...

  • @patriotenfield3276
    @patriotenfield3276 Год назад +2

    Some other underrated SMGs of WW2
    1) Type 100 SMG
    2) United Defense M42
    3)MAS 38
    4)Reising M50/55
    5) Danuvia 39M/43M
    6)M2 Hyde
    7)ERMA SMGS
    8)TZ45

    • @dudedog884
      @dudedog884 Год назад

      News flash: just because they were in your favorite video game doesn't mean they're worth mentioning.

    • @patriotenfield3276
      @patriotenfield3276 Год назад

      @@dudedog884 When did I say they were my favorite?

  • @stanlyqbrick1621
    @stanlyqbrick1621 Год назад +1

    A friend of my father had one in PNG on the Kokoda trail. He said he and two other men with owens swam in a swamp for 25 minutes through reeds to out flank and cut off a coming Australian assault on a Japanese position. The Japanese didn't expect that as other rifles and sub machines guns would not fire after being under water for 25 minutes. But not the Owen. Once the Japanese retreated up a trail from the Assault the three men opened fire killing 4 and wounding two and the Owens did not misfire once. The 8 other Japanese soldiers ran back into the huts and were all killed off over the next 40 minutes.

  • @Ididitlikethis2079
    @Ididitlikethis2079 Год назад +3

    Fun Fact: The magazine is upsidedown on the owen gun, because everything in Australia is upsidedown

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +2

      Now that is fact. So much so I didn't think I needed to include it 🙃

  • @allancarey2604
    @allancarey2604 7 месяцев назад

    A couple of fun facts about the owen - the top magazine was also helpful in preventing snagging in the jungle undergrowth (a disadvantage of the sten & sterling). You'll also notice that there is a lot of rounded edges...this was done to prevent nicks and cuts that were frequent with the Thompson. Important given how quickly a minor wound would become seriously infected & difficult to heal when your diet was poor (tin beef & biscuits don't make for the healthiest of long term diets) & exposed to the jungle for a long time.

  • @fortis3686
    @fortis3686 Год назад +6

    You definitely should do the Lee Enfield next, since you’ve covered the other commonwealth guns such as the Sten, Vickers, and PIAT

  • @Patriciadiko
    @Patriciadiko Год назад +17

    Australia: makes the best smg of ww2, makes the best tank design of ww2 (AC IV Sentinal), gave the Japanese their first land defeat, gave the Italians their first land defeat, gave the germans their first land defeat, takes no credit for any of these.
    United States: joined the war late, takes credit for everything mentioned above

    • @dudedog884
      @dudedog884 Год назад

      Well, good thing the Australians have you to cry for them in the RUclips comment section. Australia should be thankful, if it wasn't for the United States all those descendants of inbred criminals would be speaking Japanese today 🤣

    • @leechgully
      @leechgully Год назад +2

      You just took credit for them. Aussies take credit for these all the time. We never stop.

    • @pweter351
      @pweter351 Год назад +1

      Sentinel with Centurion never quite made it

    • @grizwoldphantasia5005
      @grizwoldphantasia5005 Месяц назад

      I thought the Bob Semple was from New Zealand.

    • @Patriciadiko
      @Patriciadiko Месяц назад +1

      @@grizwoldphantasia5005 It was, and I never mentioned the Bob Semple.

  • @cameronnewton7053
    @cameronnewton7053 Год назад +3

    The Owen was a great gun, it was a shame that the creator got so little money for it, he did it as a passion project ( Owen was a private on the army)and the government wasn't going to argue, the top fed mag also helped with reliability as any dirt in the mag would fall out when taken from the webbing, and anything that remained would fall straight out the ejection port.I would also recommend Danger close the battle of long tan as a great movie.

  • @RossCollingwood-fw6zb
    @RossCollingwood-fw6zb Месяц назад +1

    The Owen gun was very much like the Aussie diggers who carried and used it - it was loud, crude, rough, and a long way from elegant to look at. But it was also rugged, reliable, efficient, and when the chips were down and the lead was flying, nothing else got the job done better!

  • @wolvesgabemaster5385
    @wolvesgabemaster5385 Год назад +1

    Sten: Who are ya, lad?
    Owen gun: Oi! I'm ya, mate. But more reliable.

  • @marcusher4979
    @marcusher4979 Год назад +1

    In Australia they still show up as modern ‘homemade’ copies often without the wooden stock being used. 🇦🇺

    • @vsvnrg3263
      @vsvnrg3263 Год назад

      marcusher, some organised crime gangs were found to be attempting to mass produce the owens about 20 years ago so the government went around removing info on it to try stop people reproducing it.

  • @braxton1098
    @braxton1098 Год назад +5

    I know you tend to do more older historical guns, but I think it would be awesome to see some videos on the Barrett M82 and minigun!

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +1

      I got the minigun for ya! ruclips.net/video/MgPBGRbkNfs/видео.html

  • @airmackeeee6792
    @airmackeeee6792 Год назад

    About 3:24: I was expecting the V/O guy to say "... and it's made of a space-age polymer!" 😂😂😂

  • @jacoblush
    @jacoblush Год назад +2

    That’s an Australian this is my favorite gun along with the AK-47 and I’ve been to a gun museum in Queensland which has this gun I wasn’t allowed to shoot it but I was allowed to see it and many other historical firearms

  • @alexlanning712
    @alexlanning712 Год назад +1

    Thanks for quite an informative essay

  • @yevgeny8186
    @yevgeny8186 Год назад +1

    I love the Owen gun. People give it shit for looking the way it did, but in the end it was exactly what Australia needed. It was a simple, reliable, cost-effective weapon that was well-suited for the task, and it was well-liked by the soldiers who had to drag them through the jungles of Papua New Guinea. I personally like the Owen because it's an ingenious weapon of war that didn't need to look good to perform.

  • @Bokator2
    @Bokator2 Год назад +1

    It's interesting to note its involvement in the vietnam war, its like bringing an old character of a series back after a long absence. Although at that time it was in the process of being replaced by the F1 SMG but it was still used quite a bit like the grease gun for the Americans and ARVN

  • @brothercaptainwarhammer
    @brothercaptainwarhammer Год назад +3

    The Third Submachine Gun on my Favorite Submachine Gun list, with the Top going to the Thompson and, 2nd going to both the PPSH and PPS. Thank you for Tackling this Well Liked and Well Loved, but completely overshadowed and mostly left out piece of Australian Weapons Engineering Johnny! And Yes I have to Agree that the Battle of Long Tan Movie was some Good Shit to watch... Now time to watch the Cowra Breakout always wondered if there was a Movie on one of the Bloodiest Prisoner Escapes of WW2.
    Again, thank you for the Knowledgeable and Fun Content as always, as well as for your hard work!
    Keep up the Damn Fine, and Amazing Work Johnny!

  • @kevingreer7877
    @kevingreer7877 Месяц назад

    It's also featured in "Mr Inbetween." It's given to someone as a gift, and when the recipient says: A Sterling, the giver says: No, it's an Owen. It's better."

  • @skyrimJava
    @skyrimJava Год назад +3

    The most underrated ww2 gun is the mauser c96 with all its chinese variants

  • @ant4812
    @ant4812 Год назад +1

    I never got to play with an Owen. I did get to use its successor the F1 for a short while just before the F88 (Steyr AUG) came in. The top mounted mag is no problem at all. If you're in a hole it doesn't get in the way like an underslung one. It's also more convenient when it comes to slipping the thing around corners, tree trunks & the like.

  • @pendantblade6361
    @pendantblade6361 Год назад +3

    Owen, Bren and Sten sounds like the name of musicians in a band.

    • @ianb9028
      @ianb9028 Год назад

      In that case the percussion section is accounted for.

  • @LUR1FAX
    @LUR1FAX Год назад +1

    The Owen gun even gives the expensive SMGs like the Suomi KP31, Beretta 38, and MP-34 a run for their money. It was pretty cheap and simple, very reliable, and doesn't sacrifice any controllability.

  • @muhammadabyzard7970
    @muhammadabyzard7970 4 месяца назад +1

    Also used by Royal Dutch East Army and subsequently after various captures, the Indonesian Army, alongside Stens, Thompsons, Austens, M3s, and even MP40s. Now that's a list 😅

  • @Chiller01
    @Chiller01 Год назад +2

    This is the one subgun, well also an MP5, I’d like to own. Can see them in the Australian film Danger Close which I think is a excellent Vietnam War flick. (Yes I commented before watching the entire video.)

  • @ideadlift20kg83
    @ideadlift20kg83 Год назад +3

    Cool, I never knew that and now I am a bit sad we didn't see it in BF V. (At least I think so). Thank you!

  • @chuxxsss
    @chuxxsss Год назад +1

    I love using it in 1991 great weapon.

  • @allenjenkins7947
    @allenjenkins7947 Год назад

    A SMG with a bottom- mounted magazine is great for urban combat, but it is pretty nigh impossible to use from the prone position. The Sten and similar weapons were great for firing from ditches, etc and made a great ambush weapon for resistance fighters. The side-mounted magazine restricted movement in forest, or moving building to building. The top-mounted magazine on the Owen eliminated both of these problems. While it did require offset sights, that was a minor disadvantage. I think that it is the best SMG design for jungle fighting.

  • @patriotenfield3276
    @patriotenfield3276 Год назад +2

    If you are thinking of the most underrated of the gun,then I think nothing will fit it perfectly more than the Type 100 SMG. Coz even though Owen SMG served in millions with commonwealth and allied forces during and post WW2, Only 8,000+ of the Type 100 were built. And even then , the type 1 and type 2 paratrooper Arisakas were more preferred over The type 1000

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад +1

      Type 100 would be an interesting weapon to do a video on! I'll see what I can do

  • @Shoelaces77
    @Shoelaces77 Год назад +1

    It was rejected at first because it was originally a .22 SMG. Thank goodness for the 9mm Version.

    • @brucelee3388
      @brucelee3388 Год назад

      The .22 prototype was belt fed (!!), there were also .32ACP and 455 Webley prototypes but I don't think they made a .45ACP.

  • @HuckOrris
    @HuckOrris 2 месяца назад +1

    This is the most naturally Aussie gun, as the magazine and case ejection are upside-down.

  • @eamonnclabby7067
    @eamonnclabby7067 Год назад +2

    Excellent choice....

  • @matthewcharles5867
    @matthewcharles5867 Год назад +1

    Best sub machine gun we had, still a few around at the start of Vietnam.

  • @williampower6534
    @williampower6534 11 месяцев назад +2

    I demonstrated competency on the Owens SMG and it was in my humble opinion a much better SMG than the F1 that replaced it. To this day I cannot understand why the Australian army replaced a reliable easy to operate weapon with something that performed no where near as well.

  • @jozzieokes3422
    @jozzieokes3422 Год назад +2

    as an Australian thanks for the vid!

  • @BOpal-cl6of
    @BOpal-cl6of Год назад

    Thanks for another great video, Johnny. Cheers from Australia.

  • @officercat7907
    @officercat7907 Год назад +5

    Amazing video! Are you ever gonna do one regarding the Browning Hi-Power or Welrod in WWII?

  • @Mikedadof2
    @Mikedadof2 Год назад +3

    Proud to be a Anzac

  • @makukawakami
    @makukawakami Год назад +2

    i thought the mag was an Aussie joke by the inventor and just ran with it

  • @jeffreystorer4966
    @jeffreystorer4966 Год назад

    Young Mr Owen apparently designed and built this gun in his shed while waiting to be old enough to inlist,then just left it in the shed ,and went off to war ,he had previously offered it to the army who originally knocked it back ,

  • @iansands8607
    @iansands8607 Год назад

    My dad served in the Royal Marine Commandos during WWII; He preferred the Thompson to the Sten gun which he thought was rubbish. I have a feeling he would have loved the Owen, it's a shame it wasn't issued further afield than the Australian AIF.

  • @arnijulian6241
    @arnijulian6241 Год назад +3

    Problem with the Owen gun johnny was only 45,000 was built from 1942-1944 for perspective.
    The Sten had around 3.7-4.6 million built from 1941 -1945 wars end designed in les s then a year in 1940
    Thompsons all variants at approximately 1.75 million built from 1921-1945
    The only Submachine comparable to the (Sten's) numbers built is the (PPSH41) that either arguably hold the WW2 production record approximately 6 million from 1941-1947
    The Stens sheer quantity was astonishing for a little island.
    Most of the Sten's complaint were not reliability as you claim Johnny but firing without the trigger being pulled but this was later resolved with a tack welded modification.
    If you knocked Stens to heavy as an open stroke bolt design, they could cycle a round.
    The other major complaint of the Sten by troops was the limited effective range no more than 100meters 50 meters shorter than a Thompson 150M's
    The PPSH41 is labelled as 250meters effective range but is more so about 200meters in practice but these are pricey.
    The German MP40 from 1940-1945 produced 1.1million which is nothing compared to the British Sten or USSR PPSH41 but was the MP40 well machined with same effective range of 200M or at least similar range to the PPSH41
    The German had pure quality but that came at a cost of much lower production!
    Britain went for cheap & many that won out over all sub machine guns in ww2!

    • @arnijulian6241
      @arnijulian6241 Год назад

      If interested in the 'Owen gun' you should look up the (Austen) which the Australians version of the Sten!

    • @JohnnyJohnsonEsq
      @JohnnyJohnsonEsq  Год назад

      Thanks again for adding this Arni. Never really meant to put down the STEN. I speak highly of it in my Sten video. You are absolutely right it was the perfect weapon for getting immediate affordable weapons into hands. The best weapon is always the one that suits the cause not always the one that looks pretty or functions like a sporting rifle.

    • @arnijulian6241
      @arnijulian6241 Год назад +1

      ​@@JohnnyJohnsonEsq Thing a lot of people don't give credit for the Sten & Own is they aren't fancy but anyone with 1/2 a functional brain can clean & maintain them as the Owen has dead on 50 parts & the Sten 47 with only 2 machined being the Barrel & the bolt!
      Compare that to an MP40 with 72 parts that need to be assembled in the right order!
      Few automatics have less the 60 parts never mind 50!
      I really like machines & guns with less parts as that means less can go wrong in operation!
      I hate most modern machine guns as the M16 has 148 parts with countless common issues liking over heating & jamming.
      That & the British L85 has 110 parts if memory serves.
      Damn I hate both of those pieces of junk!
      An Ak47 has 63 parts for perspective.
      I'm middle ground on Russian stuff but they have enough brains to keep total components within reason!
      You put in too many parts then the troops will clean the gun less often or well & there is more likelihood they misplace parts!
      Happens more than you think as I have refurbished arms missing even over 1/2 dozen parts that should really be there!

    • @kidpagronprimsank05
      @kidpagronprimsank05 Год назад

      @@arnijulian6241 as Kalashnikov said, he designed weapon with simplicity in mind. The dumber the soldiers, the simpler the weapon

    • @arnijulian6241
      @arnijulian6241 Год назад +1

      ​@@kidpagronprimsank05
      Михаил Калашников/Mikhail
      Kalashnikov quote in comment to the ak47 30/7/2002 visiting Berlin:
      ''Жаль, что я не сделал газонокосилку''.
      ''zhal, chto ya nay sdelal gazonokosilku''.
      ''I wish I'd made a lawnmower''.
      Even on his death bed in 2013 Kalashnikov knew for all the Americans advanced space age level technology his assault rifle by ease of construction had killed more than anyone of their invention's
      The Ak47's lowest death rate globally is 1/4 million per year since construction in 1947.
      Kalashnikov designed over 150 small arms weapons!
      ''если моя винтовка унесла жизни людей, то может ли быть так, что я... христианин и православный верующий, виноват ли в их смерти''?
      ''If my rifle claimed people's lives, then can it be that I... a Christian and an Orthodox believer, was to blame for their deaths''?
      Do keep in mind a famous quote of his: Я сплю хорошо. Именно политики виноваты в том, что не смогли прийти к соглашению и прибегли к насилию.
      ''I sleep well. It's the politicians who are to blame for failing to come to an agreement and resorting to violence'',
      He took pride in the quality for cost & popularity his assault rifle gained as an inventor & engineer.
      Kalashnikov mind was completely aware of what he made!
      He blamed the politicians.
      As a fellow Engineer who both my father & grandfather also designed weapons systems but for the British, they had similar thoughts though less pride if any!
      Both my elders & Kalashnikov share in youth blindness by patriotism & nationalism.
      The perfect military servants for service?

  • @alandesouzacruz5124
    @alandesouzacruz5124 Год назад +1

    Very beautiful submachine gun

  • @audiemurphy1925
    @audiemurphy1925 Год назад

    The Beretta M33 is such an underrated Italian pistol and actually pretty good too

  • @shreyasmohite8929
    @shreyasmohite8929 Год назад

    Owen gun was also extensively used by the ANZAC forces in Malayan emergency as well Borneo confrontation. Danger Close was a really well made movie, showcasing the courageous Australians in action in Vietnam. But the movie couldn't garner a global audience just like all their contribution in all these great wars.

  • @LazyLifeIFreak
    @LazyLifeIFreak Год назад +1

    When people talk about sub machine guns, in particular the simple blowback, the most important part is the magazine and its feeding reliability.

  • @loganoldon8924
    @loganoldon8924 Год назад +1

    I have a cousin with that name. It always drew me to it