ExNotes Review: Arnold

By Joe Berk

Susie and I were channel surfing on Netflix a few nights ago and a new documentary popped up:  Arnold.

Arnold is a three part series (one hour each) documentary on the life and times of our former governor and my all-time favorite actor, Arnold Schwarzenegger.  The series was very well done, it is told by Arnold himself (interspersed with comments by folks who figured prominently in his life, including James Cameron, Danny DeVito, and others), and in a word, it was great.  The three segments cover the Governator’s early life and body building career, his movie career, and his stint as governor of California.  The show doesn’t pull any punches, and the last segment includes the affair with his housekeeper and the son he had with her.

I’d heard of Arnold Schwarzenegger and sort of had a vague idea that he was a movie star/body builder before the movie Terminator was released.  When I saw Terminator and Terminator II and I thought he was great in both.  Then I saw Predator, and I liked him even more.  I watched (or rented the VHS tape back in those days) of just about everything he’s ever done.  When Arnold ran for governor of California, he had my vote both times.  I’m a fan.  I like the guy.

If you are a Netflix subscriber, queue up and watch Arnold.  You’ll like it.

I’ll be Bach: The AMT 1911 Hardballer Long Slide

“I’ll be Bach,” of course, is the written Austrian-accent impersonation of the Governator (i.e., Arnold) in what has to be one of the best sci-fi movies ever, Terminator.  One of the several guns that received top billing in that movie was an AMT Long Slide Hardballer equipped with a laser sight.

There are a lot of cool things to know about the Terminator movie and its armament, not the least of which is that laser target designators were not yet available for handguns when the movie was released in 1985.  Ahnold’s (misspelled intentionally) AMT Hardballer had a custom 10,000-volt laser, and the wiring for all that power was hidden in the future governor’s jacket sleeve.  I liked the movie, but I especially liked seeing the Long Slide Hardballer 1911 in it.  You see, I own one.  It cost just $365 back in the day and it was manufactured by Arcadia Machine and Tool (hence the AMT moniker) just up the road from me in Monrovia, California.  It is a stainless steel 1911, it has a 7-inch long slide and barrel, and it is accurate.  That’s my gun you see in the phot0 at the top of this blog.  One of these guns recently sold for close to $2,000 complete with box and papers.  I have the box and papers that came with mine.  And no, it’s not for sale.

The Hardballer is surprisingly accurate.  The 2-inch longer sight radius really works.  Mine has not been tightened up, accurized, or modified in any way.  The trigger pull is a bit higher than I would like, but it’s crisp (one of these days, I may get around to having TJ of TJ’s Custom Gunworks do a trigger job on it).  I found the targets you see below in an old reloading notebook; they were all fired by yours truly, standing, at 50 feet.  I guess that old saying is true:  The older I get, the better I was.




I’ve owned my Hardballer for close to 40 years now.  The AMT company is no more, so there won’t be any more of them.  It’s a classic, and I need to get out and shoot it more often.  Maybe I’ll do that today.


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