Hence why you eject and inspect the chambered round...
Does Alec Baldwin know what to look for in terms of a fake round made for aesthetics or a real one?
Hence why you eject and inspect the chambered round...
All of them right?
Cause you might be using more than one
Does Alec Baldwin know what to look for in terms of a fake round made for aesthetics or a real one?
No this is you assuming what cold meant on that set.
It could mean blank or dummy too with it beinga revolver.
Checking a round is there or not is in no way a safety check when you are expecting a blank or dummy to be there.
Only if you're expecting a completely empty unloaded gun.
If it's a revolver, it's a very easy task. So yes. As I've pointed out if it uses a magazine you can carry out a visual inspection.
It's brilliant though you two now admit you were both wrong by saying "it's a quick chamber check" to its a full inspection of the entire magazine.
Well done lads personal growth right there
So not the"simple chamber check" that takes a few seconds you where souing before
You can see why this long winded process that may happen dozens of times a day gets handed over to an armourer?
So not the"simple chamber check" that takes a few seconds you where souing before
You can see why this long winded process that may happen dozens of times a day gets handed over to an armourer?
It's brilliant though you two now admit you were both wrong by saying "it's a quick chamber check" to its a full inspection of the entire magazine.
On a film though they'd always have something (fake/dummy round) in them though or else it would be obviously empty for the close ups right?
And again if he's expecting blanks he opens the gun he sees the back of the round that's what he'd expect
What long-winded process?
What long-winded process?
To be honest, you all seem to be living in some fantasy land whereby the actor repeats all the necessary steps that are someone else's responsibility, in making sure a firearm is safe to have its trigger pulled.
While not always the case close ups are usually filmed with a so called "hero" prop which is usually high detail but non-functioning (though again not a hard and fast rule). Sometimes there are going to be exceptions though - which is where a higher level of diligence would be required.
To be honest, you all seem to be living in some fantasy land whereby the actor repeats all the necessary steps that are someone else's responsibility, in making sure a firearm is safe to have its trigger pulled.
Like I said, I garauntee Alec will face no legal repercussions for this.
Why on earth do you think that's a "fantasy land" though? Why should basic weapon safety not be adhered to on film sets?
To be honest, you all seem to be living in some fantasy land whereby the actor repeats all the necessary steps that are someone else's responsibility, in making sure a firearm is safe to have its trigger pulled.
This was the 3rd accidental/unintended discharge 2 blank shots had been fired in a reading inside a cabin where the actors stated the gun just went off in thier hands
Its called responsible weapon handling and basic weapon safety. Its what anyone should be doing when handling firearms. Suggest you have a watch of some YouTube videos of keanu reeves filming John wick as he demonstrates it very well.
Ultimately you never point a potentially live weapon in anyone's direction. That's just retarded.
Its called responsible weapon handling and basic weapon safety. Its what anyone should be doing when handling firearms. Suggest you have a watch of some YouTube videos of keanu reeves filming John wick as he demonstrates it very well.
Ultimately you never point a potentially live weapon in anyone's direction. That's just retarded.
Because it is.
Do you believe that Alec is in some way responsible for this? If it was indeed a live round fired, should he be prosecuted for negligence?
If it was a blank and there was debris in the barrell, should he be prosecuted for negligence?