The golden rule is a little different in movie productions though. In the death of Brandon Lee for example, Michael Massee pointed the gun at Lee and fired with a loaded (with blanks) gun - and this is exactly what he was 'supposed' to do. In a normal situation you know that all the rounds are live, there are no blanks, no fake bullets etc. I'm pretty sure I've seen scenes in movies where someone has a loaded gun pointed at someones head and then the hero takes it off them and ejects the visibly 'loaded' clip in a single take. You also shouldn't normally throw pyrotechnics towards people, crash cars, blow things up with people near by, jump off 4 story buildings, set people on fire etc.This is true, if it were James Woods, they would call for his head and there would be article after article in the MSM aperatus describing everything I said that SHOULD HAVE BEEN DONE, since them is the rules. You know, firearm safety 101.
There would be flippy floppies in this thread and all over the internets. My position would remain the same, however. The golden rule.
No it's not. The rules were more strictly enforced since the Brandon Lee incident, which is ironic that you brought it up. Do read the thread and all of my posts. Been covered to death with receipts.The golden rule is a little different in movie productions though.
I imagine he will be the one most likely to face criminal charges. Given his past history he seems to be a sloppy operator in this respect, might be why he was cheap enough for Alec to afford him. The armorer lady might see court as well. Alec, I suspect, will make a settlement with the family to avoid a wrongful death lawsuit and probably has enough on set coverage to avoid a criminal charge. His production company's insurance is gonna pay out big as well. I imagine we will never see him handle a weapon as an actor again, probably for the best.i guess Dave Halls is about to catch a charge for negligence ?
No it's not. The rules were more strictly enforced since the Brandon Lee incident, which is ironic that you brought it up. Do read the thread and all of my posts. Been covered to death with receipts.
I have worked several productions and we all followed this rule that the actor is the last to check the firearm in front of the armorer or weapons master (whatever special title they want to have that day). This production was sloppy AND UNION WORKERS WALKED OUT DUE TO SAFETY CONCERNS BECAUSE THEY WERE NOT FOLLOWING STANDARD PRACTICE in regards to firearm safety. They literally were acting all "wild wild west."
I'm done with this thread anyhow. Let cognitive dissonance ring.
How is that a lot? Imagine all the sets and costumes you need. 3:10 to Yuma had a budget of 48-55 million and that was in 2007.7 million dollar budget seems like a lot to me for a western but I guess not for the script they were using.
7 million dollar budget seems like a lot to me for a western but I guess not for the script they were using.
Take a look at this behind the scenes of 3:10 Yuma. Within the first minute there is a guy being 'shot' at point blank range, and several shots of people firing directly at camera with a cameraman behind the camera with only a plastic facemask for protection.I'm not sure why this is so hard for people to grasp. I started off thinking "well maybe the rules are different on a set...?" and when it became clear that they're not and what standard practices are, I changed my mind. Why's it so hard for some people to change their mind when new info comes to light?
Maybe you don't think it's a good idea for the actor to be the last one to check the weapon before a scene, but that doesn't mean that's not what they're supposed to do per standard safety protocols. And with as long as Baldwin has been doing this shit, he apparently should've known better.
Take a look at this behind the scenes of 3:10 Yuma. Within the first minute there is a guy being 'shot' at point blank range, and several shots of people firing directly at camera with a cameraman behind the camera with only a plastic facemask for protection.
Take a look at this behind the scenes of 3:10 Yuma. Within the first minute there is a guy being 'shot' at point blank range, and several shots of people firing directly at camera with a cameraman behind the camera with only a plastic facemask for protection.
What has that got to do with the golden rule? Or firearms 101? I have never heard "the golden rule of firearm safety is to make sure you have blanks loaded before pointing and firing at someone"…neglecting to show the vital step of the actor verifying what’s in the weapon before firing it.
Huh? Then just call it a gun. Stop with the word salad. A fake gun can't shoot bullets, use that phrase instead.Prop gun means it’s to be used as a prop independently of its ability to shoot.
Has this been covered? Crew were using the guns for target practice with live ammo out of filming hours.
They do, John Wick as well as many others. You can see how off the muzzle flash trajectory is from the post processing CGI for those who have firearms experience and an eye for it.Gun rules or not, for decades now it seems that they go the cgi route for anything from blood splats, weather, de-aging, outdoor locations to even adding dead actors, you'd think they could add gun shot actions to that list... I'm sure there's a very convincing iPhone app that does that..
Not funny...but that's hilarious
Good point. You don't just accidentally fire a revolver without the hammer pulled back (unless it was double action I suppose) and if it was pulled back, just hanging around the set, that is so incredibly dangerous. Pure negligence. This whole situation baffles me to no end. It's like every single safety precaution was ignored.Let's also cut the newspeak with 'misfires'. Virtually all single-action revolvers have a very light trigger pull after the hammer is bright to full cock. These triggers are lighter than even SA/DA semi-automatics, and not even in the same ballpark as striker fired semis. My Pietta Remington 1858 repro has about a 1.5lbs trigger, my 9mm S&W carry pistol is about 8lbs for comparison.
These weren't misfires, these were negligent discharges. There is a world of difference.
Huh? Then just call it a gun. Stop with the word salad. A fake gun can't shoot bullets, use that phrase instead.
Not likely. Also why is he "*NOT*" a good person in your opinion?Hope this asshole gets put away for a long, long time. Baldwin is *NOT* a good person. At all.
Yeah the people in charge of the guns and the safety of the cast and crew dropped about million different balls in this situation.Dude... this is beyond stupid. How does something like this happen in a profissional movie set? What the fuck?
This 100%.I am still baffled how someone can be so ignorant in gun safety.
I dont care if they are an instructor at a gun range, or any kind of expert. If someone hands you a gun and says its clear, you check the fucking thing before pointing it at someone. Every fucking time.
Has this been covered? Crew were using the guns for target practice with live ammo out of filming hours.
Dude... this is beyond stupid. How does something like this happen in a profissional movie set? What the fuck?
Common sense straight from someone in the picture.
'Rust' actor describes ‘life-threatening’ shootout scene before fatal accident involving Alec Baldwin | Fox News
"Fortunately, Hudson explained that some of the other actors on the set with more experience than him when it came to firearms did indeed check their weapons, regardless of whether or not they were told the guns were safe to handle or not.
As a new actor, I don’t want to cause trouble," he explained. "I don’t want to make an issue about things, I just want to do as well as I can and get the footage that they want. So, I held my tongue for a lot of it."
He added: "But some of the other actors who had worked on a lot more sets than I have as principal characters… They were double and triple-checking our weapons after the armorer gave them to us, whether they were cold or hot."
He also notes the armorer lady, Reed, was doing the best she could given the circumstances of the shoot. Not that that will save her I don't think, if she failed to check the guns that day after the crew were availing themselves of them (with or without her knowledge?) for live fire target practice.
She let a weapon onto set that had an actual bullet in it and also allowed crew members to use the prop guns for target practice. Totally doing the best she could. This guy sounds real legit.Common sense straight from someone in the picture.
'Rust' actor describes ‘life-threatening’ shootout scene before fatal accident involving Alec Baldwin | Fox News
"Fortunately, Hudson explained that some of the other actors on the set with more experience than him when it came to firearms did indeed check their weapons, regardless of whether or not they were told the guns were safe to handle or not.
As a new actor, I don’t want to cause trouble," he explained. "I don’t want to make an issue about things, I just want to do as well as I can and get the footage that they want. So, I held my tongue for a lot of it."
He added: "But some of the other actors who had worked on a lot more sets than I have as principal characters… They were double and triple-checking our weapons after the armorer gave them to us, whether they were cold or hot."
He also notes the armorer lady, Reed, was doing the best she could given the circumstances of the shoot. Not that that will save her I don't think, if she failed to check the guns that day after the crew were availing themselves of them (with or without her knowledge?) for live fire target practice.
Of course that's your takeaway. News story after news story is talking about how actors are also supposed to check their weapons. Like people here have been saying repeatedly.She let a weapon onto set that had an actual bullet in it and also allowed crew members to use the prop guns for target practice. Totally doing the best she could. This guy sounds real legit.
I will sum it up,Of course that's your takeaway. News story after news story is talking about how actors are also supposed to check their weapons. Like people here have been saying repeatedly.
What is your agenda? Why not just say it? You're clearly not discussing in good faith at all, because you've been proven wrong on every level imaginable and yet you keep coming back and you keep deflecting. Seriously, what are you trying to accomplish here?
Hope this asshole gets put away for a long, long time. Baldwin is *NOT* a good person. At all.
Well, if she wasn't empowered to force procedures and she went to a producer, Baldwin perhaps, then who is ultimately responsible?She let a weapon onto set that had an actual bullet in it and also allowed crew members to use the prop guns for target practice. Totally doing the best she could. This guy sounds real legit.
Actually news story after news story say you would never make the last line of defense be the actor. That’s why the AD is the one getting all the heat.Of course that's your takeaway. News story after news story is talking about how actors are also supposed to check their weapons. Like people here have been saying repeatedly.
What is your agenda? Why not just say it? You're clearly not discussing in good faith at all, because you've been proven wrong on every level imaginable and yet you keep coming back and you keep deflecting. Seriously, what are you trying to accomplish here?
Actor ON THAT SET saying the more experienced actors did check their weapons. Alec probably had more on set time than everyone within 50 miles put together. What does "negligent" mean to you?Actually news story after news story say you would never make the last line of defense be the actor. That’s why the AD is the one getting all the heat.
You won't ever get that answer. Let him do his public reeeeeelations.Why do you insist on deflecting personal responsibility and common sense safety measures?
No. Blanks are often made from the same cases live ammo use. What can change is the barrel, it is a smaller diameter so a bullet wouldn't go through or is plugged in some fashion. They can also modify the magazine or chamber to not take the longer bullets.And why it's live ammo same size as some "prop ammo"? Is this only in this case due to negligence?
Thanks. I don't know guns at all, so I had to ask.No. Blanks are often made from the same cases live ammo use. What can change is the barrel, it is a smaller diameter so a bullet wouldn't go through or is plugged in some fashion. They can also modify the magazine or chamber to not take the longer bullets.
But the cheapest thing is to just use a real gun but NOT put live rounds in it. Every year some cop will get shot in a training scenario when live ammo is mixed with blanks. Transitioning to airsoft helps, going to dummy guns with CGI helps a lot, but makes folks complacent when it is done for the "old school" look. I don't think any western will look good with cg gunsmoke.