Gardenista
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I wonder if there is any way this could be a manufacturing/packaging error.
Like most accidents or horrible occurrences like this one, It is a train of mistakes or missed opportunities that could have stopped the fatal action anywhere along the line. We know the ending of the train, LE will find the beginning of it. New laws won't help. They didn't follow simple rules this time and it cost a life.
Even if it was, the Amorer and the AD were supposed to check each bullet and not just put it in because it came out of the correct package. Each one is supposed to be looked at individually.I wonder if there is any way this could be a manufacturing/packaging error.
As long as you can see that they have either no primer or a dimpled or punched primer they are equally safe.I've seen two variations of Dummy rounds. One has a hole drilled in it and another has the dimpled primer. And (imo) the end result is they have no more danger than a cotton ball being put in the gun.
Even if it was, the Amorer and the AD were supposed to check each bullet and not just put it in because it came out of the correct package. Each one is supposed to be looked at individually.
You mean a live round possibly came to the set in a box of dummy rounds? I guess that could happen.I wonder if there is any way this could be a manufacturing/packaging error.
The way I understand it dummy rounds are made using live rounds where the bullet is removed from the case, the gunpowder is the dumped out, then the primer is punched which causes it to fire. You then put the BB's in the case for later safety checks and press the bullet back on.I agree, but what if the dummy was the type with the indented primer and it didn't indent correctly in manufacturing. Do dummies have gunpowder in them?
If it is, that's terrifying, and a recall needs to be done immediately.I wonder if there is any way this could be a manufacturing/packaging error.
You are exactly right. New laws are not the answer. In fact banning the use of real guns in the US film industry will just drive productions and the jobs they bring to other countries like Canada which already has a large film industry including firearm suppliers.Yes, and it bothers me hearing AB proclaim the need for 'better laws and regulations' when he wasn't following the ones they already have.
Apparently no one was. Regulations are meaningless if no one adheres to them.
Movie Armaments Group (MAG) was founded over 30 years ago and is the first and largest company incorporated in Canada to supply guns and military equipment to the film industry.
We offer the best and most modern tactical weapons and gear with thousands of blank firing and replica firearms from cowboy guns to the latest sci-fi.
From your link:
“Alec was pretty concerned about safety on set,” said another camera technician.
“He wanted to know where I would be standing when he drew his gun,” this person said. “I told him I was going to be standing in a different place, and he said, ‘Good.’”
Also from the article:
Baldwin had taken pains to make his gun work look realistic. A few days earlier, he’d gone into the church to walk through what it would be like to use the weapon in the scene. The live rounds he fired contained blanks, but still made enough noise that crew members were startled.
“Alec was pretty concerned about safety on set,” said another camera technician.
“He wanted to know where I would be standing when he drew his gun,” this person said. “I told him I was going to be standing in a different place, and he said, ‘Good.’”
And that is totally against safety regulations. The actor is not supposed to accept the gun from anyone but the armourer and she should not have left before that was done.She did not pass it to Hall. She put it on the prop table, and there were three weapons from which Hall could choose - he chose a hot one and called it a cold one.
Armourer was not, to anyone's knowledge, there in the church nor did she "pass" a particular gun to anyone.
That would affect the acting negatively too, imo. Actors react to the environment in a scene. They react physically to the sound of the gunfire in a scene. It would fall flat if it was silent. JMOBut wouldn't you watch anyway? I would. And I really, really think they can dub gunfire in without using blanks.
The latest info is that after Halls got the gun from HGR, he "stood in" for Alec Baldwin and rehearsed the scene before Alec showed up.I don't understand this.
Halls got the gun from HRG, stood in for Alec during rehearsing before Alec showed up, then gave the gun to him. That's a new detail (that Halls stood up for Alec in rehearsing) that just got published.And that is totally against safety regulations. The actor is not supposed to accept the gun from anyone but the armourer and she should not have left before that was done.
And Hall was supposed to double check her work himself, right before handing it to the actor. That will be a major error that may bite him in the end of this messy legal process.
I was reviewing a few websites that provide "prop guns" for various purposes. Even those companies state unequivocally, that a prop gun should never be pointed at anyone.
Old West Blank Guns | Colt 1873 Replica Guns | Western Stage Props
And this gun, was NOT a "PROP GUN". I think that is an important distinction. Why was this gun even allowed on the set?
Many of the news articles are misleading, as is the title of this thread. This was a real gun. An antique. A .45 Colt Revolver.
Gun not thoroughly checked before Alec Baldwin fired fatal shot
Gun that killed Halyna Hutchins used for leisure shooting by crew the morning of the accident: report
Thank You. That is exactly right. JMOWhich means an actor, usually the highest person paid on the set, has the responsibility to make sure that protocol is followed. He/she can stop all work. Simply by saying, "No, the weapon should only be presented to me by the armorer. When that person is available, let me know...going to my trailer. Thank you.".
And no one would have been killed. If the actor had demanded that the safety protocols were followed.