RIP Halyna

What a terrible tragedy!
Cant filmmakers just use rubber/plastic or even paper guns and CGI them later???
There should be a law prohibiting even prop guns.
Human life is at stake.
I cant even imagine what the victim's family goes through right now.
Agreed, there is no reason at this point in time why CGI couldn't be used. Other than the ego of filmmakers who want everything to be more ~realistic~. CGI is now cheap and easy.
How can a prop gun loaded with blanks misfire and kill someone?
FYI 'prop gun' just means it's a prop. It doesn't mean it's not a real gun. 'Props' can be real things.
Being the producer and lead of the film he could have easily been in charge of everything.
Baldwin was the shooter and is also the producer.
'Producer' is a vague term with no clear meaning tbh. Different producers have different roles and tasks. Sometimes it's given as a status symbol, more than anything else. Sometimes it just denotes an actor who has a bit of a say about their own character, for example. It doesn't mean you're in charge of everything on the set.
When an actor receives a producer credit, it usually comes alongside a request for more money. Hopefully, the studio acknowledges that part of the show's success comes from the actor's presence and performance, and they're willing to negotiate a new salary and producer credit.
Sometimes, an actor's producer credit is just "vanity," a concession to keep them happy. But even when the actor earns the credit, it rarely comes tied to actual producing duties or fees. In other words, a producer credit doesn't contractually obligate an actor to fulfill actual duties or receive producing monies… although, like I said, the actor has probably received a raise anyway for his acting duties.
From
PRIMETIME: Why Some TV Stars Get "Producer" Credits... and How Important is Life Experience? But you can also just google 'actors with producer credits' and find loads of references to actors' producer credits largely being an ego/money thing. (money as in sometimes they're paid more; sometimes they've provided funding for an indie movie) ACTUAL Producers will have p.g.a after their names, usually (ie they're in the Producers guild; it's their ACTUAL job)
He pulled the trigger.
A LOT is going to come out about this I bet.
He's reportedly devasted and fully cooperating with police.
Here is an article regarding deaths on movie sets. I had no idea there had been so many
I remember the Twilight Zone filming tragedy, where the two young children and actor Vic Morrow were killed by the helicopter. It was absolutely horrifying and hard to believe it could have happened.
Recent Accidents on TV and Movie Sets
Stunt people die, or are horrifically injured, with some frequency. Sometimes you'll barely even hear about it. I know a stunt person died on one of the Hangover movies, for example, and I bet most people don't even know.
How did this happen? It's easy to tell a blank from a live round. Didn't Baldwin bother to check the rounds before shooting? Here is a chart, a blank doesn't have a point on the end. The pointy thing is the projectile.
I don't think you can expect actors to also have any knowledge about guns? That's why movies are supposed to employ people to take care of it. All the actor is supposed to do is pretend to use it.
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Those are seriously unsafe working conditions. My SO works camera department on films and even the lowest-budget shoots have proper safety meetings and protocols, and provide decent accommodation for crew. Working on film sets is exhausting at the best of times and those reports of some crew sleeping in their cars at basecamp are truly alarming. This sounds like a recipe for a bad accident on set.
Yep, this echoes everything I've been reading... that normal film sets double, triple check everything and have full processes, policies, procedures for handing this kind of thing. And that it can only happen because those policies/procedures likely weren't followed correctly.
But that’s not how it works. An actor is usually handed a prop gun at the last minute. An actor is NOT responsible to discern if it is safe or not.
ya this. 100%. It isn't and shouldn't be an actors responsibility. That's why propmasters, stunt coordinators etc are employed.