All I can say is when I learned to shoot a gun there were basically two iron-clad rules.
1) Always assume it's loaded, even if you think you know it's empty.
2) Point it at the ground, point it at the sky, but never at anyone or anything you don't intend to shoot. (This goes double for your own foot!)
Any actor handling a gun needs some kind of firearms training. Let's face it: Alec Baldwin is in a mess now and he can't ever come out of it painlessly, beginning with his own conscience. Even if other people started it, it would have been better if he got to be his own last line of defense. He should have been issued an empty gun and verified it. He should have been issued the ammunition and been able to verify the type visually, loaded it and then emptied the gun when he was finished.
I'm surprised they use real guns anyway: use a replica and dub in the "BANG!" later! Even then you'd need to treat it like a real, loaded gun...just in case. (I mean: do you remember that scene with Chief Inspector Dreyfus and the cigarette lighter?)
1) Always assume it's loaded, even if you think you know it's empty.
2) Point it at the ground, point it at the sky, but never at anyone or anything you don't intend to shoot. (This goes double for your own foot!)
Any actor handling a gun needs some kind of firearms training. Let's face it: Alec Baldwin is in a mess now and he can't ever come out of it painlessly, beginning with his own conscience. Even if other people started it, it would have been better if he got to be his own last line of defense. He should have been issued an empty gun and verified it. He should have been issued the ammunition and been able to verify the type visually, loaded it and then emptied the gun when he was finished.
I'm surprised they use real guns anyway: use a replica and dub in the "BANG!" later! Even then you'd need to treat it like a real, loaded gun...just in case. (I mean: do you remember that scene with Chief Inspector Dreyfus and the cigarette lighter?)
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