You could argue that 1) and 2) boil down to being the same rule in practice, as do 3) and 4) Like they're restatements of the same principle, like the first two rules of Fight Club
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Replying to @arthur_affect @sapphixy and
There's some controversy over the fact that the "first rule of gun safety" is "the gun is always loaded", like it's not actually literally true but it's phrased in a way to make sure newbies understand the appropriate amount of fear
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Replying to @arthur_affect @sapphixy and
I mean it is true that it's not possible to, say, disassemble a Glock without pulling the trigger so the striker is no longer in firing position If you literally believed there was a round in the chamber, then you simply could not disassemble it
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Replying to @arthur_affect @sapphixy and
But the point is to emphasize that even though you are intentionally pulling the trigger with the understanding the gun isn't loaded because you just unloaded it yourself and cleared the chamber, you still point the gun in a safe direction and pull the trigger braced to fire
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Replying to @arthur_affect @iridienne and
Yup. I once had a gun I knew I'd cleared make a bang when I pulled the trigger. I found a spent casing nearby but never found a bullet hole, and it was in a place where it would have been easy to find one. We never did figure out what happened.
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Replying to @sapphixy @iridienne and
Yeah no one wants to be the next Brandon Lee
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Replying to @arthur_affect @sapphixy and
I was on a film set once where people were jokingly messing around with the prop guns and we all knew this was a gun-free shoot - no working firearms, a promise made in writing to the actors and the insurance company The one real pro actor still clucked in disapproval
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Replying to @arthur_affect @sapphixy and
"A gun is a gun is a gun, man I've been in all kinds of fights, had all kinds of injuries I fucked up and shot my fingertip off with a blank round once and it is an entirely different level of pain That happens to you, you stop thinking it's funny"
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Replying to @arthur_affect @iridienne and
There was an actor who died by discharging a blank into his temple. What they don't tell you is that blanks may not have a bullet in them, they have to pack in WAY more gunpowder to get the guns to cycle. And that expanding gas is hot and generates a LOT of pressure.
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Replying to @sapphixy @arthur_affect and
In movies made now, they often won't even bother with blanks, they'll dub in the sounds and use VFX to create muzzle flashes. But it's why in movies before that became more cost effective the recoil on a .50AE Desert Eagle is like a .22LR target pistol.
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I have noticed that movies are a lot more cavalier with gun handling these days and I guess a lot more gunfire being pure VFX makes sense Gunshots and explosions are literally the first thing everyone tries to do first in Aftereffects
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Replying to @arthur_affect @iridienne and
The people at Corridor Crew on YouTube have discussed what's wrong with muzzle flashes in a LOT of movies that rely on it. But, yes, explosions and in particular smoke simulations have gotten a lot more off-the-shelf in recent years.
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