The Commercial Appeal

Firearms on movie sets opposed

Tragedy spurs call to ban live guns, use computers

- Jocelyn Noveck

NEW YORK – With computer-generated imagery, it seems the sky’s the limit in the magic Hollywood can produce: elaborate dystopian universes. Trips to outer space, for those neither astronauts nor billionair­es. Immersive journeys to the future, or back to bygone eras.

But as a shocked and saddened industry was reminded this week, many production­s still use guns – real guns – when filming. And despite rules and regulation­s, people can get killed, as happened last week when Alec Baldwin fatally shot cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins after he was handed a weapon and told it was safe.

The tragedy has led some in Hollywood, along with incredulou­s observers, to ask: Why are real guns ever used on set, when computers can create gunshots in post-production? Isn’t even the smallest risk unacceptab­le?

For Alexi Hawley, it is. “Any risk is too much risk,” the executive producer of ABC’S police drama “The Rookie” announced in a staff memo Friday, saying the events in New Mexico had “shaken us all.”

There “will be no more ‘live’ weapons on the show,” he wrote in a note, first reported by The Hollywood Reporter and confirmed by The Associated Press.

Instead, he said, the policy would be to use replica guns, which use pellets and not bullets, with muzzle flashes added in post-production.

The director of the popular Kate Winslet drama “Mare of Easttown,” Craig Zobel, called for the entire industry to follow suit and said gunshots on that show were added after filming, even though on previous production­s he has used live rounds.

“There’s no reason to have guns loaded with blanks or anything on set anymore,” Zobel wrote on Twitter. “Should just be fully outlawed. There’s computers now. The gunshots on ‘Mare of Easttown’

are all digital. You can probably tell, but who cares? It’s an unnecessar­y risk.”

Bill Dill – a cinematogr­apher who taught Hutchins, a rising star in her field, at the American Film Institute – expressed disgust in an interview over the “archaic practice of using real guns with blanks in them, when we have readily available and inexpensiv­e computer graphics.”

Dill, whose credits include “The Five Heartbeats” and “Dancing in September,” said there was added danger from real guns because “people are working long hours” on films and “are exhausted.”

“There’s no excuse for using live weapons,” he said.

A petition was launched over the weekend on change.org for real guns to be banned from production sets.

“There is no excuse for something like this to happen in the 21st century,” it said of the tragedy. “This isn’t the early ’90’s, when Brandon Lee was killed in the same manner. Change needs to happen before additional talented lives are lost.” Lee, the actor son of martial arts legend Bruce Lee, was killed in 1993 by a makeshift bullet left in a prop gun after a previous scene.

The petition appealed to Baldwin directly “to use his power and influence” in the industry and promote “Halyna’s Law,” which would ban the use of real

firearms on set. As it stands, the U.S. federal workplace safety agency is silent on the issue and most of the preferred states for production­s take a largely hands-off approach.

Hutchins, 42, died and director Joel Souza was wounded Thursday on the set of the Western “Rust” when Baldwin fired a prop gun that a crew member unwittingl­y told him was “cold” or not loaded with live rounds, according to court documents made public Friday.

Souza was later released from the hospital.

The tragedy came after some workers had walked off the job to protest safety conditions and other production issues on the film, of which Baldwin is the star and a producer.

In an interview, British cinematogr­apher Steven Hall noted that he worked on a production this year in Madrid that involved “lots of firearms.”

“We were encouraged not to use blanks, but to rely on visual effects in post (production) to create whatever effect we wanted from a particular firearm, with the actor miming the recoil from the gun, and it works very well,” he said.

He noted, though, that special effects add costs to a production’s budget. “So it’s easier and perhaps more economic to actually discharge your weapon on set using a blank,” said Hall, a veteran cinematogr­apher who has worked on

films like “Fury” and “Thor: The Dark World.” But, he said, “the problem with blanks is, of course … something is emitted from the gun.”

Besides financial concerns, why else would real guns be seen as preferable? “There are advantages to using blanks on set that some people want to get,” said Sam Dormer, a British “armorer,” or firearms specialist. “For instance, you get a (better) reaction from the actor.”

Still, Dormer said, the movie industry is likely moving away from real guns, albeit slowly.

The term “prop gun” can apply to anything from a rubber toy to a real firearm that can fire a projectile. If it’s used for firing, even blanks, it’s considered a real gun. A blank is a cartridge that contains gunpowder but no bullet. Still, it can hurt or even kill someone who is close by, according to the Actors’ Equity Associatio­n.

That’s why many are calling to ban blanks as well, and use disabled or replica guns.

“Really there is no good reason in this day to have blanks on set,” director Liz Garbus wrote on Twitter. “CGI can make the gun seem ‘real,’ and if you don’t have the budget for the CGI, then don’t shoot the scene.”

Megan Griffiths, a Seattle-based filmmaker, wrote that she often gets pushback when demanding disabled, non-firing weapons on set.

 ?? ANDRES LEIGHTON/AP ?? A large crowd of movie industry workers and New Mexico residents attend a candleligh­t vigil to honor cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., on Saturday. Hutchins was killed when Alec Baldwin fired a weapon on a film set that a crew member told him was safe.
ANDRES LEIGHTON/AP A large crowd of movie industry workers and New Mexico residents attend a candleligh­t vigil to honor cinematogr­apher Halyna Hutchins in Albuquerqu­e, N.M., on Saturday. Hutchins was killed when Alec Baldwin fired a weapon on a film set that a crew member told him was safe.

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