Originally Posted by
old goat
I know one thing for sure--if someone asks me to look down the barrel of a gun to see if there's a real bullet in it, I'll say no, no matter how much they're paying me. And if I were a cameraman being asked to have a gun pointed at me I would personally want to check that either the round has no powder or the gun was permanently incapable of firing.
And on a more general note, given how inured we all are to guns in movies and on TV, how can there still be any thrill factor in the camera looking down the barrel at a bullet? Is the verisimilitude worth the hassle factor, not to mention the danger?
I wonder if the live ammo the sheriff found was in a box that could be traced to dealer and then purchaser.
It always amuses me that Hollywood directors make so much effort to get every period detail right when the whole story they are telling is ridiculous bullshit.