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Rules on how prop guns are used on film sets are about to change after ‘Rust’ shooting. Here’s why

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Rules on how prop guns are used on film sets are about to change after ‘Rust’ shooting. Here’s why

The best way firearms are used on movie and tv units is about to change within the wake of the “Rust” accident, the place actor Alec Baldwin inadvertently shot and killed cinematographer Halyna Hutchins with a prop gun.

An influential industrywide labor-management committee, composed of union and studio representatives, is weighing revisions to so-called security bulletins that dictate how weapons and ammunition ought to be dealt with within the leisure trade, based on folks with data of the talks who weren’t licensed to talk publicly.

Among the many attainable revisions: requiring armorers to be current when weapons are handed over to actors and offering the crew with a glossary of phrases utilized by armorers on units, one of many folks stated.

“Security Bulletins #1 and #2 are at present beneath revision,” Matthew Antonucci, administration co-chair of the Trade-Vast Labor-Administration Security Committee, stated in an announcement. “As a result of that course of just isn’t but full it might be inappropriate to remark additional presently.”

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Whereas the talks are nonetheless of their early levels, the revisions of the bulletins can be the primary since 2003.

The bulletins have come beneath scrutiny for the reason that tragedy on the low-budget western in New Mexico final fall, because the trade grappled with how such an accident might occur. Questions stay about how a reside bullet was on set and loaded into the gun, finally killing Hutchins and wounding director Joel Souza.

The movie and tv trade has compiled quite a few bulletins with tips for the best way to handle harmful practices on set. There are bulletins that instruct crews on the best way to be secure utilizing helicopters, bikes, animal dealing with, venomous reptiles and even toxic vegetation.

Security Bulletin #1 offers with using firearms and clean ammunition on units.

It contains guidelines resembling by no means having reside ammunition on set or inserting a finger on the set off till able to shoot; and requiring that the prop grasp or armorer examine the weapon earlier than and after every firing.

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Security Bulletin #1 — which is hooked up to name sheets for all of the crew — requires that the prop grasp or different applicable personnel deal with firearms, and states that solely a “certified individual” can load firearms simply earlier than a scene. Actors working close by ought to have the ability to observe the loading of the gun, it says.

At present, the protocol is {that a} prop grasp, or of their absence an armorer, checks the weapon earlier than and after every firing. However there aren’t any detailed steps specifying how a gun ought to be handed to an actor.

Usually an armorer will show clearing and loading a gun in entrance of the forged and crew when the prop is prepared for use after which take it again into their possession. And if an assistant director is inspecting a gun, the armorer or prop grasp is current.

Nonetheless, after the “Rust” accident, committee members consider wording must be added to make clear secure procedures for handing over weapons to actors.

Within the case of “Rust,” armorer Hannah Gutierrez Reed was outdoors the church the place the deadly scene passed off, based on police interviews. She has denied wrongdoing within the case.

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Assistant director Dave Halls took a gun from a cart, referred to as out “chilly gun” to point the gun was secure to make use of, and handed it to Baldwin, however didn’t test all of the rounds within the gun first, based on the affidavits. Corridor’s legal professional Lisa Torraco disputed the model of occasions described within the affidavits.

An assistant director is in control of security on a movie set however their position just isn’t specified within the security bulletins.

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Movie Reviews

Movie Review: 'The Bikeriders' is photography in motion

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Movie Review: 'The Bikeriders' is photography in motion

The Bikeriders starts in the middle of its own story. A man in a “Chicago Vandals” jacket, head hanging over the bar counter.

“You can’t be wearing no colors in this neighborhood,” someone threatens, to which he replies: “You’d have to kill me to get this jacket off of me.”

The man, Benny, approaches most things in his life with this same kind of fervor. His wife, Kathy, describes Benny camping out in her front yard until her boyfriend at the time packed up his car and left.

It’s through Kathy’s eyes that we come to know the Vandals: The leader, Johnny; his right hand, Brucie; and a menagerie of other club members — Cockroach, Zipco, Cal, Funny Sonny, Corky and Wahoo, to name a few. Kathy, with varying levels of exasperation, takes us through the club’s rise and fall over her interviews with Danny, the photojournalist meant to represent the author of “The Bikeriders,” the book on which the film is based.

Johnny’s vision for the club starts simply enough — just guys talking about bikes. But, as The Vandals grow, he realizes what he’s created might have become impossible to control.

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The first, most obvious thing to say about “The Bikeriders” is that it’s gorgeous.

The beauty and effectiveness of Danny Lyon’s photography translates perfectly to film. Although an article by the Smithsonian reports 70% of the film’s dialogue is taken from Lyon’s interviews, you could almost watch this movie with the sound off.

Color, light and framing are used so beautifully here it’s hard not to spend the whole review geeking out. Stoplights, bars and midwestern houses and parking lots become art pieces, dioramas of the tumultuous life of a “bikerider.”

Beyond the surface, though, I’m not sure how to feel about this movie.

When Kathy says Johnny got the idea for the club while watching TV, we cut to him staring, enraptured, as 1953’s “The Wild One” plays in his living room. “Hey Johnny, what are you rebelling against?” The girl in the movie asks. Marlon Brando replies, “Whaddaya got?”

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This listlessness, this sense that Johnny doesn’t have any purpose in mind, that the club doesn’t have much of a point, permeates the film. For me, it extended to the movie itself: At the beginning I thought life in a motorcycle gang would be exciting but dangerous, and by the end I thought the exact same thing.

Maybe it’s Kathy’s perspective leaking through the narration, but the deaths in this movie are, as a rule, abrupt and stupid. Once the shock wore off, I found myself wondering, “What was that all for?”

For all the glamor and power being a bikerider supposedly grants, they don’t die for great causes or in blazes of glory. The end is a car in reverse, an empty parking lot.

“The Bikeriders” is gorgeous and exciting, but doesn’t appear to say very much. Maybe that’s exactly what it’s saying.

Other stories by Caroline

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Caroline Julstrom, intern, may be reached at 218-855-5851 or cjulstrom@brainerddispatch.com.

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Caroline Julstrom finished her second year at the University of Minnesota in May 2024, and started working as a summer intern for the Brainerd Dispatch in June.

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'Despicable Me 4': Mega Minions bring mega bucks to holiday box office

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'Despicable Me 4': Mega Minions bring mega bucks to holiday box office

Audiences are going bananas for Universal Pictures’ and Illumination’s “Despicable Me 4.”

The latest installment in the popular family film franchise opened to $27 million Wednesday at the domestic box office, according to estimates from a studio source and measurement firm Comscore. That number is expected to rise to roughly $120 million by the end of the Fourth of July weekend.

Other titles vying for moviegoers’ business this holiday stretch are Disney and Pixar’s “Inside Out 2,” which grossed $7.3 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $496.6 million; Paramount Pictures’ “A Quiet Place: Day One,” which scared up $4.4 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $68.6 million; Sony Pictures’ “Bad Boys: Ride or Die,” which earned $1.2 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $169.1 million; and Warner Bros.’ “Horizon: An American Saga Chapter 1,” which made $1.1 million on Wednesday for a North American cumulative of $14.8 million.

The promising start for “Despicable Me 4” is good news for exhibitors as the 2024 box office appears to be turning a corner thanks to some much-needed breakout hits such as “Bad Boys: Ride or Die” and “Inside Out 2.”

From directing team Chris Renaud and Patrick Delage, “Despicable Me 4” follows the not-so-nefarious Gru (voiced by Steve Carell), his resourceful daughters and his wacky minions on another daring mission to escape from a new nemesis. Rounding out the main voice cast are Kristen Wiig, Miranda Cosgrove, Dana Gaier, Madison Polan, Will Ferrell and Sofía Vergara.

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The animated feature received a lackluster 55% rating on review aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes, but pulled an A grade from audiences polled by CinemaScore — proving that fans still can’t get enough of Carell’s curmudgeonly antihero and his babbling yellow entourage.

Film critic Gary Goldstein was not so generous in his review for the Los Angeles Times, writing that “this latest installment of Illumination’s mega-grossing animated franchise jams in a grab-bag of physical and visual gags and anything-goes action, plus a barrage of narrative dead ends, subplots and characters, as it strains to fill its 90 or so minutes of eye-popping, brain-draining mayhem.”

“Despite a few chuckles, some capable voice work and plenty of splashy color,” he adds, “it proves a largely empty and exhausting ride.”

So what keeps audiences coming back to this critically soured saga?

The Times’ Samantha Masunaga has reported that a perfect storm of organic social media phenomena (calling all #Gentleminions), Facebook mom memes and multigenerational nostalgia has kept the franchise relevant and lucrative over the past 14 years. “Despicable Me” debuted at $56.4 million domestically in 2010, “Despicable Me 2” launched at $83.5 million in 2013 and “Despicable Me 3” opened to $72.4 million in 2017, according to Box Office Mojo.

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“I’ve been 25 to 28 years in the business. I can’t remember something that created that much excitement for the audiences,” Francisco Schlotterbeck, chief executive of theater chain Maya Cinemas, told The Times.

“The other thing I can compare it to is ‘Toy Story.’”

Coming to theaters Friday is the highly anticipated A24 horror flick “MaXXXine,” followed by the wide releases of Goldove Entertainment’s “Lumina,” Neon’s “Longlegs” and Columbia Pictures’ “Fly Me to the Moon” next weekend.

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Movie Reviews

Movie review: ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’

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Movie review: ‘A Quiet Place: Day One’
A Quiet Place: Day One. Valley News/Courtesy photo

Bob Garver
Special to Valley News
“A Quiet Place: Day One” made a grave miscalculation with its advertising. Scenes were filmed with the intention of putting them in the trailers, but not the movie. This way, when people saw the movie, they wouldn’t be able to properly anticipate the surprises and story progression. To that end, the advertising succeeded, I was indeed thrown off while watching the movie. But here’s where they didn’t succeed: the scenes shot just for the trailers were terrible, with clumsy dialogue and careless pacing. I was so mad at Hollywood for continuing this series without the creative vision of director John Krasinski, especially when the movie looked like garbage without his input. I only saw this movie out of obligation for the column, and I wouldn’t

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