00:00I saw the trailer for your new movie The Night They Came Home. It looks very authentic and I saw
00:05a lot of gunfire because that's what makes a great western. But now when I see this gunfire
00:09in movies, all I can think about is the mishap on the set of Rust. How does that work on
00:15these
00:15sets? And has it changed since the days of loading a gun on Bonanza? Several productions no longer
00:21allow real firearms on the set. They use replicas. From an acting standpoint, it's a thrill to shoot
00:27a full load blank. It helps your acting. If you take that away, you've taken one of the
00:32tools I use as motivation. I like shooting blanks. And how was it back in the 70s when you'd
00:38be handed a gun? The armor would come around and load each pistol for the actors and make
00:43sure that we understood these things are hot and they're ready to go and people weren't
00:47getting hurt with blanks. The movie guns were allowed to leave that and be fired with real
00:52ammo. Obviously, one of the real bullets stayed in the gun that killed that cinematographer.
00:57The screen was turned out. Absolutely.
00:59The pressure took me unterschied through the air and the fire of theこんな
00:59ambassador, itsernice phenomenon. This
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