Tombstone reenactment with LIVE rounds !!!

Yeah, this was weird......

I stand corrected. It was Bruce Lee's son.

Gun was fired with real rounds, unnoticed a squib round lodged in the barrel on the last shot. Gun was loaded with blanks and given to Brandon Lee's 'attacker' to film the scene. 'Attacker' bursts into room and fires a blank at Lee, but the blank has enough pressure to send the bullet out of the barrel at lethal speed, striking Lee. This is just plain weird, and except for the person firing the squib and not noticing, what could have been done to prevent it?
 
The Brandon Lee Incident

I could be wrong here but I seem to recall that the revolver was first loaded with dummy rounds for a camera close-up where blanks would have been noticed at the front of the cylinder. For the next shoot, the actor dumped the "show" rounds but a bullet remained lodged in the front of one chamber and was not noticed. Once a blank round was fired behind it, it became a live round.
 
This re-enactment...

This re-enactment snafu is a real hit to responsible gun owners. We are going to take the flack for this stupidity.
Apparently, the love of playing cowboy and shooting guns comes before safety in this racket.

They used to have these at 'Ghost Town In The Sky' in Cherokee, NC. It was not part of town, ticket payers only. The only objection I had at the time was that those blanks were painfully loud, even 20 yards away. Those six guns needed a suppressor. The last one I saw was at the Old Tombstone movie set town and it was pretty corny. Of course most of it burned down years ago.
 
Sounds plausible....

I could be wrong here but I seem to recall that the revolver was first loaded with dummy rounds for a camera close-up where blanks would have been noticed at the front of the cylinder. For the next shoot, the actor dumped the "show" rounds but a bullet remained lodged in the front of one chamber and was not noticed. Once a blank round was fired behind it, it became a live round.

Looks like we are getting some variations in the story, but yours sounds the most plausible.
 
"Apparently, the love of playing cowboy and shooting guns comes before safety in this racket."

Don't forget the tourist $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$.
 
I could be wrong here but I seem to recall that the revolver was first loaded with dummy rounds for a camera close-up where blanks would have been noticed at the front of the cylinder. For the next shoot, the actor dumped the "show" rounds but a bullet remained lodged in the front of one chamber and was not noticed. Once a blank round was fired behind it, it became a live round.

Apparently, more than one bullet remained because at least two people were shot.

As one press release stated:
Authorities inspected the weapon and found one live round and five casings that indicated the gun was filled with live rounds prior to the skit, the marshal said.

So, if they found one live round still in the gun, and two people were shot separately, that leads me to believe that there were at least three live rounds in the firearm.

Totally inexcusable. Just my view from the saddle.
 
Gun was fired with real rounds, unnoticed a squib round lodged in the barrel on the last shot. Gun was loaded with blanks and given to Brandon Lee's 'attacker' to film the scene. 'Attacker' bursts into room and fires a blank at Lee, but the blank has enough pressure to send the bullet out of the barrel at lethal speed, striking Lee. This is just plain weird, and except for the person firing the squib and not noticing, what could have been done to prevent it?

How to prevent that? Given the number of movies/TV production companies, there are a number of weapon masters companies whose sole business is providing weapons for use in the industry. They control the weapon from the time it's uncased to recased, including the ammo.

In the Lee accident, there are competing stories. The story goes that the prop crew did not have dummy rounds for the close-up scene shot before the fatal one, so they pulled the bullets from live rounds, dumped the powder and reseated the bullets to show what looked to be a loaded gun in the close-up. Another version of that story states a crew member sawed off a bullet tip and placed it in the barrel for the close-up. In that close-up scene, the .44 Magnum was fired, with the resultant squib lodged in the barrel. In the following scene (some hours after the close-up scene) the revolver was reloaded with blanks and was fired, with fatal results. There is a competing story which cites the use of a squib (small explosive) in a grocery bag Lee was holding during the scene. As the scene went, revolver was fired, Lee detonated the squib in the grocery bag to simulate the bullet striking the bag. That squib explosive somehow killed him.

Lee's autopsy cites "GSW of abdomen" as the probable cause of death, but notes Lee exsangunated (bled out) 12.5 hours after being shot.

There were other factors involved, included filming conducted in limited lighting; filming conducted after midnight, including scenes shot outdoors in subfreezing temperatures; no weapon master on set; live rounds present on set; Lee was not wearing a bulletproof vest, which is commonly used when actors are in close proximity to weapons fired on set.

The negligence lawsuit was settled out of court in October 1993, seven months after the accident. While terms were not released, the film production company was separately fined $84K by the North Carolina OSHA, which stated the incident as "the worst kind of negligence." A fairly good article is at The Brief Life and Unnecessary Death of Brandon Lee
 
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