This is what happens when you take safety a little too far...What I've noticed has gotten popular in Hollywood, esp. on TV is people indexing their weapon (keeping their trigger finger on the side of the gun and not on the trigger) at all times. By all times I mean times where you would normally expect someone to have their finger on the trigger, like when pointing a gun at someone in some sort of stand off/hostage situation.
What I've noticed has gotten popular in Hollywood, esp. on TV is people indexing their weapon (keeping their trigger finger on the side of the gun and not on the trigger) at all times. By all times I mean times where you would normally expect someone to have their finger on the trigger, like when pointing a gun at someone in some sort of stand off/hostage situation.
As a former competition three gun shooter, and combat veteran, seeing proper gun handling is a good thing. It may seem over the top extra safe, but for competition, that's exactly what you see. Keanu Reaves trained extensively in three gun for the John Wick movies, and it shows. I don't know if John Bernthal has, but it appears so. Finger off the trigger until you are ready to fire. Biggest safety rule in handling any gun. It may look weird to those who haven't had a lot of training, and are used to the typical Hollywood gun handling. But I smile when I see combat reloads, press checks, and proper handling. Makes me wish for warmer weather so my range thaws out.
That cavitation also does damage to the props. Edit: The link did not go to the right spot in the video. The important bits for this discussion start at around the 7:00 mark.This one's certainly not going to a pet peeve for a lot of people unless you're a sub buff, like me. What gets me is seeing military subs cavitating all the time, you know, producing those little bubbles at the end of the prop. That's cavitation and that's bad because that creates noise from all of those little bubbles popping and sub drivers hate noise. The screws on mlitary subs are specially designed so that if a sub driver is doing things right, their sub won't cavitate.
89 Batmobile is to blame for that. The armour comes from nowhere.Helmets that automaticly and miracously fold back into nothing.