Film Props - Airsoft Guns During The Films

De BISAWiki

On the list of hallmarks of a big-budget Hollywood action movie, aside from the requisite star electric power, are the guns which the celebrities wield onscreen. Two cases props issue: it might be challenging to argue the mini-gun carried by Arnold Schwarzenegger in 'Terminator 2' is any less legendary compared to the character's black leather-based jacket or tinted sunglasses. A similar can be mentioned for your twin Heckler & Koch 9mm handguns which graced the leg holster's of Angelina Jolie's character of 'Lara Croft' inside the Tomb Raider films. Croft's side-arms are as much a part of that character as are her legendary braid and skimpy clothing, and nearly as memorable.

Such movie props need to do a bit more than to simply look believable at rest, however, to sell the cinematic gags required of action directors. I doubt that these flicks could be nearly as memorable without the revolutions of Arnold's multi-barreled, electric gatling gun or Jolie diving side-wise through space as the bolts on her H&K's kicking. Bottom line, for today's savvy audiences, the guns they see on the silver screen need to operate as if they were the real thing. Slides still need to travail and cylinders still need to spin. That means, rubberized prop-guns won't cut it.

Historically, industry prop-masters working to lend authenticity to these productions have needed to walk a balancing act due to such, juggling safety with the intended realism the sub-genre demands, and unfortunately, and sometimes soberly, with varying and occasionally tragic results.

With realism such an obvious contributing factor, actual firearms are often employed in movie productions (albeit outfitted with non-firing conversion kits or blank-loaded), and yet they remain still as potentially lethal as their unmodified brethren. Sadly, there are far too many historic examples of firearm prop malfunction or misuse resulting in physical harm (among others, the promising American actor Brandon Lee was accidentally shot and killed in North Carolina at the age of twenty-eight while on the set with the feature film The Crow, the result a combination of 'use of an actual firearm as prop' and operational ignorance of such).

In an effort to prevent such tragedies from transpiring, as well as to 'sell the gag,' educated prop houses have now begun to turn to the airsoft industry in an effort to supply film productions with safe, realistic props. Airsoft guns after all closely mimic the appearance of their real-world counterparts (which is why military and law-enforcement world-wide are adopting airsoft as their close quarter combat weapon training platform), yet they don't possess the ability to fire anything more than 6mm plastic airsoft BBs, at speeds well under a lethal limit. This unto itself, as well as airsoft guns' inherent ability to mimic the actual mechanical movements of actual firearms, combined with airsoft's cost-effective nature, makes airsoft the ideal choice for realistic film props.

The producers of this past summer's Warner Bros. summer flick The Losers can attest to this, as can the producers of HBO's True Blood series and the brass behind Sony Pictures' recently-wrapped Hostel 3, a trio of production companies who have inside the last year employed the use of airsoft products secured via Southern California's airsoft retailer Airsoft Megastore. Independent filmmakers too have utilized airsoft guns for their various productions, and given the competitively-priced nature of airsoft products, the attention to display airsoft manufacturers display within the manufacture of these products, and the relative safety of airsoft guns, it's no wonder.

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