Catching bullets in your teeth, you mean? Your assistant fires a gun loaded with blanks in your general direction. Meanwhile, you’ve hidden a bullet under your tongue. You manipulate with your tongue so that it goes to the front of your mouth. Then reach into your mouth, and voila, Captain Amazing has captured a bullet with his teeth!
Try About.com ‘s “Information about the deadliest magic trick ever performed”.
Looks like very few details are revealed. As they say: magicians never do.
But the Captain told. However, the reason why magicians have died before is because in those occasions a real bullet was used. So remember: do not try this at home, even blanks can go wrong, remember Brandon Lee.
what about the people who got shot attempting this trick, what did they do?
That’s it? That’s disappointing, though I can make it fit the info I got. If it’s that straightforward, how come it’s killed so many magicians? Carelessness? Bad luck?
that’s really insulting to me that I couldn’t figure that out.
I’m looking for the webpage again, but I found a chart in my searches of how the twelve dead magicians died and one of them alledgedly got dizzy from performing the stunt too many times and fell off a cliff. Does this mean he did a different variation of the stunt, or does this mean the chart was made by a magician?
It’s not right for you to claim Brandon Lee was killed by an act of stupidity, unless you refer to the person who inspected the weapon before it was fired.
Well…yes. The person who inspected it was stupid. Of course, if it were to be me the gun was pointed at and the trigger pulled, I’d want to look at it too…no matter what assurances that there were blanks in there.
What about Pen & Teller (and other magicians) who have an audience member mark the bullet and casing before firing, and match it after the shooting? A plant?
Your suspicion should be raised by the detail that this trick is usually done with an old-fashioned rifle that does not use cartridge-style bullets.
The rifle is primed from a powder-horn, the marked slug is put into the bore, and then “tamped down” with one of those long pokey-things. (Excuse the esoteric jargon…)
The key is the pokey-thing. It is magnetic, and actually removes the bullet, which the magician usually delivers to his mouth while arranging a blind-fold.
Actually the handling of the gun was stupid. That you can blame on both the wrangler (who inspects, loads and hands the gun to the actor), and the actor (who shouldn’t have pointed the gun directly at Brandon in the first place).
No matter what occurs during filming, the screen shows only a 2-dimensional image. The camera has no depth perception. You can point a gun at something that is well away from the actor and the camera (and thus the viewers at home) will not be able to tell the difference.
Even the bullet-catching trick that is done on stage has the weapon pointing safely away from the magician. You can’t tell from the audience because acts on stage are set set so far back that you loose the perception from your seated position.
So, in the case of Brandon Lee, whoever fired the blank shouldn’t have pointed the gun at Brandon in the first place, but worked together with the cameraman and the actor (who, IIRC, was flipping through the air at the time) to figure out where was the safest place to aim while still appearing dangerous to the viewer.
Yes, the thing with Brandon Lee was one Unsolved Mysteries years ago (I taped it). The whole thing was an incredible coincidense and was the result of several people taking unsafe shortcuts. I think the bullets were bought from a pawn shop along with several other items for the “movie pawnshop”, and were stored in some guy’s trunk for a while (first thing that shouldn’t have happened although it wasn’t to do directly with the accident). There was a scene where they were showing the gun barrel turning as it was fired, so they needed some dummies or whatever they’re called. Instead of buying proper ones, the tech guys took some of the real bullets, pryed the slugs out, emptied the powder, and then set off the primers with a nail or something… then put the slugs back in. During the filming of the scene, they heard a small “pop”, but didn’t really investigate. One of the primers had not been set off when they made the empty bullets, but did when the gun’s hammer hit it. This had just enough oomph the lodge the slug into the barrel where it sat unnoticed (why they didn’t notice the bullet with the missing slug was another case of carelessness I guess). When they filmed the scene where the gun was fired, it was loaded with blanks. The actor fired the harmless blank (with no slug) at Brandon, but the charge shot the real (unseen) slug out the barrel, and… it was curtain time.
The magician bullet thing has been on TV too, on one of those “secrets revealed” shows. I’ve forgotten the details, but others have provided them here.
what mmmmiiiikkkkeeee said, but I just want to add that no matter if there is a real bullet or a blank (or anything stuck in the barrel), the gun should NEVER have been aimed directly at the actor (or any actor) in the first place.
Yeah, I had meant to mention that too. It sounds very bad, but the guy apparently had a pretty good shot as Brandon was running during his final scene. I don’t see the sense in pointing a gun right at an actor in a wide-angle shot when the audience wouldn’t know the difference on-screen. Yet another over-looked safety measure…