‘A whip, and then a loud pop’: A timeline of events leading to Alec Baldwin fatally shooting Rust cinematographer-Entertainment News , Firstpost
‘By sundown, the cinematographer of the film was dead, the director injured, and star actor Alec Baldwin distraught over having accidentally shot them both’: a picture of the day emerges through affidavits.
Thursday, 21 October was already off to a bad start on the set of Rust when a walk-off by the camera crew left the producers scrambling for replacements during a pivotal scene.
But the day quickly turned into a nightmare: by sundown, the cinematographer of the film was dead, the director injured, and star actor Alec Baldwin distraught over having accidentally shot them both.
A picture of the day Halyna Hutchins died is starting to emerge through affidavits supplied by the Santa Fe sheriff’s department.
Not the best start to the day
- The workday began at 6:30 AM at the Bonanza Creek Ranch, a several-thousand-acre property in the foothills of northern New Mexico, and a favourite destination for producers of Western movies.
- Things quickly began to unravel when a six-person camera crew, angry over disputes about payment and accommodation during the three-week shoot, put down their gear and walked off set, leaving production bosses the task of sourcing replacement staff.
- Director Joel Souza told investigators that even after a new crew had been found, they only had one camera to work with, so scenes were taking longer than they should.
Prop gun as the weapon of no choice
- In the late morning, Souza was preparing a scene in which Baldwin, sitting on a wooden church pew, draws a gun across his body and aims it at the camera, the affidavits say.
- Souza worked with Hutchins to frame the shot to make it look like Baldwin was pointing the gun at the viewer.
- Baldwin’s gun in the scene was one of three that had been placed on the props cart by armorer Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, a 24-year-old who only had one previous movie to her name.
- It was taken from the cart by assistant director Dave Halls.
- Souza recalled the phrase “cold gun” being shouted as the weapon was introduced on set. The expression is industry lingo for an inert firearm.
‘A whip, and then a loud pop’
- At 12:30 PM, the crew broke for lunch in an area away from the set.
- When they returned, Souza said, he was not sure if the weapon had been checked again.
- Cameraman Reid Russell came back to the set to find Baldwin, Souza, and Hutchins setting up the scene, trying to get around the problem of a shadow being caused by the outside light.
- Baldwin sat on the pew, as Hutchins checked how the scene would look from the viewer’s perspective. Souza hovered over her shoulder.
- As Baldwin explained how he would draw the weapon and where his arm would be, the gun went off, Russell said.
- Souza described a sound “like a whip, then a loud pop.”
When the dust settled
- Hutchins stumbled backwards, clutching her midsection and complaining about her stomach.
- Russell remembers her saying she could not feel her legs.
- He saw she was bleeding as she lay on the ground, as medics rushed to help her.
- Souza recalls realising that he was bleeding from his shoulder.
- A 911 call to police immediately afterward conveyed the shock and anger felt on the set.
- “We’ve had two people accidentally shot by a prop gun. We need help immediately,” the caller tells a police dispatcher.
- Emergency responders rushed to the ranch, where they airlifted Hutchins to hospital.
- She was declared dead a short time later.
With inputs from Agency France Presse.