WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2024 Poal.co

377

I'm watching the 90s heist movie "Heat". It has a running gun battle with automatic weapons in the streets of LA, and the gunshots in the movie echo about as much as I'd expect at an indoor range.

I know what lots of gunfire sounds like indoors, and out in a field, but I've never had the misfortune to hear gunfire in a downtown area with lots of concrete and buildings to echo gunshots.

Is "almost as much echoing as an i door range" an accurate representation of gunfire in a dense urban area, or did they screw up and record their gunshots indoors and hope their audience wouldnt know any better?

I'm watching the 90s heist movie "Heat". It has a running gun battle with automatic weapons in the streets of LA, and the gunshots in the movie echo about as much as I'd expect at an indoor range. I know what lots of gunfire sounds like indoors, and out in a field, but I've never had the misfortune to hear gunfire in a downtown area with lots of concrete and buildings to echo gunshots. Is "almost as much echoing as an i door range" an accurate representation of gunfire in a dense urban area, or did they screw up and record their gunshots indoors and hope their audience wouldnt know any better?

(post is archived)

[–] 1 pt

For that big gunfight scene, they actually used the on scene audio of the blank gunfire because they forgot to turn on the sound recording equipment. So I guess it does echo that much.