At 02:31 PM 6/20/2008, Peter St. John wrote:
The destructive radius of Little Boy was about total, up to about one mile radius, and tapered down to light at about two miles. So being in a lead-lined steel container at 2000 meters might be OK for Indiana.

In all action movies, blasts throw people unhurt for long distances; when that much force (to impart that much momentum) would kill you. That part is just conventional Hollywood. I could teach RGB to kick me so that I fly through the air as in a Bruce Lee movie; it's a stunt, and real kicks reallly hitting drop you like a sack of potatoes, I've seen it. But not in movies. Similarly bullets, they drill holes in you, if they pushed you through the air the recoil would do the same to the shooter.

As for the scene's good taste I can't say, I haven't seen the movie yet :-)

Peter

As someone who used to work in the business of doing this sort of thing (e.g. physical effects) for movies, TV shows, and commercials, you can assume that whatever you see on screen is specifically designed to "look like" what the director thinks will create the correct impression in the viewer. (e.g. real rain is invisible on film, for all intents and purposes..)

For blasts (or kicks, etc.) flinging folks about, they use what is known as a "jerk vest" (for the high third derivative of position, not to describe the wearer) and bungee cords, springs, hydraulic winches, etc. Note well that the effects tech just runs the gear. A stunt person (aka human sandbag) survives the loads (and gives thanks to Stapp).

To fling things about, we used a variety of things.. air power is popular, so is gunpowder. (look under a car that flips over for the piece of telephone pole used as the piston in a one-shot internal combustion engine.) Speaking of refrigerators, air pressure is just fine for a hundred meter or so launch.


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