3. Bullet hole is not "attached" to the head

Discussion

After the shot in frame 1, the head appears to rotate backward and down. The "bullet hole" on the woman's forehead does not follow the movement of the head -- it appears to be stationary in the frame which is consistent with a carelessly applied digitally created "hole." Click on the image below for a two frame animation which shows this defect clearly.

Click on either image above to see a two frame animation

 

4. "Blood" projection is too slow

Blood first appears four frames after the shot was fired. If this video was created at the standard 30 frames per second rate, there was an interval of .05 seconds between the shot and the blood projection. This is much too long an interval as the blood projection in a real shooting occurs within hundreds of thousands of a second -- not tenths of a second.

Discussion

The image below shows a bullet perforating an egg. This image was taken approximately .0004 sec after the bullet struck the egg. When a human head is perforated by a bullet, blood will be projected out the exit hole "immediately".  A video camera records images at a rate of 30 frames per second. In an actual shooting, the projected blood would appear in the same frame as the fired shot -- not several frames later.

Continued   

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