You can aim down the sights of your rifles to hit longer range targets, but this is too slow for close -
up gunfights.
Not exact matches
A climactic
gunfight in the season finale goes as far as to show the math — the mental calculations the shooters have to do to make their shot — to juice
up the action.
Adapted from the numerous Tom Clancy books your grandfather reads, Jack Ryan stars Krasinski as a CIA analyst who always ends
up in
gunfights.
Bekmambetov is a visual effects maestro (as he's proven with the Russian fantasy films «Night Watch» and «Day Watch»), and though most of his SFX trickery is squandered before the end of the first act, he still stages a mean
gunfight; one good enough to rival even the most impressive sequence from «Shoot «Em
Up.»
However, don't let that fool you — the heart and raw emotion of the plot more than makes
up for the film's lack of
gunfights and high - tech action.
Henry Fonda plays Wyatt Earp and Victor Mature plays Doc Holliday in My Darling Clementine, John Ford's 1946 film depicting the build -
up of events in Tombstone, Arizona that eventually led to the infamous
Gunfight at the O.K. Corral.
Robert Duvall was superb in «Open Range» as the wily old rancher who ends
up in a
gunfight for his life with his friend, played by the also fantastic Kevin Costner, by his side.
Given such freedom, however, they prove not only incompetent at picking
up women but increasingly lonely without their other halves, though the revelation that loyal, loving matrimony is preferable to meat - market clubs and one - night stands only comes after boys - night - out hijinks — pot brownie - fueled golfing, affairs with older women, drunken brawling and
gunfights — that never quite rise to the humorous heights one expects.
The over-the-top action is pretty good, if oddly directed; car chases and
gunfights will vacillate between conventionally filmed excitement and kooky close -
ups and slow - motion shots of Helen Mirren firing two guns out of the windows of a spinning car.
Unfortunately, the clunky control scheme and frequent framerate stutters transform intense
gunfights into frustrating slogs that only the most diehard Borderlands fans would bother to put
up with.
It's a good thing, too — Flynn's casual performance is helped by Curtiz's ability to keep his star under constant threat from well - drawn villains (big heavy Bruce Cabot is square jawed and smug; character actor / sidekick Victor Jory is the epitome of dumb, single - minded badness) and from civilization run amok (random
gunfights popping
up all over; children getting dragged through the street tied to horses).
The DVD contains 3 «Deleted Scenes» which total 17 minutes, most of which is taken
up by a deleted
gunfight sequence.
The inaugural Baltimore Grand Prix lived
up to expectations as tight corners and limited passing opportunities turned the streets into a
gunfight...
«For the game to be fun and engaging and everything we hoped it could be, we had to include a huge range of classic western moments — stand - offs, duels, stagecoach fights,
gunfights on trains, hold -
ups, bounty hunting, and so on.»
The map layout flows nicely with 6 people on each team, and it's good to get in a
gunfight across the entire map while the undulating hills still allow players to get
up close and personal.
The AI is certainly nothing to shout about, but it's all satisfying and heart pumping stuff, and as it's not made
up of
gunfight after
gunfight, the shooting actually feels better off because of it.
Just like the section that leads
up to the first
gunfight, a spray of bullets sees parts of the environment (where Nate is taking cover) shatter and rip apart.
Despite his age and dependence on alcohol and painkillers, Max continues to be rather spry in a
gunfight thanks to his ability to perform Bullet Dodge, a tactic that slows down time to give you ample opportunity to line
up your shots for quick, efficient kills.
If you mess
up sneaking around some guards, you'll find yourself being forced into an unwanted
gunfight.
On the deck of a huge military tanker, still breathless from a recent
gunfight, the greatest spy in the world finds a wet Cardboard Box, folds it
up, and slips it into his bottomless pockets.
As for drive - by shootings, if the ammunition were facts, then I'd be
up for a
gunfight, metaphorically speaking.
One way to approach it is to adjust the general volume
up to the level that is comfortable for you in regard to the loud sounds in the movie or TV show (the explosions, the
gunfights, etc.) and then individually adjust the center channel upwards until the dialogue is also at a comfortable level.