Really. Try it with a pot of tomato soup. One can of the condensed with one half can water will be about the right consistency. Spurting, copious blood happens if a main artery is cut and cut enough and there is no mitigation like a crush or burn to temporarily block the blood flow and there is an exit path. Sometimes, say a lung wound, there is a lot of blood but the path of least resistance is into the chest cavity, not outside.
You know, as soon as the heart stops, the blood stops pumping. It isn't like our bodies are balloons full of blood that will all drain out once there is a hole. Blood doesn't flow like water at its runniest and it is designed to start clotting immediately. And just how much of the body have you seen? I've seen a pixilated head and a crumpled heap. How do you know what's under the heap? How do you know about the walls? How many people or animals have you seen shot in real life?
Note how this author speaks of the blood flowing into the interstitial space in a near fatal shooting that hit the femoral artery. It wasn't flowing out even though this man almost bled to death! It was flowing between the muscles of his leg and causing a swelling--the author alludes to other instances. This is just one example of why there is not always a lot of blood showing, regardless of movie drama.
https://www.wired.com/2015/12/what-really-happens-when-you-get-shot/
Really?
Really. Try it with a pot of tomato soup. One can of the condensed with one half can water will be about the right consistency. Spurting, copious blood happens if a main artery is cut and cut enough and there is no mitigation like a crush or burn to temporarily block the blood flow and there is an exit path. Sometimes, say a lung wound, there is a lot of blood but the path of least resistance is into the chest cavity, not outside.
Nonsense. IT was 'supposedly' shot several times with no blood visible on IT, the floor, or the walls?
I don't care how she "identified" I am not buying into their twisted nonsense. She was a female, end of story In more ways than one.
You know, as soon as the heart stops, the blood stops pumping. It isn't like our bodies are balloons full of blood that will all drain out once there is a hole. Blood doesn't flow like water at its runniest and it is designed to start clotting immediately. And just how much of the body have you seen? I've seen a pixilated head and a crumpled heap. How do you know what's under the heap? How do you know about the walls? How many people or animals have you seen shot in real life?
Note how this author speaks of the blood flowing into the interstitial space in a near fatal shooting that hit the femoral artery. It wasn't flowing out even though this man almost bled to death! It was flowing between the muscles of his leg and causing a swelling--the author alludes to other instances. This is just one example of why there is not always a lot of blood showing, regardless of movie drama. https://www.wired.com/2015/12/what-really-happens-when-you-get-shot/