'A cascade of terrible things'
The Guardian Weekly
|March 21, 2025
A new documentary pieces together the story of the freak accident on the set of Rust and pays tribute to the cinematographer who was killed during filming
Anyone who loved Halyna Hutchins expected her to become a name. At 42, she had worked her way from photojournalism to cinematography, building an impressive portfolio that was beginning to court attention in Hollywood. Her work alone attracted Joel Souza, a writer-director, who hired her in 2021 to be his director of photography for a new western called Rust, to film in Santa Fe that October. "She absolutely would have become a household name as a cinematographer," said Rachel Mason, one of Hutchins's close friends and the director of the new Hulu documentary Last Take: Rust and the Story of Halyna. "Anyone who knew her had absolutely no doubt she was going to be on the highest level, winning awards, becoming well-known for that."
Hutchins didn't get the chance. Instead, she became a household name in death, after a weapon actor Alec Baldwin was holding accidentally discharged during filming, which unbeknown to him, was loaded with live rounds. A bullet from the prop revolver passed through Hutchins and lodged in Souza's shoulder. Souza was hospitalised and recovered.
The accident, subsequent investigations and eventual trials - Baldwin and the armourer, Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, were both charged with involuntary manslaughter - made headlines around the world and sparked calls for greater safety on film sets. Hutchins's name always appeared next to a celebrity's or the word "killed", if she was mentioned at all. “This unimaginable thing happened and she overnight became very well-known for not the reasons we all expected her to become well-known,” said Mason. “It just felt so wrong and so unfair.”
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