The especially vocal suit shoots back "You're one to talk! I've seen crackheads shoot straighter than you!"
He then shoots back with his gun, instead of his words. Following the flow of the conversation, the bullets crash against the gambler's cover.
Back to the injured suit and the man who was once a spy. Our camera rotates around them, still in close quarters after the last scuffle. A dead hand clenches into a fist, which the owner raises into the air. He rushes forward screaming in his damaged voice, his tie and jacket moving backwards from the force. The fist slams into the restaurant owner's stomach in a brutal display of raw strength.
But his target trained for such simple attacks. Rolling with the punch, James is pushed back, barely bruised.
Once again, we get a closeup of a P90. First the front of the gun, the muzzle flashing dramatically as bullets spray out. Then on the bottom, demonstrating the strange ejection system as the casings fall downward landing on the floor, with the camera follows their decent. One of the casings rolls slowly, hitting into a group of spent ammunition as the camera pans out to reveal a floor now covered with shining brass. Lingering on this shot just a moment, the camera then switches to the effects of the weapon. Leon is pinned down by this dramatic burst of fire. Bullets whiz inches above his head, one crashes through his cover to his right leaving a neat hole slightly above his hand. But his cover holds otherwise, despite now being covered in damage from his enemies attacks.
Gunfire from the other gangsters, picking a variety of targets to miss utterly and completely. Back to the Desert Eagle Dandy, blasting away at an off-camera target when a brass shell gets stuck in the gold gun. He continues to pull the trigger several times, before noticing, then makes a face at the problem before throwing the gun casually over his shoulder. From an overly fancy new coat, he pulls out a silver colt python with pearl grips.