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But you could create a small explosion that… you don’t want any kind of explosion in the brain. Would it blow your head off? Probably not.
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You could put something small in the brain. “Right now, with things like nerve stimulators that you can put in after a stroke or for Parkinson’s, the battery pack they insert underneath your clavicle, or somewhere in the abdomen, and the wiring goes up to the brain. Diagram of a real-life deep brain nerve stimulator implantation. Vaisman trails off, stuck on the idea that there’s not much chance of it also containing a battery. You probably could implant something in the head …” “But I think it would be difficult to get that sort of blow-up-your-entire-head amount of material in there. “I guess in these sort of movies, you make the assumption that the government has technology that’s smaller, better, faster than the rest of us,” says Vaisman, suggesting that that could also be true in real life. But what if we assume the technology does exist? At least, you know, the face, which would be definitely bigger than you could just inject with a syringe.” Smaller, Better, Faster Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn. Right now, the technology for most of those things is about the size of a wristwatch. “And it’s that power source that needs to have wiring. “Whatever explosive material you have has to have some sort of trigger, which essentially has to have a power source,” says Vaisman. Especially since it would also require a power source - that doesn’t appear to have been fitted elsewhere about the body in the film.
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might be looking to effect within such a small mechanism. Dr Vaisman admits to being no bomb expert but isn’t certain you could fit enough explosive material to do the kind of damage Waller and co. You can watch the procedure in the official Red Band trailer for the film. The bombs implanted in the Suicide Squad’s heads are about the size of a grain of rice, at their largest. Okay, so the biggest problem we’re facing is the realistic size of the device. Because those things typically take up more room.” It’s mostly that electrodes, like the wiring sensors, are in the brain and then the battery pack that is usually outside the brain. For the most part, the things that we implant now are things to prevent seizures and strokes. “There’s not a lot of extra room inside our head for things. “It’s certainly challenging, for sure,” says prominent MD Boris Vaisman, who has an APA private practice in Los Angeles.