Also Mel Gibbons character in the movie is fictional/composite so his attack never actually took place so in reality no one survived because they didn’t exist in the first place
Not exactly. Mels Character was based on The Swamp Fox. Also the end battle was a combination of Cowpens & Guilford Courthouse. Tavington based on Tarrington. So some ideas were based on true history.
I noticed that too. Is What Culture up a video about their own mistakes? Emmerich got shafted on this movie, by the way. ONE Academy Award?! For a film THIS epic? No wonder he went back to disaster movies.
In Batman returns the Danny DeVito penguin goes to visit his parents grave and when he brushes against one of the tombstones it wobbles like it's made out of cardboard or foam😂😂😂
In Mortal Kombat (the original 1997 film) there are a few times where the actors bump against 'boulders' and 'rock faces in a cave' that flaked off white foam and had white patches that show it is just polystyrene foam! Easy to see even on a DVD version of the movie...lol Love that film though!
One of the best known technical errors that was kept in a movie occurred in "The Manchurian Candidate" (1962). There is a scene in which Frank Sinatra is doing a long soliloquy but the camera is out of focus. This was not intended but Sinatra's performance was so good that the director used it over the other takes he did. This scene was later praised by critics who interpreted the blurry shot as visualizing his character's conflicting emotions.
IIRC, Carpenter once answered a question about that, and the TL;DR version was that they couldn't do any breakaway parts on that balcony. The stunt had to be performed with ZERO damage to the house (well, balcony) in question. 🙂 Keep in mind, Carpenter almost *never* had a legitimately fair budget to achieve his objectives. In fact, it's a wonder he was able to do his awesome work at all since Hollywon't rarely ponied up the d34d prezzez for production. 😅
@Novastar.SaberCombat thank you for that comment. I really appreciate it. I knew about the shoestring budget, but I hadn't heard about that specific story.
In LOTR: The Fellowship of the Ring, you find out that these Hobbits are quit some innovating inventors. In the scene where Frodo and Sam has left their village and comes to the field with the scarecrow, you can spot a car driving in the background. On the Extended Blu-ray release, you get that car kicking up a lot of dust at 44min 33sec.
You left out Gladiator! There's a crew member working with a horse in the camp as Commodus does his sword work. Then a propane tank on a chariot in the arena. I've heard of others but couldn't find them. But please, check out the Man in Jeans as mentioned above!
As Maximus is feeding his horse with an apple after the initial battle with the Germans, in one frame a man in jeans is standing behind the horse as it moves aside. In the "are you not entertained?" scene as the camera shows the crowd around, a person in jeans is clearly visible standing to the left in the middle tribune. I think, cars and/or planes are visible in some moments too
In Jaws, when chief Brody is writing his report in the beginning, it says Corners report 2 times instead of Coroner. Also, the dates on the report don't add up.
In an early scene in the original Tremors, Kevin Bacon takes about 7 or 8 goes at hammering in a nail in a fence post, long after the last line of the scene is spoken. It's made exta noticable by his co-star, Fred Ward, taking an extra long look at the nail after Bacon walks away. It's a lovely little (unplanned) character moment and sets up that the pair are actually pretty rubbish handy-men in their remote town, right before their wits are tested with the man-eating underground God-damn monsters.
"Alone In The Dark" has an even worse corpse movement. The dead body sits up in the foreground as everyone is walking by, so your eye is already drawn to that spot when they move.
Funny how they go after the sound design guys for not watching 10 seconds of the film to get it right, meanwhile they didn't take 10 seconds to lookup who directed The Patriot. But I also thought Gibson directed it too.
I definitely thought number one was going to be the final seconds of Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ where the physical damage to the film caused that weird light-flare that Scorsese liked and decided to keep
The one obvious mistake I don't think I have even seen mentioned anywhere is from Jurassic Park. When Alan Grant is climbing down the cable with Lex on his back, the cable is very clearly draped on and over the camera. It seems like such a simple thing to say "wait, the cable is visibly on the camera lens can someone move it, please?" but they didn't and it was kept in the final edit
Maybe the extra in The Patriot moved because he and the cameraman also thought Mel Gibson was the director and they were waitinging for Mel Gibson to shout cut but they got Roland Emmerich instead giving the call. The extra moved and the cameraman didn't stop filming until it was too late. Good thing Roland Emmerich was able tofigure it out and make the change for the edited version.
I think this is actually a pretty well-known mistake but I find it hilarious so im going to mention it. In the Mummy Returns, Alex is too old. Rick and Evelyn meet in 1926 in the first movie but in the second, they have an 8-year-old son, Alex, by 1933. Alex would have had to be born in 1925 to be 8 in 1933. I think this error may come from when the movie first shows Rick, it is 1923 and whoever reviewed the movie before making the sequel saw this and forgot/didn't realize that the majority of the movie takes place in 1926.
In the famous car chase in 1968's Bullitt - often credited with creating car chases in movies - one of the bad guys' cars loses FIVE hubcaps from its FOUR wheels...
In Gladiator, during the Battle of Carthage, when one of the chariots runs too close to the wall, loses its wheel and flips over, the back of the chariot also breaks off and reveals what appears to be a gas tank.
Requiem For a Dream. Sara Goldfarbs breakdown was so well acted by Ellyn Burstyn that D.P. Matty Libatique teared up and lost focus on her close up. Aronofsy, the director, loved the take (and i think it makes shot even more effective) ...a bit like story from this with Punch Drunk & Les Mis, a happy accident meets great performance moment.
In the end scene of ‘300’ - when the camera holds on Leonidas’s body riddled with arrows, as the camera pulls away a lot of the cgi arrows weren’t anchored properly and they drag across Leonidas’s legs and in other places to.
Also, in the scene where Leonidas is eating an apple. You can see an extra on the ground before he is stabbed, raise his knee and just chill and swing his knee side to side haha
*Raiders (80's).* There's a wonderful moment with Marion (Karen Allen) in her bar at the wooden table in Nepal after she tells Jones to return tomorrow. She reveals the Staff of Ra's headpiece on a chain around her neck. In the next shot, the entire necklace has teleported off of her neck and it's utterly loose in her hand. 😁 It's a minor editing issue, but I always liked it. We didn't NEED to see Marion remove it, but perhaps that gesture may have lent more gravitas to her memory of Abner. "The bar's closed..." "Uh... heheh... we are... heh... we are... not thirsty." 💪😎✌️
In Star Wars revenge of the Sith. After Kenobi shoots Grevious, he looks to his gun and says "how uncivilised" at that moment there looks to be a glitch on the gun. It just doesn't look right. Later in the film, during the epic Kenobi vs Skywalker fight. As skywalker grabs kenobi throat. The light saber changes from Anakins to Kenobis then back again.
Showdown in Little Tokyo. Near the end, Brandon Lee goes to rip a piece of railing off of the catwalk, but I guess the prop master made it stick too tightly because Brandon pulls once, fails, plays it off as a flex, then pulls the pipe off the railing. HILARIOUS!!
In the first Pirates of the Carribean toward the end during the moonlight ship ambush, there's a soldier fighting nobody. Just swinging a sword around aimlessly while everyone else is fighting skeleton pirates. FX crew missed a spot.
Stan & Ollie (2018), the biopic about Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, is set in the 1950s, but London's Savoy Hotel is flying a Canada Maple Leaf flag, which was not created until 1965. (Before that Canada used the Union Jack or the Red Ensign, which had a Union Jack in the corner.) As a Canadian this took me right out of the movie when I saw it.
The car in the distance early on in LOTR Fellowship of the Ring. PJ denied it at the time and it got edited out for the DVD release but I remember what i saw in the cinema.
I’ve never noticed anybody point out that shot in Return of the King where smoke goes into the chimney. I’ve also never really noticed anybody point out that in The Running Man - Arnold says, “I will not harm helpless human beings.” But at the end of the movie when a ‘recording’ of this scene is played, he says “I will not harm helpless people.”
Similarly, there is a wide shot of Edoras where all the waving in the flags goes the wrong way. Or are we talking about the same shot only we noticed different details?
@@MasterHigureI think that might be the same shot! The flags looked weird to me, too. It is Edoras, though. Just an establishing shot played in reverse.
Die Hard: When they discover Tony’s dead body in the elevator the actor blinks when Alan Rickman moves his head. Batman Returns: When the penguins slide The Penguin’s dead body into the water a wheeled cart can be seen sinking into the water below him (this may have been edited out at some point) The Dark Knight: When Dent, Gordon and Batman meet on the roof you can see lights from the other buildings through the door Gordon comes out of because there is no wall behind it. Tron Legacy: During the fight in The End of Line club every time it cuts to Castor, Gem is sitting then standing then sitting then standing/dancing then sitting again.
In "Windtalkers" there's a shot that has a massive amount of the film crew in the background. It's like half way through when the dude with the flamethrower is torching a bunker or trench.
In the Paul Newman sports film, Slapshot (1977) there's a scene where Newman talks to a guy in the street. It cuts between two angles. In one angle he has a newspaper in his hand. From the other angle the newspaper is held underhis armpit.
In the original Alien, there’s a curious scene where, as the ship is being primed for destruction, the alien regards the ship’s cat with apparent wonder and relish. Scott explains in the director’s commentary that this scene is a remnant of the original storyline, in which the Alien is destroyed when the ship detonates, but knows that its genetic line will survive via the cat, which unbeknownst to Ripley, it has infected. (This idea was recycled as the basis of a dream sequence in the sequel.) I don’t think Scott explained why the scene was kept in, given that it no longer makes any sense.
There’s a scene in Pearl Harbor where the attack begins with Cuba Gooding Jr. reacting to a explosion before running to the bridge where you can see the hands of a crew member holding some piece of equipment
In Brian De Palma's Snake Eyes, the entire climax was changed. Unfortunately, they didn't think to alter Nicolas Cage's big speech at the end which directly references the original way things went down.
In the bombing scene in Dr Strangelove, you see a B-52 flying over snowy mountains, but for a couple of seconds, you see the shadow the the plane that actually shot the footage - a four-engined prop plane.
I swear this is true and have no idea how it made passed editing. At the end of Back to the Future III, you meet Doc Brown's family in the time traveling train. If you keep your eye on one of his kids, he does this beckoning hand gesture, then points to his d*ck, nods his head & smirks all while staring into the camera. Go watch the end of BttF 3 & see for yourself.
David Lynch Eraserhead, in a whole scene you can see the 15mm support rods/bars in the bottom of frame, panning as the camera moves, he darkened down the scene to try and hide but they are still visible. Mistakes like this are common on low/zero budget films so no disrespect. C
A couple more in Abyss, if you have the VHS version of the movie, when Lindsey and team are looking for the USS Montana, you can see a film crewman in the shadows of the mini sub she's in one of the shots. On the VHS, it's pretty apparent there's a cameraman back there. This was apparently fixed in later DVD and digital releases, and that area was blackened. Also in the Abyss, the Deep Core drilling platform is actually missing from the long range establishing shot at the end, when the alien ship emerges. Deep Core should be somewhere on its surface, but it's not.
In Shoot To Kill (aka Deadly Pursuit) there is a scene where Tom Berenger finds a bunch of bodies in some water.They are supposed to be in the middle of nowhere, yet in the background a car drives by. In some versions they zoom in on this one shot, like on the European Dvd, creating a blurry shot for a couple of seconds instead.
Its possible that the mistakes in Dr Strangelove were left in because of the hand-drawn nature of the credits and the difficulty of correcting them without changing the rest of the lettering.
In Star wars IV when the Corellian ship is being docked into the battle cruiser, you can hear it being locked into place but next scene is still moving into the ship - also at the end of the board meeting with Vader he's still talking (showing expressive hand movements) but the audio is cut
In Corvette Summer, a piece of chrome falls in front of Kenny Dantley. When he picks it up, it says "Corvette". This chrome is the top part of a 1963-1967 Corvette Sting Ray emblem. If it had fallen off the car used (a 1973 Corvette) it would have said Stingray.
There are many movie mistakes to be had in the world of cinema, and the most glaring of them are movies that shouldn't have been made, or hailed by critics.
In the fellowship of the ring, on Weathertop, one of the ring wraiths looks to the side and you can see the cloth covering the face. Every other time it’s black silhouettes you don’t know what’s on the inside. But I always found that funny.
In Star Trek 6, at the start, it is mentioned that Captain Sulu's ship the Excelsior, is carrying gas detecting equipment, due to a specific survey mission. This equipment isn't standard. Yet at the end, it is mentioned that this equipment is on the Enterprise, and the survey mission is referenced as being the enterprise's (which is impossible), and as such Kirk and co use it to win the final battle.
The Excelsior only had the equipment to detect gaseous anomalies onboard in the very beginning of the movie when returning home from the Beta quadrant, which is set several months before the Enterprise, Excelsior and Chang's ship are up against each other at Kitomer near the end of the movie. The Enterprise was doubling as a training ship for Starfleet Academy under Spocks command who also was an instructor at the academy, when the ship was not on active duty. Hence the equipment for detecting gaseous anomalies was actually standard equipment to have on board the Enterprise.
3:55 XD but didn't you hear what he said??? he said: "I shot him 6 times... I SHOT HIM 6 TIMES... I shot him in the heart... 6 TIMES... he's not HUMAN!!!" XD gosh I love that movie and the acting
4:18 Halloween II isnt an actual mistake. Per se. Your'e just seeing the first gunshot a second time. The first gunshot is from Michaels perspective. Cut to outside. Then the first gunshot as seen from outside the house. Then 5 more gunshots. So theres 7 shots total but the first two are the same gunshot from 2 different perspectives.
10:50 The Patriot, it was a different soldier who survived to be questioned later by Tavington. So it was DEFINITELY a mistake. Nothing to do with historical accuracy
In the background of one of the resident evil movies (the one set in las vegas- there's been that many I've lost count.) a busy highway can be seen in the background of a supposedly post apocalyptic landscape. In Alien, as Ash is malfunctioning - after he rips a handful of hair from Ripley's head and throws her to the ground, the camera pans around Ian Holm and backs down a corridor and as it does, the cameraman (or camera) strikes a toy hanging in the doorway and you can see and hear it. Holm momentarily glances at the object before grabbing Ripley and continuing his attack. In the movie Moon, while Sam is watching a video message from his wife, one of the crew can be seen standing in shot... it's actually joked about by director Duncan Jones in the DVD commentary.
In aliens, when theyre escaping in the air ducts, at one point Vasquez is shooting at the xenos, and you can plainly see brass being ejected from her m41. (If youre not a total nerd, the weapons were described as 10mm caseless.)
In _A Madea Christmas_ there is not one, but two times in which they inexplicably splice in a scene from later in the film right in the middle of another. One is very obvious because the characters are just sitting in a car outside the house in day before we see the others come out at night having a fight before it cuts back to the day scene. And, no, it makes no sense in context, either. It's odd that not only would someone edit it this way, but that it was released without anyone fixing it. (And to be clear, I only became aware of this via a review I saw, leading me to find a copy somewhere online to verify for myself.)
The t-rex scene in Jurassic Park has bugged me since I first saw it in the theater. In every scene by the t-rex pen the ground is completely level behind the fence, until the moment it becomes a 60 foot drop off where the vehicle is tossed of the side of the road into a tree while almost hitting Grant and Lex on the way down. I think it was a deliberate choice because you couldn't have the visual t-rex standing beside the fence eating the goat if there was a massive drop off and there was no way that Explorer would have landed in a tree unless it was dropped of from a higher point. In rereading the book, it states that t-rex tossed a Toyota Landcruiser into a tree that was beside the road, but I think the logistics of trying to get that to happen visually in the movie would have been impossible, so they went for the push off the side of the road approach. Spielberg rightly guessed that most people wouldn't notice the change in geography and I hardly ever see anyone make a big deal about it online.
In one of the original Star Wars films trilogy, I forget which one, I saw a Storm Trooper bump his head/helmet on the door frame entering a room. This was hilarious and I’m surprised no one else has noticed this gaffe.
On that note, no one could see out of the stormtrooper helmets, at least not in the first movie. Hence the head bonk and the tripping. Luke complaining that he couldn’t see anything while wearing the helmet wasn’t in the script - Mark Hamill couldn’t see the cameras were rolling and he was actually saying that to Harrison Ford
I like to believe, that Henry Cavil is like Dennis from the Spongebob Movie (2014). He can grow his beard on command by flexing his beard-growth-muscles😸
Midern revolvers or "six shooters," depending on caliber, can hold between 4 and 8 bullets in most calibers. Smaller calibers can hold over 12. So calling them "six shooters" isn't always the best. I also don't think the "7th" shot was a mistake, but simply a difference in perspective. Loomis shoots and then the scene switches to Michael's perspective, and shows the 6 shots. Or his revolver had 7 bullets, who knows...
History buffs will point out that Roland Emmerich directed The Patriot.
Also Mel Gibbons character in the movie is fictional/composite so his attack never actually took place so in reality no one survived because they didn’t exist in the first place
Not exactly. Mels Character was based on The Swamp Fox. Also the end battle was a combination of Cowpens & Guilford Courthouse. Tavington based on Tarrington. So some ideas were based on true history.
Mel Gibson didn't direct The Patriot. Roland Emmerich did.
Yes. I knew it was Emmerich without reading it up.
I noticed that too. Is What Culture up a video about their own mistakes? Emmerich got shafted on this movie, by the way. ONE Academy Award?! For a film THIS epic? No wonder he went back to disaster movies.
@@ajspice The Patriot is as historically INaccurate as Braveheart!
@@Foebane72 The Patriot wasn't trying to be historically accurate, just to tell a story in a historical environment.
I thought the entire movie was the strangest mistake in Borderlands... 🤔
In Batman returns the Danny DeVito penguin goes to visit his parents grave and when he brushes against one of the tombstones it wobbles like it's made out of cardboard or foam😂😂😂
Michael Keatons eye make up disappearing before he takes his mask off gets me everytime
In Mortal Kombat (the original 1997 film) there are a few times where the actors bump against 'boulders' and 'rock faces in a cave' that flaked off white foam and had white patches that show it is just polystyrene foam! Easy to see even on a DVD version of the movie...lol Love that film though!
I have seen The Abyss many times and never noticed this. Now I'm going to find the DVD and check this out
It definitely feels like it could be "cramped quarters and debris". Especially given the tension of the scene.
One of the best known technical errors that was kept in a movie occurred in "The Manchurian Candidate" (1962). There is a scene in which Frank Sinatra is doing a long soliloquy but the camera is out of focus. This was not intended but Sinatra's performance was so good that the director used it over the other takes he did. This scene was later praised by critics who interpreted the blurry shot as visualizing his character's conflicting emotions.
In Halloween, Michael also walks backward while getting shot and somehow ends up on top of a 3-foot railing before falling over.
this i had to watch again - ya, wtf!??
IIRC, Carpenter once answered a question about that, and the TL;DR version was that they couldn't do any breakaway parts on that balcony. The stunt had to be performed with ZERO damage to the house (well, balcony) in question. 🙂 Keep in mind, Carpenter almost *never* had a legitimately fair budget to achieve his objectives. In fact, it's a wonder he was able to do his awesome work at all since Hollywon't rarely ponied up the d34d prezzez for production. 😅
@Novastar.SaberCombat thank you for that comment. I really appreciate it. I knew about the shoestring budget, but I hadn't heard about that specific story.
I never noticed Anne Hathaway slinking awkwardly off camera at the end of "Les Miserables." I'll never be able to unsee it.
I’ve always noticed it. Just thought it was intentional.
Only now that it has been pointed out as a mistake do I realize how awkward it looks
Roland Emerich directed The Patriot
In LOTR: The Fellowship of the Ring, you find out that these Hobbits are quit some innovating inventors.
In the scene where Frodo and Sam has left their village and comes to the field with the scarecrow, you can
spot a car driving in the background.
On the Extended Blu-ray release, you get that car kicking up a lot of dust at 44min 33sec.
I'd not heard this before, but apparently Viggo breaks his toe at some point
Shame they didn't drive to Mordor then!
You left out Gladiator! There's a crew member working with a horse in the camp as Commodus does his sword work. Then a propane tank on a chariot in the arena. I've heard of others but couldn't find them. But please, check out the Man in Jeans as mentioned above!
As Maximus is feeding his horse with an apple after the initial battle with the Germans, in one frame a man in jeans is standing behind the horse as it moves aside. In the "are you not entertained?" scene as the camera shows the crowd around, a person in jeans is clearly visible standing to the left in the middle tribune. I think, cars and/or planes are visible in some moments too
In Jaws, when chief Brody is writing his report in the beginning, it says Corners report 2 times instead of Coroner. Also, the dates on the report don't add up.
You totally missed Henry Cavil’s arm reload giving him a shirt pocket all of a sudden
OH shit!
which if true and not a trick of the light, would seem to indicate 2 separate shots digitally stitched together possibly from a reshoot
@ just rewind to the beginning of the video.. once you see it, you can’t un-see it
I genuinely laughed aloud at the pizza arm reload lmao
In one of the early Bond films, a car enters a narrow alleyway on a tilt and emerges from the other side tilted in the opposite direction
In an early scene in the original Tremors, Kevin Bacon takes about 7 or 8 goes at hammering in a nail in a fence post, long after the last line of the scene is spoken. It's made exta noticable by his co-star, Fred Ward, taking an extra long look at the nail after Bacon walks away. It's a lovely little (unplanned) character moment and sets up that the pair are actually pretty rubbish handy-men in their remote town, right before their wits are tested with the man-eating underground God-damn monsters.
The sound man/boom mic when Jackman wanders up the snowy hill to meet Bowie in The Prestige
I love that any talk of the reverse waterfall ignores the reverse smoke on the boat as well.
"Alone In The Dark" has an even worse corpse movement. The dead body sits up in the foreground as everyone is walking by, so your eye is already drawn to that spot when they move.
Jurassic park: in wide shots of the scene when Tim gets electrocuted, we can see that the electric fence just ends a few metres away.
Funny how they go after the sound design guys for not watching 10 seconds of the film to get it right, meanwhile they didn't take 10 seconds to lookup who directed The Patriot. But I also thought Gibson directed it too.
I definitely thought number one was going to be the final seconds of Martin Scorsese’s The Last Temptation of Christ where the physical damage to the film caused that weird light-flare that Scorsese liked and decided to keep
The one obvious mistake I don't think I have even seen mentioned anywhere is from Jurassic Park. When Alan Grant is climbing down the cable with Lex on his back, the cable is very clearly draped on and over the camera. It seems like such a simple thing to say "wait, the cable is visibly on the camera lens can someone move it, please?" but they didn't and it was kept in the final edit
Maybe the extra in The Patriot moved because he and the cameraman also thought Mel Gibson was the director and they were waitinging for Mel Gibson to shout cut but they got Roland Emmerich instead giving the call. The extra moved and the cameraman didn't stop filming until it was too late. Good thing Roland Emmerich was able tofigure it out and make the change for the edited version.
Starwars Episode 4, when a Stormtrooper hit his head on a door frame.
I think this is actually a pretty well-known mistake but I find it hilarious so im going to mention it. In the Mummy Returns, Alex is too old. Rick and Evelyn meet in 1926 in the first movie but in the second, they have an 8-year-old son, Alex, by 1933. Alex would have had to be born in 1925 to be 8 in 1933. I think this error may come from when the movie first shows Rick, it is 1923 and whoever reviewed the movie before making the sequel saw this and forgot/didn't realize that the majority of the movie takes place in 1926.
I watch Gareth’s videos at 1.5x speed and he sounds like he’s talking normal speed.
Tried it, didn't like it.
In the famous car chase in 1968's Bullitt - often credited with creating car chases in movies - one of the bad guys' cars loses FIVE hubcaps from its FOUR wheels...
I believe it's also _Bullitt_ in which the car passes the same VW beetle several times due to multiple cameras filming the shot.
In Gladiator, during the Battle of Carthage, when one of the chariots runs too close to the wall, loses its wheel and flips over, the back of the chariot also breaks off and reveals what appears to be a gas tank.
Requiem For a Dream. Sara Goldfarbs breakdown was so well acted by Ellyn Burstyn that D.P. Matty Libatique teared up and lost focus on her close up. Aronofsy, the director, loved the take (and i think it makes shot even more effective) ...a bit like story from this with Punch Drunk & Les Mis, a happy accident meets great performance moment.
In one scene in Braveheart, you can see a truck in the background.
In the end scene of ‘300’ - when the camera holds on Leonidas’s body riddled with arrows, as the camera pulls away a lot of the cgi arrows weren’t anchored properly and they drag across Leonidas’s legs and in other places to.
Also, in the scene where Leonidas is eating an apple. You can see an extra on the ground before he is stabbed, raise his knee and just chill and swing his knee side to side haha
That waterfall shot wasn't reversed, that waterfall was actually going upwards for real. The scene was shot on location at Viagra Falls.
3:49 ever changing license plates in that seagal movie lol
Every Seagal movie is a mistake 😂✌🏻
At the end of the first _Pirates of the Caribbean_ movie, a smiling cowboy hat wearing crew member wearing sunglasses stands behind the crew on deck.
*Raiders (80's).* There's a wonderful moment with Marion (Karen Allen) in her bar at the wooden table in Nepal after she tells Jones to return tomorrow. She reveals the Staff of Ra's headpiece on a chain around her neck. In the next shot, the entire necklace has teleported off of her neck and it's utterly loose in her hand. 😁 It's a minor editing issue, but I always liked it. We didn't NEED to see Marion remove it, but perhaps that gesture may have lent more gravitas to her memory of Abner.
"The bar's closed..."
"Uh... heheh... we are... heh... we are... not thirsty."
💪😎✌️
In Star Wars revenge of the Sith. After Kenobi shoots Grevious, he looks to his gun and says "how uncivilised" at that moment there looks to be a glitch on the gun. It just doesn't look right.
Later in the film, during the epic Kenobi vs Skywalker fight. As skywalker grabs kenobi throat. The light saber changes from Anakins to Kenobis then back again.
I spotted a mistake in Madame Web.
The mistake was that the movie was made.
There was another mistake too - it was released too
"I count six shots"
"I count two guns"
Cavill also grows a pocket in that scene.
Showdown in Little Tokyo. Near the end, Brandon Lee goes to rip a piece of railing off of the catwalk, but I guess the prop master made it stick too tightly because Brandon pulls once, fails, plays it off as a flex, then pulls the pipe off the railing. HILARIOUS!!
Has no one ever worn a shirt???? Seriously he's not 'cocking his arms' he's adjusting the sleeves, it just looks cool by saying 'cocking his arms'
In the first Pirates of the Carribean toward the end during the moonlight ship ambush, there's a soldier fighting nobody. Just swinging a sword around aimlessly while everyone else is fighting skeleton pirates. FX crew missed a spot.
Stan & Ollie (2018), the biopic about Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy, is set in the 1950s, but London's Savoy Hotel is flying a Canada Maple Leaf flag, which was not created until 1965. (Before that Canada used the Union Jack or the Red Ensign, which had a Union Jack in the corner.) As a Canadian this took me right out of the movie when I saw it.
The car in the distance early on in LOTR Fellowship of the Ring. PJ denied it at the time and it got edited out for the DVD release but I remember what i saw in the cinema.
The car is still featured in the Extended Blu-ray release at 44min 33sec.
I’ve never noticed anybody point out that shot in Return of the King where smoke goes into the chimney.
I’ve also never really noticed anybody point out that in The Running Man - Arnold says, “I will not harm helpless human beings.” But at the end of the movie when a ‘recording’ of this scene is played, he says “I will not harm helpless people.”
Similarly, there is a wide shot of Edoras where all the waving in the flags goes the wrong way. Or are we talking about the same shot only we noticed different details?
@@MasterHigureI think that might be the same shot! The flags looked weird to me, too. It is Edoras, though. Just an establishing shot played in reverse.
Die Hard: When they discover Tony’s dead body in the elevator the actor blinks when Alan Rickman moves his head.
Batman Returns: When the penguins slide The Penguin’s dead body into the water a wheeled cart can be seen sinking into the water below him (this may have been edited out at some point)
The Dark Knight: When Dent, Gordon and Batman meet on the roof you can see lights from the other buildings through the door Gordon comes out of because there is no wall behind it.
Tron Legacy: During the fight in The End of Line club every time it cuts to Castor, Gem is sitting then standing then sitting then standing/dancing then sitting again.
In "Windtalkers" there's a shot that has a massive amount of the film crew in the background. It's like half way through when the dude with the flamethrower is torching a bunker or trench.
Darkman 3, you can see a stuntman catch alight during the big finale explosion. I’ve always hoped they came away from that without being badly hurt
In the Paul Newman sports film, Slapshot (1977) there's a scene where Newman talks to a guy in the street. It cuts between two angles. In one angle he has a newspaper in his hand. From the other angle the newspaper is held underhis armpit.
Similar to #7, in True Romance, Clarence fires seven shots from a six-shooter during the scene in which he kills Drexl and his henchman.
In the original Alien, there’s a curious scene where, as the ship is being primed for destruction, the alien regards the ship’s cat with apparent wonder and relish. Scott explains in the director’s commentary that this scene is a remnant of the original storyline, in which the Alien is destroyed when the ship detonates, but knows that its genetic line will survive via the cat, which unbeknownst to Ripley, it has infected. (This idea was recycled as the basis of a dream sequence in the sequel.) I don’t think Scott explained why the scene was kept in, given that it no longer makes any sense.
There’s a scene in Pearl Harbor where the attack begins with Cuba Gooding Jr. reacting to a explosion before running to the bridge where you can see the hands of a crew member holding some piece of equipment
Jean Valjean dies?! thanks for spoiling it for everyone!!
Really hoping this is sarcasm.
That waterfall scene would have taken less than 5 minutes to edit..😅
Not in 1996/7 when the movie was filmed. Sure, almost 30 years later it would be easy but not back then
In Brian De Palma's Snake Eyes, the entire climax was changed. Unfortunately, they didn't think to alter Nicolas Cage's big speech at the end which directly references the original way things went down.
In the bombing scene in Dr Strangelove, you see a B-52 flying over snowy mountains, but for a couple of seconds, you see the shadow the the plane that actually shot the footage - a four-engined prop plane.
I swear this is true and have no idea how it made passed editing. At the end of Back to the Future III, you meet Doc Brown's family in the time traveling train. If you keep your eye on one of his kids, he does this beckoning hand gesture, then points to his d*ck, nods his head & smirks all while staring into the camera. Go watch the end of BttF 3 & see for yourself.
You should have mentioned Plan 9 From Outer Space, where in one scene day keeps changing to night and back again!
Legolas eyes are legit. Elf eyes will always turn out as light blue whenever facing the direction of the Silmarils.
In ‘The Red Dragon’, the cameraman can be seen briefly in a mirror of the panning sequence when Dolarhyde is working out at his house.
Never noticed cavills beard but seen his chest pocket show up out of no where when he pumped his arms
David Lynch Eraserhead, in a whole scene you can see the 15mm support rods/bars in the bottom of frame, panning as the camera moves, he darkened down the scene to try and hide but they are still visible. Mistakes like this are common on low/zero budget films so no disrespect. C
A couple more in Abyss, if you have the VHS version of the movie, when Lindsey and team are looking for the USS Montana, you can see a film crewman in the shadows of the mini sub she's in one of the shots. On the VHS, it's pretty apparent there's a cameraman back there. This was apparently fixed in later DVD and digital releases, and that area was blackened. Also in the Abyss, the Deep Core drilling platform is actually missing from the long range establishing shot at the end, when the alien ship emerges. Deep Core should be somewhere on its surface, but it's not.
In the bar scene in the Long Kiss Goodnight you can see a boom mic poking into the middle of the group of characters from behind them.
In Shoot To Kill (aka Deadly Pursuit) there is a scene where Tom Berenger finds a bunch of bodies in some water.They are supposed to be in the middle of nowhere, yet in the background a car drives by. In some versions they zoom in on this one shot, like on the European Dvd, creating a blurry shot for a couple of seconds instead.
In Batman & Robin, when Poison Ivy is trying to drown Robin in a paddling pool, the same shot is played forward and backwards, including audio.
The Fast and The Furious (2001) Johnny Tran magically changes shirts in the start of his race with Jesse.
You seem to be implying that Patriot was directed by Mel Gibson, which was certainly not.
Its possible that the mistakes in Dr Strangelove were left in because of the hand-drawn nature of the credits and the difficulty of correcting them without changing the rest of the lettering.
In Star wars IV when the Corellian ship is being docked into the battle cruiser, you can hear it being locked into place but next scene is still moving into the ship - also at the end of the board meeting with Vader he's still talking (showing expressive hand movements) but the audio is cut
As it relates to The Patriot I would say it is fairly common for someone who is left for dead to live for a short time and move a little.
In Corvette Summer, a piece of chrome falls in front of Kenny Dantley. When he picks it up, it says "Corvette". This chrome is the top part of a 1963-1967 Corvette Sting Ray emblem. If it had fallen off the car used (a 1973 Corvette) it would have said Stingray.
Mistakes are like tribbles: for every one you catch and destroy, ten more pop up in its place.
There are many movie mistakes to be had in the world of cinema, and the most glaring of them are movies that shouldn't have been made, or hailed by critics.
In the fellowship of the ring, on Weathertop, one of the ring wraiths looks to the side and you can see the cloth covering the face. Every other time it’s black silhouettes you don’t know what’s on the inside. But I always found that funny.
In Star Trek 6, at the start, it is mentioned that Captain Sulu's ship the Excelsior, is carrying gas detecting equipment, due to a specific survey mission. This equipment isn't standard. Yet at the end, it is mentioned that this equipment is on the Enterprise, and the survey mission is referenced as being the enterprise's (which is impossible), and as such Kirk and co use it to win the final battle.
The Excelsior only had the equipment to detect gaseous anomalies onboard in the very beginning of the movie when returning home from the Beta quadrant, which is set several months before the Enterprise, Excelsior and Chang's ship are up against each other at Kitomer near the end of the movie.
The Enterprise was doubling as a training ship for Starfleet Academy under Spocks command who also was an instructor at the academy, when the ship was not on active duty. Hence the equipment for detecting gaseous anomalies was actually standard equipment to have on board the Enterprise.
3:55 XD but didn't you hear what he said???
he said: "I shot him 6 times... I SHOT HIM 6 TIMES... I shot him in the heart... 6 TIMES... he's not HUMAN!!!" XD gosh I love that movie and the acting
You left in a clip of a Marvel movie between Les Mis and StrangeLove, around @8:28
You talked about the Abyss without talking about the depantsing during the big wave scene.
4:18 Halloween II isnt an actual mistake. Per se.
Your'e just seeing the first gunshot a second time.
The first gunshot is from Michaels perspective. Cut to outside. Then the first gunshot as seen from outside the house. Then 5 more gunshots.
So theres 7 shots total but the first two are the same gunshot from 2 different perspectives.
In the 2013 Corey Feldman movie The Zombie King, when all humans are supposed to be dead, you can see a car traveling on a road in the background.
Mystery of Chess Boxing: the villain's arms are suddenly 7 feet long.
fun fact.. he kept his arm reload in deadpool and wolverine but that changed to a claw reload
10:50 The Patriot, it was a different soldier who survived to be questioned later by Tavington. So it was DEFINITELY a mistake. Nothing to do with historical accuracy
In the opening football match in was Craven's shocker, you can see the entire camera crew on the football pitch.
Anaconda also features a bolt action rifle you can shoot multiple times without working the bolt...
In the background of one of the resident evil movies (the one set in las vegas- there's been that many I've lost count.) a busy highway can be seen in the background of a supposedly post apocalyptic landscape.
In Alien, as Ash is malfunctioning - after he rips a handful of hair from Ripley's head and throws her to the ground, the camera pans around Ian Holm and backs down a corridor and as it does, the cameraman (or camera) strikes a toy hanging in the doorway and you can see and hear it. Holm momentarily glances at the object before grabbing Ripley and continuing his attack.
In the movie Moon, while Sam is watching a video message from his wife, one of the crew can be seen standing in shot... it's actually joked about by director Duncan Jones in the DVD commentary.
In aliens, when theyre escaping in the air ducts, at one point Vasquez is shooting at the xenos, and you can plainly see brass being ejected from her m41.
(If youre not a total nerd, the weapons were described as 10mm caseless.)
In _A Madea Christmas_ there is not one, but two times in which they inexplicably splice in a scene from later in the film right in the middle of another. One is very obvious because the characters are just sitting in a car outside the house in day before we see the others come out at night having a fight before it cuts back to the day scene. And, no, it makes no sense in context, either. It's odd that not only would someone edit it this way, but that it was released without anyone fixing it. (And to be clear, I only became aware of this via a review I saw, leading me to find a copy somewhere online to verify for myself.)
The t-rex scene in Jurassic Park has bugged me since I first saw it in the theater. In every scene by the t-rex pen the ground is completely level behind the fence, until the moment it becomes a 60 foot drop off where the vehicle is tossed of the side of the road into a tree while almost hitting Grant and Lex on the way down. I think it was a deliberate choice because you couldn't have the visual t-rex standing beside the fence eating the goat if there was a massive drop off and there was no way that Explorer would have landed in a tree unless it was dropped of from a higher point. In rereading the book, it states that t-rex tossed a Toyota Landcruiser into a tree that was beside the road, but I think the logistics of trying to get that to happen visually in the movie would have been impossible, so they went for the push off the side of the road approach. Spielberg rightly guessed that most people wouldn't notice the change in geography and I hardly ever see anyone make a big deal about it online.
Top 10 mistakes by whatculture that were left in video uploads: #1: claiming the director of “Apocalypto” directed “the patriot
Almost more egregious in Anaconda is the smoke going into the steamboat. I remember watching that and thinking the boat was gonna explode.
In one of the original Star Wars films trilogy, I forget which one, I saw a Storm Trooper bump his head/helmet on the door frame entering a room. This was hilarious and I’m surprised no one else has noticed this gaffe.
The special editions even added a "bonk" sound effect due to how famous it had become.
On that note, no one could see out of the stormtrooper helmets, at least not in the first movie. Hence the head bonk and the tripping. Luke complaining that he couldn’t see anything while wearing the helmet wasn’t in the script - Mark Hamill couldn’t see the cameras were rolling and he was actually saying that to Harrison Ford
We not gonna talk about the hand on the Velociraptor in Jurassic Park?
The visible crew member in The Descent. People thought it was an early view of the creatures.
In Alien Resurrection, Call throws a pair of boxing gloves and one of them hits the camera causing it to shake
In the original VCR release when Michael is shot there are trees in background which disappear in the recap
I like to believe, that Henry Cavil is like Dennis from the Spongebob Movie (2014).
He can grow his beard on command by flexing his beard-growth-muscles😸
Midern revolvers or "six shooters," depending on caliber, can hold between 4 and 8 bullets in most calibers. Smaller calibers can hold over 12. So calling them "six shooters" isn't always the best. I also don't think the "7th" shot was a mistake, but simply a difference in perspective. Loomis shoots and then the scene switches to Michael's perspective, and shows the 6 shots. Or his revolver had 7 bullets, who knows...