Date↓ | Likes | Retweets | movie_goofs' top 20 |
The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly (1966)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 6, 2020
Plot hole
In the scene set to Morricone's "The Ecstasy of Gold", Tuco (Eli Wallach) runs around a cemetary looking for a name on a tombstone, but he runs so fast the names all disappear in a blur, making it impossible for him to read them. pic.twitter.com/0bD7mN3Jfy
The Human Centipede (2009)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) May 14, 2020
Plot hole
Josef Heiter (Dieter Laser) surgically connects Katsuro (北村 昭博), Lindsay (Ashley C. Williams), and Jenny (Ashlynn Yennie) into a human centipede. But since Heiter is a doctor, he should understand the importance of social distancing.
His Girl Friday (1940)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) May 6, 2020
Plot hole
Walter Burns (Cary Grant) mistakes Pete Davis (Earl Dwire) for his ex-wife's new fiancé Bruce Baldwin (Ralph Bellamy). However, this doesn't make any sense, as Pete Davis doesn't look anything like Ralph Bellamy. pic.twitter.com/oKhdW2Tnj8
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) March 24, 2020
Continuity
In the scene before the opening credits, Knives Chau (Ellen Wong) and Young Neil (Johnny Simmons) sit on a sofa right in front of the band. A few shots later, the sofa is very far away from the band. pic.twitter.com/CLpgnaUO18
Knives Out (2019)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) March 10, 2020
Plot Hole
Ana de Armas' character Marta has a condition which causes her to vomit if she lies. This happens a few times in the movie. However, the actress spends the entire movie _acting_. So _everything_ she says is a lie. But she's not constantly vomiting.
Lost in Translation (2003)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) February 1, 2019
Continuity
In the hotel bar, after Charlotte (human actress Scarlett Johansson) sends Bob (Bill Murray) a bowl of nuts, in one shot you can see the clips that are used to make the jacket Bob is wearing appear to fit him correctly. pic.twitter.com/9KOPwTwneE
Adaptation (2002)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) January 29, 2019
Plot hole
Charlie Kaufman (Nicolas Cage) tells a story about his brother Donald (Nic Cage) talking to a girl in high school named Sarah Marshall (Kristen Bell). However, the movie Forgetting Sarah Marshall wasn't released until 2009.
(by @quip_witted)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) January 24, 2019
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Plot hole
At the end of the movie, Dorothy (Judy Garland) comments that the farmhands look exactly like the Scarecrow (Ray Bolger), the Cowardly Lion (Bert Lahr), and the Tin Man (Jack Haley) from Oz. This coincidence is never explained. pic.twitter.com/cQtwDddLRI
Bohemian Rhapsody (2018)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) January 23, 2019
Crew or equipment visible
The microphones used to record the actors' voices are visible in several scenes. pic.twitter.com/C2tgkFUaEB
Watchmen (2009)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) January 19, 2019
Production error
When Laurie/Silk Spectre (Malin Akerman) demands Jon/Dr. Manhattan (Billy Crudup) land his Martian clockwork vehicle, the actor's reply is from a different script entirely. "As you wish" is a line from The Princess Bride (1987). pic.twitter.com/D1JZxGSkqP
The Sixth Sense (1999)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) January 14, 2019
Plot hole
[SPOILERS]
Cole (Haley Joel Osment) can see and hear dead people. It is eventually revealed that Crowe (Bruce Willis) is dead, which is why only Cole interacts with him. However, it is never explained how Crowe can see and hear Cole. pic.twitter.com/B2oDH0PwUo
(by @ARPmusic_YT)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) January 8, 2019
Infinity War (2018)
Plot hole
There are only six "infinity" stones, not infinitely many. pic.twitter.com/ZqlC262qkF
(by @ashishboltoy)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) January 3, 2019
Interstellar (2014)
Factual error
When Joseph Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) arrives at Cooper Station, he finds a sloped-roof farmhouse just like his old one. However, sloped roofs on buildings are only needed for water drainage, and it doesn't rain in space. pic.twitter.com/26rA8JsCfD
(by @quip_witted)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) December 31, 2018
Back to the Future II (1989)
Plot hole
After returning from the past in BTTF, Marty McFly (Michael Fox) notices many differences from when he left. But he doesn't notice his girlfriend (Elisabeth Shue) is entirely different from the first movie (Claudia Wells). pic.twitter.com/s6ZuqKiu7y
The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe (2005)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) December 27, 2018
Factual error
In the movie, the Pevensie children have direct evidence that Father Christmas (Santa Claus) exists: they meet him and he personally hands them gifts. In reality, evidence for the existence of Santa Claus is marginal.
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) October 26, 2018
Apollo 13 (1995)
Plot hole
From a table covered in spare parts, engineers on the Earth build an adapter to fit Command Module CO₂ filters to the Lunar Module's filter sockets. However, it's never explained how the adapter is sent from the Earth to the astronauts. pic.twitter.com/UohcYEl6f8
(by @TimStellmach)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) October 22, 2018
Duck Soup (1933)
Revealing Mistakes
In several scenes, the makeup used to apply a false moustache to the character Rufus T. Firefly is visible. pic.twitter.com/LeN0rIIAqQ
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) October 17, 2018
Cube (1997)
Incorrectly regarded as goofs
Some people consider it a goof that Joan (Nicole de Boer) does not instantly reject numbers with an even final digit as potential primes. This is incorrect, however; there are prime numbers with that property, such as 2. pic.twitter.com/658HHGdBUA
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) October 16, 2018
Titanic (1997)
Factual error
In the film, the RMS Titanic has only 20 lifeboats capable of harboring about 1200 people, despite the Titanic being able to carry about 3300 passengers and crew. In real life, this would be illegal under maritime safety regulations. pic.twitter.com/JB50osmrPE
(by @JonathanSandals)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 18, 2018
Terminator 2 (1991)
Character error
At the end, the T-800 terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) gives a thumbs-up when it is melting in a vat of molten steel. A thumbs-up gesture is used to signal that the gesturer is okay or even great, which the T-800 isn't. pic.twitter.com/DVrkD3GDzO
@movie_goofs
— Alexander Kominek (@lexkominek) September 15, 2018
Bram Stoker's Dracula (1992)
Crew or Equipment Visible
The shadow of a crew member can be seen in multiple shots within Dracula's (Gary Oldman) castle. pic.twitter.com/YVqkpmQ6Ft
Adaptation (2002)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 17, 2018
Plot hole
After Charlie Kaufman (Nicolas Cage) asks his brother Donald (Nic Cage) for help structuring his screenplay, the two fly to Miami, where Donald dies. Charlie then finishes his screenplay. But his solution to the structural problem is never explained. pic.twitter.com/W3wXvM37Sg
Million Dollar Baby (2004)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 14, 2018
Production error
This sequel to Fistful of Dollars (1964) and For a Few Dollars More (1965) has absolutely no connection or continuity with those earlier movies except the presence of The Man With No Name (Clint Eastwood), now known as "Frankie". pic.twitter.com/owgNpnbRWZ
Citizen Kane (1941)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 13, 2018
Plot hole
The film is about a reporter (William Alland) investigating why Charles Foster Kane's (Orson Welles) dying words were "Rosebud". In the final shot we see a "Rosebud"-branded sled burning in an incinerator. The coincidence is never explained. pic.twitter.com/4ZCx2aJH9R
The Fugitive (1993)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 12, 2018
Factual error
When Dr. Kimble (Harrison Ford) claims he didn't kill his wife, Deputy U.S. Marshal Gerard (Tommy Lee Jones) says he doesn't care. However, in reality law enforcement would never be so dismissive of seeking out truth and justice for a white man. pic.twitter.com/rXZf548nDs
(by @fresh_avacado)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 11, 2018
Deadpool 2 (2018)
Character error
Deadpool (Ryan Reynolds) says "Zip it, Thanos" to Josh Brolin's character. Although Josh Brolin plays Thanos in several other Marvel superhero movies, in this movie he's playing a character named Cable, rather than Thanos. pic.twitter.com/sI5bR6PmjZ
The Matrix (1999)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 10, 2018
Plot hole
Cypher (Joe Pantoliano) is shown being killed in one of the Nebuchadnezzar hovercraft flashback scenes set in the past. However, he is also shown alive in many of the non-flashback scenes set in the city. His revival is never explained. pic.twitter.com/xsriqivDr1
Dead Men Don't Wear Plaid (1982)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 9, 2018
Production error
Footage from The Big Sleep, Notorious, The Postman Always Rings Twice, Double Indemnity, and several other films are intercut with the actual scenes from the movie. pic.twitter.com/IBf5QkyWKO
(by @segoknot)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 7, 2018
Mad Max: Fury Road (2015)
Character error
Imperator Furiosa (Charlize Theron) never uses her turn signal. pic.twitter.com/QIUatFdyTC
(adapted from @MikeD2049)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 6, 2018
Twin Peaks (1991 TV series)
Equipment or crew visible
In both the pilot and the final episode of the original TV series, set dresser Frank Silva can be seen in a mirror. pic.twitter.com/w1dJ7sJoH9
(by @sparrk)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 5, 2018
The Blues Brothers (1980)
Revealing mistake
Elwood (Dan Akroyd) tells Jake (John Belushi) that they have to "go see the penguin". When they do, it is obvious that the supposed penguin is actually a woman (Kathleen Freeman) in a nun's habit.
Apollo 13 (1995)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 4, 2018
Character error
Gene Kranz (Ed Harris) tells his team they'll need to figure out how to "fit a square peg in a round hole". However, it is not possible to fit a square peg in a round hole. pic.twitter.com/X5pBGw3m0G
Lost in Translation (2003)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 3, 2018
Production error
At the end of the movie, the final line spoken by Bill Murray's character to human actress Scarlett Johansson's character is inaudible. pic.twitter.com/vUe0ptUwP9
(by @aubreyclayton)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 2, 2018
Troy (2004)
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Paris (Orlando Bloom) speaks fluent English with a British accent. This is not a goof; it not unusual for members of royal families in the Middle East to be educated at British schools.
(by @ScottJohannsson)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) September 1, 2018
The Lion King (1994)
Revealing mistakes
All of the "animals" in this movie are obviously fake images handmade by humans that are woefully incorrect approximations of the real thing. There are no actual animals in the movie at all. pic.twitter.com/VZ4FOG4tRQ
The Shining (1980)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 31, 2018
Continuity
Danny Torrance (Danny Lloyd) writes "redrum" on the door in lipstick. However, when Wendy Torrance (Shelley Duvall) looks at it in the mirror, she sees the word "murder" instead. pic.twitter.com/fHWQsX5WBd
(by @DoveShackBaby)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 30, 2018
The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
Revealing mistakes
In the fight between Luke Skywalker (Mark Hamill) and Darth Vader (Jake Lloyd), elements of the set can be seen falling over. pic.twitter.com/NLtyVxbUf1
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 29, 2018
Point Break (1991)
Continuity
At the end of the on-foot chase sequence, Johnny Utah (Keanu Reeves) fires 14 shots at Bodhi (Patrick Swayze) as the latter climbs a fence. In the close-up, Johnny seems to be aiming nowhere near Bodhi. pic.twitter.com/bDCpLNK0j2
Blade Runner (1982)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 28, 2018
Plot hole
Early in the movie, Deckard (Harrison Ford) has a dream involving a unicorn. Later, Gaff (Edward James Olmos) sends him an origami unicorn. The coincidence is never explained. pic.twitter.com/DiguH46Y8B
(by @aubreyclayton and @movie_goofs)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 27, 2018
Back to the Future II (1989)
Factual error
The movie claims that the Chicago Cubs swept the 2015 World Series four games to zero. In reality, the Cubs' World Series victory several years ago was won four games to three. pic.twitter.com/mT6LkAx7Or
To Have and Have Not (1944)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 26, 2018
Character error
The instructions that Marie Browning (Lauren Bacall) gives Harry Morgan (Humphrey Bogart) explaining how to whistle do not actually produce a whistle, just a blowing sound. pic.twitter.com/Yg5co0h0xc
(adapted from @TreyStokes)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 25, 2018
Pet Sematary (1989)
Production error
It makes sense that the sign in the movie is misspelled–it was made by kids who didn't know any better. However, the movie has the same error in its title, and it was made by adults who should have known better. pic.twitter.com/ST7ASDkTtg
Dirty Harry (1971)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 25, 2018
Character error
Harry Callahan (Clint Eastwood) says to a bank robber (Albert Popwell) "You've got to ask yourself one question: Do I feel lucky? Well, do you, punk?" However, that is actually two questions. pic.twitter.com/DV3XH2nqxV
(by @MagiciansDinner)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 24, 2018
The Shining (1980)
Plot hole
Actor Jack Nicholson is visible in one of the black & white photographs of the ballroom. The photo he's in is dated 1921. But the character he plays in the movie, Jack Torrance, is too young to have been alive in 1921. pic.twitter.com/4YGTGMRxPS
(adapted from @milhouselynch)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 24, 2018
I'm Not There (2007)
Continuity
Bob Dylan (Christian Bale/Cate Blanchett/Marcus Carl Franklin/Richard Gere/Heath Ledger/Ben Whishaw) looks very different from one scene to the next.
(by @J_S_Docherty)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 23, 2018
The Love Bug (1968)
Revealing mistake
There are several shots where the car appears to be moving even though there's nobody in the driver's seat. pic.twitter.com/ph4TwyhNup
(by @WokeDudeBro)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 22, 2018
Robocop (1987)
Plot hole
After ED-209 (Jon Davison) demands Kinney (Kevin Page) put down his weapon and Kinney drops it, ED-209 says Kinney is in violation of penal code 113 section 9 and shoots him. We're never told what code 113/9 is or how he violated it. pic.twitter.com/jHjWsDU50j
Fight Club (1999)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 21, 2018
Production error
This shot-for-shot remake of Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981) gets almost every element of every scene wrong—except for the rolling boulder scene. pic.twitter.com/BohfE0mPqT
(by @pa_rhodes)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 21, 2018
The Usual Suspects (1995)
Plot hole
A scene near the end reveals that the name of Pete Postlethwaite's character, Kobayashi, is also the brand name of the coffee cup Agent Kujan (Chazz Palminteri) is drinking from. This coincidence is never explained. pic.twitter.com/Ncnd03ntZ4
Jaws (1975)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 20, 2018
Character error
Mrs. Kintner (Lee Fierro) slaps Chief Martin Brody (Roy Scheider) since she blames him for the death of her son. However, there is no way the killer shark seen in the movie could possibly fit into a human-sized Chief Brody costume. pic.twitter.com/wsQ3NthArr
Black Panther (2018)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 20, 2018
Character error
Okoye (Danai Gurira) tells Ayo (Florence Kasumba) to take most of the Dora Milaje and help "the king". However, they run to help T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman), not to help King N'Jadaka/Killmonger (Michael B. Jordan) pic.twitter.com/IHOCbEeeZU
(by @armybike)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 19, 2018
An American Werewolf in London (1981)
Revealing mistake
Whilst the pretence is this colour film is set in London, the lack of the Shard (32 London Bridge), the Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe), and the London Eye on the skyline make it obvious it was filmed elsewhere.
(by @harrisrboe)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 18, 2018
The Dark Knight (2008)
Plot hole
The Joker is seen working as a nurse. A hospital would never hire a serial killer to be a nurse. pic.twitter.com/ndclwkOYK6
Dr. No (1962)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 18, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
None of the other characters ever refer to Bond James Bond (Sean Connery) by his full name. This is not an error, however, as the world of spies tends to be formal and avoid first names. pic.twitter.com/860aiTH4Po
@movie_goofs
— JP (@vectorpoem) August 17, 2018
RoboCop (1987)
Math error in marketing copy
The film's theatrical release poster states that RoboCop is "part man, part machine, all cop". Expressed as percentages, these values add up to a number greater than 100. pic.twitter.com/GxY28A2NHG
Birdman or (The Unexpected Virtue of Ignorance) (2014)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 17, 2018
Plot hole
Everyone thinks Riggan (Michael Keaton) is the superhero Birdman, but this makes no sense since the two are ONLY ever seen in the same room together. pic.twitter.com/dWIcJi9yRw
(by @FatsDurson)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 17, 2018
Halloween (1978)
Continuity
At the end of the movie, the dead body of Michael Myers (Nick Castle) is seen in one shot but is missing from a subsequent shot. pic.twitter.com/pSnrKqjouB
Inception (2010)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 17, 2018
Plot hole
Each time Cobb (Leonardo DiCaprio) dies or "falls asleep" in one reality, he is transported to another, different alternate reality. None of this makes any sense and nothing is ever explained clearly. pic.twitter.com/17PQmG2rYN
Community (2009 TV series)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 17, 2018
Anachronism
In this series set in 2009, Pierce Hawthorne (Chevy Chase) appears at first to be a loveable doofus. Five minutes later, he turns out to be racist. However, the Milkshake Duck meme wasn't invented until 2016.
The Hunt for Red October (1990)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 16, 2018
Factual error
Once the Red October receives its official mission orders, the crew switches from speaking Russian to speaking English. A real Russian submarine crew would continue speaking Russian for the entire mission. pic.twitter.com/pKKIK6tFDU
Premature (2014)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 16, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Rob (John Karna) dies the little death in his dream he "wakes up" in bed in the next, outer dream. That his dream knowledge applies to real life is not a plot hole, but evidence he's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/pFRYgp4QUJ
(adapted from @euan_burns)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 15, 2018
Lost in Translation (2003)
Continuity
Human actress Scarlett Johansson is obviously wearing a wig in the karaoke scene.
300 (2006)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 15, 2018
Character error
When Xerxes' messenger (Peter Mensah) says "This is blasphemy. This is madness," Leonidas (Gerard Butler) replies "This is Sparta". But the messenger was using the word "this" to refer to threatening a messenger, not his current geographic location. pic.twitter.com/lcyG7SjANP
Naked (2017)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 15, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Rob (Marlon Wayans) "wakes up" naked in the elevator, he's actually escaping into the next, outer dream. That his dream knowledge applies to real life is not a plot hole, but evidence that he's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/IG3kBhTjGS
Hot Fuzz (2007)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 14, 2018
Revealing mistake
When Nicholas Angel (Simon Pegg) is introduced to the "Andys", it's obvious that the freeze-frame on detectives Cartwright and Wainwright (Rafe Spall and Paddy Considine) is fake—there is smoke rising from Cartwright's cigarette. pic.twitter.com/9Nj80Yx4tA
(by @AdmiralJota)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 14, 2018
The Martian (2015)
Character error
Mark Watney (Matt Damon) says he will get to 'fly around like Iron Man'. In reality, Iron Man's suits use repulsors—not escaping pressurized oxygen—as a mode of propulsion, so he does not fly around the way Iron Man does. pic.twitter.com/Cr6duURSES
12:01 (1993 TV movie)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 14, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Barry (Jonathan Silverman) "wakes up" in bed, he's actually escaping into the next, outer dream. That his dream knowledge applies to real life is not a plot hole, but evidence he's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/oqK8xzfH4b
(by @brskaylor)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 14, 2018
Interstellar (2014)
Continuity
By the end of the movie, Murph (Mackenzie Foy/Jessica Chastain/Ellen Burstyn) has aged significantly, but her father Cooper (Matthew McConaughey) hasn't aged at all.
(by @Sargent)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 13, 2018
Thor: Ragnarok (2017)
Continuity
When Odin (Loki Odinson) shows the flashback of Loki dying in Thor: The Dark World, there are numerous continuity errors (too many to list) between the footage shown here and that seen in the previous movie. pic.twitter.com/0p5Qryh2JR
The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 13, 2018
Plot hole
It is never explained how Gandalf the White (Ian McKellen) possesses the memories of the character Gandalf the Grey (Ian McKellen) from The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring (2001). pic.twitter.com/Z8Q48ir9N7
Before I Fall (2017)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 13, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Sam (Zoey Deutch) dies in her dream, she "wakes up" in bed in the next, outer dream. That her dream knowledge applies to real life is not a plot hole, but evidence the final scene is also a dream. pic.twitter.com/XBAYBdSZ6y
Day Break (2006 TV series)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 12, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Hopper (Taye Diggs) becomes unconscious in his dream, he "wakes up" in bed in the next, outer dream. That his dream knowledge applies to real life is not a plot hole, but evidence he's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/MJmQHW4wKM
(adapted from @crazym108)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 12, 2018
The Dark Knight (2008)
Character error
In the parking garage scene with Scarecrow, Batman is repeatedly shown firing guns, despite his rule about not using guns. pic.twitter.com/vtwf5Ygxy2
Police Academy (1984)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 11, 2018
Revealing mistakes
In several scenes with Larvell Jones (Michael Winslow), it appears that the sound effects/foley team made noises with their mouths instead of using the correct sound effects. pic.twitter.com/16jVGWaEQB
(by @Big_Eaters_Club)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 11, 2018
Up in the Air (2009)
Character error
George Clooney claims that he is "from here" while he is seated on an airplane. This is impossible since Boeing 737s like the one he's on were first manufactured a few years after the character would have been born. pic.twitter.com/e5Gorpemb8
Source Code (2011)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 11, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Colter (Jake Gyllenhaal) dies in his dream, he "wakes up" in a capsule in the next, outer dream. That his dream knowledge applies to real life is not a plot hole, but evidence he's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/Y0j48iiXm3
(adapted from @sparrk)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 11, 2018
Drive (2011)
Continuity
In some scenes Driver (Ryan Gosling) is wearing sunglasses. In other scenes he is not wearing the sunglasses.
McCabe & Mrs. Miller (1971)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 11, 2018
Character error
Kid (Manfred Schulz) shoots Cowboy (Keith Karradine) on the bridge after Cowboy draws his gun, but Cowboy wasn't drawing the gun to shoot Kid, but just to show his gun to him. https://t.co/OTw6ZeLgav
(by @CraigWCostelloe and @movie_goofs)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 10, 2018
The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
Character error
Yoda (Frank Oz) says "Do. Or do not. There is no try." However, impossible it is to do without trying to do also. pic.twitter.com/EnDo5hRG30
Happy Death Day (2017)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 10, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Tree (Jessica Rothe) dies in her dream, she "wakes up" in Carter's bed in the next, outer dream. That her dream knowledge applies to real life is not a plot hole, but evidence she's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/o6QqmCKDoN
(by @csolisr)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 10, 2018
Super Mario Bros. (1993)
Production error
The credits incorrectly spell the name of the actor who plays Luigi (John Luigizamo) as "John Leguizamo".
Rogue One (2016)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 9, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goofs
The CGI technology used to put Wilhuff Tarkin (Peter Cushing) and Leia Organa (Carrie Fisher) on screen is significantly inferior to that used in Star Wars (1977). However, this was done intentionally since Rogue One is set earlier.
All of Me (1984)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 9, 2018
Revealing mistake
In real life mirrors change images so things that are on the left are on the right, and vice versa. The “mirrors” in this movie instead change images of Steve Martin into images of Lily Tomlin. pic.twitter.com/WZGBq9pioZ
(by @refreshingtime)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 9, 2018
The Godfather (1972)
Production error
Don Vito Corleone's (Marlon Brando) speech is slurred and often hard to understand, as if he has cotton balls in his mouth.
Edge of Tomorrow (2014)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 9, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Cage (Tom Cruise) dies in his dream he "wakes up" on his duffle bag in the next, outer dream. That he ends up fully-skilled in real life from his dream training is not a plot hole, but evidence he's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/EdGz61MaSI
Groundhog Day (1993)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 9, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goof
Each time Phil (Bill Murray) dies in his dream he "wakes up" to hear the radio in the next, outer dream. That he ends up "fully-skilled" in real life from his dream training is not a plot hole, but evidence he's still in a dream. pic.twitter.com/qVeSIYBNys
(adapted from @g0m)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 8, 2018
The 400 Blows (1959)
Production error
For the first 98 minutes of the film’s runtime, still images appear in rapid succession, creating the illusion of movement and life. However, during minute 99, a single still image is shown repeatedly, ruining the effect.
Se7en (1995)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 8, 2018
Character error
Although John Doe (Kevin Spacey) intends to demonstrate the seven deadly sins, he only commits murders representing gluttony, greed, sloth, lust, pride, and envy, and never commits nor plans to commit a murder representing the seventh, wrath. pic.twitter.com/7uf5gIaDAu
(by @abigailb)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 8, 2018
Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018)
Continuity
The title characters vary in height between shots. Sometimes Ant-Man is taller, and sometimes the Wasp is taller.
Chasing Amy (1997)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 8, 2018
Plot hole
At the end of the movie, Holden (Ben Affleck) shows Alyssa (Joey Lauren Adams) an autobiographical comic book "Chasing Amy". The movie never explains how it was that Holden came to be chasing Amy, who was Silent Bob's (Kevin Smith) ex-girlfriend. pic.twitter.com/Mrhlhx0BLZ
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 8, 2018
Factual error
After Indiana Jones (Harrison Ford) reaches the submarine containing the ark, the next scene shows him, soaking wet, hiding in a base as the submarine arrives. But a human being couldn't outswim a submarine over such long distances. pic.twitter.com/P64I0Cgc5h
(by @HappyBob)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 8, 2018
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969)
Revealing mistake
After delivering the line "this never happened to the other fella", actor George Lazenby (George Lazenby) looks directly at the camera. pic.twitter.com/567SfyXSpy
(by @dlukenelson)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 7, 2018
Fight Club (1999)
Production error
The first and second rules of fight club are identical.
.@movie_goofs
— Ben W Dorwin (@benwdorwin) August 7, 2018
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
Production Error
While the film correctly portrays the historical significance of the Ark, the dimensions are the Ark itself are incorrect. In reality, the Ark shown in the film would be too small to carry two of every species. pic.twitter.com/JqLRwYDk81
@movie_goofs Jaws (1975) Character error. Mrs Kintner slaps Chief Brody and blames him for the death of her son, Alex. It was in fact the shark that was to blame for her son's death, not Chief Brody. pic.twitter.com/lAnD5Nry70
— Niall 🌵 (@NiallRetxab) August 7, 2018
(by @sargent and @amcnal)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 7, 2018
Jurassic Park (1993)
Factual error
Despite the instructions in the attraction's name, the attendees interact with it primarily by driving through it. pic.twitter.com/TXGOKe7r21
(adapted from @tombeckett2285)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 7, 2018
Jurassic Park (1993)
Factual error
The park is called "Jurassic Park", but the entrance gate is not actually a time-traveling portal that sends visitors back to the Jurassic period. pic.twitter.com/5TR0rk5a0J
(by @Slingertale)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 7, 2018
On Her Majesty's Secret Service (1969)
Character error
Despite knowing James Bond (Sean Connery) from previous movies in the franchise, M (Bernard Lee), Q (Desmond Llewelyn), and Moneypenny (Lois Maxwell) all mistakenly refer to George Lazenby as "James Bond".
(by @ROTPOTAsoktho)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 6, 2018
The Last Jedi (2017)
Character error
Poe Dameron (Oscar Isaac) repeatedly mispronounces General Hux's (Domhnall Gleeson) name as "General Hugs".
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 6, 2018
My Fair Lady (1964)
Error in geography
The rainiest parts of Spain are mountainous regions near the border with Portugal and the Atlantic Coast, neither of which are plains.
(by @sparrk)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 6, 2018
This is Spinal Tap (1984)
Not actually a goof
When Nigel (Christopher Guest) shows his amplifier to Marty (Rob Reiner), he says it is louder because it goes to 11. Marty offers a complicated theory in which 10 is just as loud as 11. In reality, 11 is louder than 10. pic.twitter.com/QHnXfJNz5b
(by @m_hum)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 6, 2018
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Production error
Although the movie was shot using color film, the first and last parts of the movie were only lit with sepia lights. pic.twitter.com/Vj8GnALSGj
(by @LODaveWade)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 6, 2018
Casablanca (1942)
Revealing mistakes
In every scene the actors are not actually in the city of Casablanca, Morocco, but instead are on studio stages that have been designed, painted, and decorated to resemble the building interiors and exteriors of Casablanca.
The Wizard of Speed and Time (1989)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 5, 2018
Character error
A song is sung with the lyrics "Happy birthday to you / Merry birthday to you / May all your good dreams [..]". The actual lyrics go "Happy birthday to you / You live in a zoo / You smell like a monkey / you look like one too".
(by @sixdegreesofcb)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 5, 2018
The Dark Knight (2008)
Character error
In the scene where he's interrogated by the Batman (Christian Bale), the Joker (Heath Ledger) gets Harvey Dent and Rachel's locations mixed up.
Let the Right One In (2008)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 5, 2018
Plot hole
At the end of the movie, Oskar (Kåre Hedebrant) is riding on a train with a box. It is never explained what is in the box or what happened to Eli (Lina Leandersson).
Thor: Ragnarok (2017)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 4, 2018
Production error
The credits for Thor: Ragnarok incorrectly state that the character of Odin is played by Anthony Hopkins. In reality, Odin is played by Loki Odinson (Tom Hiddleston).
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 4, 2018
There Will Be Blood (2007)
Character error
Contrary to Daniel Plainview's claims, it would be extremely hard if not impossible to drink someone's milkshake through a straw that reaches all the way across the room. pic.twitter.com/9twe7DOV8s
Ocean's Twelve (2004)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 4, 2018
Character error
In one scene Bruce Willis mistakenly refers to Tess Ocean (Julia Roberts) by the actress' name, "Julia".
(by @aubreyclayton)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 3, 2018
Vertigo (1958)
Crew or equipment visible
Director Alfred Hitchcock is briefly visible onscreen in the shot of Scottie (James Stewart) arriving at Elster’s shipyard. pic.twitter.com/qyH7YSiFUg
Jesus Christ Superstar (1973)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 3, 2018
Anachronism
Israel in 4 B.C. had no tanks or submachine guns.
Whiplash (2014)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 3, 2018
Plot hole
After Andrew (Miles Teller) leaves the stage because he doesn't know the music and can't play it properly, he almost immediately comes back out again and is able to play the music perfectly. The movie never explains how he learned the music so quickly.
Star Wars (1977)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 2, 2018
Factual error
After Luke (Mark Hamill) wears a helmet with a blast shield, he's able to defend against a remote with his laser sword. In reality, once his eyes were covered, Luke would not have been able to see as well as before and would have done worse. pic.twitter.com/Noq06bQVRf
@movie_goofs The Princess Bride (1987)
— Siobhan (@notphonetic) July 28, 2018
Editing error
When Buttercup is in the water with the shrieking eels , the scene restarts and you can hear Peter Falk's voice reading Buttercup's and Vizzini's dialogue.
(by @nhopkin and @movie_goofs)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 2, 2018
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
Factual error
The ape civilization seems to advance from passive plant gatherers to tool-using hunters in a single day. In reality this advance would take millennia.
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 2, 2018
Royal Wedding (1951)
Plot hole
It is never explained how Fred Astaire’s character is able to dance on the ceiling during "You're All The World To Me". In reality, gravity would cause you to fall to the floor.
(by @aubreyclayton)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 2, 2018
Speed (1994)
Factual error
For the vast majority of the film’s runtime, no passengers ever get on or off the bus. In reality, buses must frequently discharge old passengers and pick up new ones. pic.twitter.com/fChx7vmQXQ
Lost in Translation (2003)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 2, 2018
Production error
Human actress Scarlett Johansson does not convincingly portray a Japanese person.
Planet of the Apes (1968)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 1, 2018
Continuity
Even though Charlton Heston's character is named Taylor, Dr. Zira (Kim Hunter) can occasionally be heard calling him "Bright Eyes". pic.twitter.com/Qwkn2yLPcr
(adapted from @sckhko)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 1, 2018
Groundhog Day (1993)
Production error
After the movie was released it could be seen in theaters on every succeeding day for several months, not, as implied by the movie, only on February 2, 1993.
Pretty in Pink (1986)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) August 1, 2018
Production error
After the story ends with Duckie (Jon Cryer) getting the girl, taking Andie (Molly Ringwald) to the prom, the movie incorrectly includes some additional footage which can be misinterpreted as Blane (Andrew McCarthy) winning Andie back.
Planet of the Apes (1968)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
Plot hole
It is never explained how or why the Statue of Liberty was transported from Earth to the planet of the apes.
(adapted from @TooMuchKarate)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
Marley and Me (2008)
Incorrectly regarded as goofs
Bruce Willis does not appear in the movie.
(by @AndyMyers101)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
Inception (2010)
Production error
In all currently available releases of the movie, the final few seconds of the final scene are missing.
Cabin in the Woods (2012)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
Crew or equipment visible
After Curt (Chris Hemsworth) collides with the invisible wall, the wall is visible in some shots.
(by @euan_burns)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
The Shining (1980)
Production error
In some shots it is possible to see that the pages Jack Torrance (Jack Nicholson) has written for his novel actually just have a "lorem ipsum"-style sentence repeated over-and-over.
Big (1988)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goofs
The changing appearance of Josh (David Moscow & Tom Hanks) is not a mistake. Switching between two actors in the same role has a rich history in avant-garde cinema such as Mulholland Dr. (2001) and That Obscure Object of Desire (1977).
(by @JOHNTULLAR)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
Amélie (2001)
Audio/visual unsynchronized
The characters speak in the French language, but the words which are displayed at the bottom of the screen to show what they are saying are written in English.
The Terminator (1984)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 31, 2018
Audio/visual unsynchronized
During a phone conversation, the Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) is seen moving his mouth, but the voice of Sarah Connor's mother is heard instead.
Jaws (1975)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 30, 2018
Revealing mistake
After Brody (Roy Scheider) says they will need a bigger boat to catch the shark, you can see in the following shots they're actually still on the same boat.
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 30, 2018
Die Hard (1988)
Error in geography
The movie is set in Los Angeles (which is in California), yet John McClane is supposed to be an NYPD officer. The NYPD is in New York City, which is in the state of New York, which is on the opposite end of the United States.
Spartacus (1960)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 30, 2018
Plot hole
In the scene where the Romans try to locate the rebel leader Spartacus in the captured slave army, most of the other slaves also identify themselves as being named "Spartacus". The movie never explains this coincidence.
(by @sckhko)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 30, 2018
Erin Brockovich (2000)
Continuity
The character played by Julia Roberts has no legal training. However, seven years earlier she was in her 3rd year of law school in The Pelican Brief (1993).
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 30, 2018
Continuity
In one opening scene, Indiana Jones steps carefully, only touching certain parts of the floor so as to avoid setting off traps. However, at the end of the scene you can see him leaving without exercising any care about where he steps.
Dogville (2003)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 30, 2018
Revealing mistakes
It is raining at the beginning of Chapter One. However, despite the fact that none of the buildings have roofs, nobody gets wet.
(by @clayzulah)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Boyhood (2014)
Revealing mistakes
Several characters appear to visibly age by many years between scenes because the actors portraying them had actually aged that much.
Terminator 2
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Revealing mistakes
In a deleted scene, Linda Hamilton's character holds a power tool to a port in the head of Arnold Schwarzenegger's Terminator with her right hand, but her "reflection" in the "mirror" holds the tool in her left hand.https://t.co/dA9B6izko6
Drive (2011)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Incorrectly regarded as goofs
The lyrics of the song "A Real Hero" appear to assert that Driver has "proved to be a real human being", which is false, as Driver is a fictional human being. However, Driver is played by Ryan Gosling, who is in fact a real human being.
(by @rygorous)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
The Muppets Take Manhattan (1984)
Revealing mistakes
When Gonzo is thrown out of a production company's office during "You Can't Take No for an Answer", his arms flop around in anatomically-impossible ways, revealing the shot was filmed using a lifeless dummy.
Take the Money and Run (1969)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Factual error
Virgil (Woody Allen) plays cello in a marching band. The cello is not an instrument played in marching bands.
Star Wars (1977)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Revealing mistakes
Although the opening text declares the movie is about "a galaxy far, far away", scenes are obviously shot using normal movie lenses and not with the extremely long telescopic lens that would actually be necessary to film events so far away.
Stop Making Sense (1984)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Costume error
During the song "Girlfriend is Better", David Byrne wears a suit that distractingly obviously does not fit him properly.
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World (2010)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Continuity
When Scott Pilgrim walks into the coffee shop, his head is uncovered, but once he starts having a conversation with Envy Adams he's wearing a hat.
Blade Runner (1982)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 29, 2018
Character error
Several characters call Deckard (Harrison Ford) a "Blade Runner", but he uses a gun not a blade, and he is a police officer not a smuggler. (by @natecull)
@movie_goofs 2001: A Space Odyssey (1968)
— Fabian Giesen (@rygorous) July 27, 2018
Audio/visual mismatch
When Dave and Frank are talking about turning off HAL, in the shot after the extreme close-up on HAL's "eye", the two astronauts are shown to be speaking but no voices are audible.
Dr Strangelove, or: How I learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 28, 2018
Continuity
The movie intercuts between supposedly-simultaneous events at Burpleson Air Force Base in the Western US and the War Room in Washington DC, but actor Peter Sellers is visible in both places.
Blade Runner 2049 (2017)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 28, 2018
Factual error
This is only the second movie in the Blade Runner franchise. (by @KarlWalmarx)
Saving Private Ryan (1998)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 28, 2018
Plot hole
Multiple soldiers give their lives to save the life of private Ryan (Matt Damon), despite the fact that Ryan is doomed to die anyway in the next fifty to seventy years. (by @woodmuffin)
Back to the Future (1985)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 28, 2018
Anachronism
Marty McFly drives a DeLorean DMC-12 in 1955, but the DeLorean was first manufactured in 1981. (inspired by @citizen_sane)
Notorious (1946)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 28, 2018
Plot hole
The movie repeatedly cuts to a dwindling set of champagne bottles to create tension about what will happen when none are left. However, there is no actual tension as the movie repeatedly shows there are plenty more bottles in the wine cellar.
@movie_goofs The Messenger: The Story of Joan of Arc (1999)
— Fabian Giesen (@rygorous) July 27, 2018
Anachronism
The titular character is shown riding with the French army. The French armed service branches only allowed women to enlist in 1939, several years after the time the story is set in.
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (1981 TV series)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 27, 2018
Factual error
"What do you get when you multiply six by nine" gives fifty-four, not forty-two.
Fight Club (1999)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 27, 2018
Character error
The bartender in Seattle calls Edward Norton's character "Tyler Durden", the name of Brad Pitt's character. (by @hotmultimedia)
The Matrix (1999)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 27, 2018
Visual inconsistency
When Morpheus holds out the pill to Neo, the reflection of the pill in his sunglasses' right eye is red, while the reflection of the pill in his left eye is blue, but the sunglasses do not have colored lenses.
Under the Skin (2013)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 27, 2018
Revealing mistakes
When Scarlett Johansson asks multiple Scottish men for directions, none of them notice or react to the fact that they're talking to famous American actress Scarlett Johansson, revealing that they are actually actors following a script.
North by Northwest (1959)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 27, 2018
Revealing mistakes
At the end of the movie, when Cary Grant's character pulls Eva Marie Saint's character up from dangling off Mount Rushmore, the following reverse shot of him lifting her reveals that they're actually in a train.
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 27, 2018
Revealing mistakes
In the two scenes where Yu Shu Lien and Li Mu Bai respectively chase Jen Yu across rooftops, their feet frequently don't make any contact with the roofs they're supposedly running on top of.
Fight Club (1999)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 26, 2018
Continuity
In the car crash scene, Tyler is driving and Edward Norton's character is in the passenger seat, but after the car flips over, Tyler crawls out of the passenger's side and pulls Norton's character out of the driver's seat.
Rashomon (1950)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 26, 2018
Continuity
The scene of the murder is shown multiple times from different viewpoints, but the actual events shown each time are incompatibly different.
The Dark Knight (2008)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 26, 2018
Factual error
When driving, Batman's motorcycle ("Batpod") makes a sound that continually rises in pitch endlessly. This is impossible, since the human auditory system has only a limited range of pitches which are audible.
Black Dynamite (2009)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Crew or equipment visible
When Honey Bee tells Black Dynamite about Bucky OD'ing, the microphone boom is visible after Black Dynamite stands up.
@movie_goofs The Godfather (1972)
— Fabian Giesen (@rygorous) July 25, 2018
Continuity
In the scene where character Peter Clemenza says "Luca Brasi sleeps with the fishes", Luca Brasi is actually dead.
Avengers: Infinity War (2018)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Continuity
Many Asgardian characters are shown to be dead at the very beginning of the movie. However, at the end of the previous movie in the continuity, Thor: Ragnarok, all of these characters were still alive.
The Wizard of Oz (1939)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Factual errors
A person caught in a tornado would be killed by debris or by being thrown by the tornado, and would not, as shown in the movie, be transported to the land of Oz.
Smokey and the Bandit (1977)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Continuity
Although the title of the movie is "Smokey and the Bandit", the movie is about two characters whose CB handles are Snowman and the Bandit.
Cabin in the Woods (2012)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Factual errors
In the "monster breakout scene", none of the monsters which are shown rampaging through the facility actually exist.
Her (2013)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Revealing mistakes
The voice of the operating system Samantha is not performed by a computer or speech synthesizer, but by human actress Scarlett Johansson.
F is For Fake (1973)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Crew or equipment visible
The film crew and film camera are very visible center frame in multiple scenes.
Austin Powers: International Man of Mystery (1997)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Factual Errors
After awaking from deep freeze, Austin Powers urinates for a very long time. However, no human has a bladder large enough to store that much urine.
Star Wars (1977)
— movie_goofs (@movie_goofs) July 25, 2018
Continuity
Ben Kenobi says that Luke's father is dead. Throughout the rest of the movie we see that Luke's father is alive and well.