One more, if anyone's interested.

In "The Man Who Loved Cat Dancing" (a title which, to this day, still
perplexes me, BTB -- any intel on the origins of it would be greatly
appreciated), there's a scene in which Burt Reynolds' character kills an
Indian by holding him face-down in a creek. Aside from the fact that he
doesn't hold the guy under nearly long enough (takes at least a minute, last
time I looked), the following scene, meant to be the day after, begins with
a long pan shot of the creek, showing the Indian's body moving slightly
(head and right leg).

On Mon, Mar 29, 2010 at 6:35 AM, Martin Baxter <martinbaxt...@gmail.com>wrote:

> Found a couple more yesterday.
>
> In "Dangerous Ground", there's a scene in which Liz Hurley's character goes
> to a window in an apartment and takes off her shoes, in order to climb out
> and walk the ledge to get into an next-door apartment, while Ice Cube waits
> outside. A few seconds after she gets in, there's shouting, and a man bursts
> out of the apartment, Liz on his heels.
>
> She's wearing kitten-heel patent leather boots.
>
> I thought that she might've taken the time to put them on once she got
> inside, as she did have the time. But, in the shot immediately following, as
> she goes back into the second apartment with Cube, she's barefooted again.
>
> The other was from one of Keith's must-sees, the M Bay Epic "Pearl Harbor"
> [?][?][?] In it, Josh Hartnett and Ben Affleck's characters are, after Pearl
> Harbor, promoted to captain, yet they continue to wear 1st-lieutenant's
> bars. Only near the end, after Hartnett's character dies and Affleck's
> returns to pearl, is Affleck seen wearing captain's bars.
>
> On Sat, Mar 27, 2010 at 4:51 PM, Martin Baxter <martinbaxt...@gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Caught one not long after replying to this.
>>
>> I was watching "Flash Point", and there's a scene in a hospital, when one
>> of the cops has been brought in after being five-ironed by an SUV driven by
>> the Big Bad. His girlfriend comes racing in, and begins whaling on the
>> co[p's partner, thinking him to be a Triad guy. When she begins to do so,
>> she's makeup-free. After the captain pulls her off him, she's done to H'Wood
>> red-carpet perfection.
>>
>> On Sat, Mar 27, 2010 at 3:06 PM, angelababycat <asrobin...@mindspring.com
>> > wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Good call. The other error in that scene, however, is that a rich guy
>>> who's up to something wouldn't have a security guard to stop the dude from
>>> getting to the front door in the first place.
>>>
>>> But more direct to your question:
>>> - There's an scene early in Children of Men where the main character is
>>> talking to that old hippie guy. He's sitting on the sofa holding a
>>> sleeping/very relaxed cat. The frame quickly switches to the hippie as he
>>> says something, then quickly back to our main man. The cat is now sleep in a
>>> different place and facing the opposite way. I may not be remembering it
>>> absolutely correctly, but whatever detail it was that changed, it really
>>> stood out that two different takes had been spliced together for that scene.
>>>
>>> - What was that movie from about 5 yrs ago about black plant workers at a
>>> chemical factory in Africa? Good movie, but all I remember is that in one
>>> scene the address number on the guy's shanty house is backwards, as in a
>>> mirror image. Why? Probably because the driver of the car in front of the
>>> house is headed to the factory which the audience already knows is down the
>>> road to the left of the screen. But the car must have originally headed
>>> screen right, so they flipped the frame to make the car go in the right
>>> direction.
>>>
>>> I'd have to think of others.
>>>
>>> --- In scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com <scifinoir2%40yahoogroups.com>, "Mr.
>>> Worf" <hellomahog...@...> wrote:
>>> >
>>> > I am watching this week's episode of Flashforward and there are a
>>> couple of
>>> > glaring errors that I found in this episode. Nothing to do with the
>>> overly
>>> > fantastic premise of the series so far, but simple mistakes that stuck
>>> out.
>>> >
>>> > In this week's episode the father of the war vet goes seeking
>>> information
>>> > from a rich guy who seems to be up to something. He drives over to the
>>> rich
>>> > guy's house and turns off the power. A moment later, he goes to the
>>> door of
>>> > the house and presses the doorbell. If there is no electricity in the
>>> house
>>> > (which they showed) how could the doorbell work?
>>> >
>>> > Have you caught any logic errors like this on the shows you watch or in
>>> > movies that you have seen?
>>>
>>> >
>>> > --
>>> > Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
>>> > Mahogany at:
>>> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/
>>> >
>>>
>>>  
>>>
>>
>>
>

<<338.gif>>

<<4F4.gif>>

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