Audience Spots 12 Big Film Errors Missed by Professionals

Movies
7 months ago

Numerous costume designers and visual stylists collaborate in the filmmaking process, meticulously crafting character aesthetics and ensuring that attire aligns with the respective historical periods depicted on screen. However, even seasoned experts are prone to occasional oversights, while some directors may purposefully ignore these minor inaccuracies.

Princess Diana never wore Chanel because the intertwined C’s reminded her of Charles and Camilla.

Lara Croft: Tomb Raider

© Lara Croft: Tomb Raider / Paramount Pictures and co-producers, Robert Bertoia/ Everett Collection / East News

In the scene where Lara Croft comes out of the water, we clearly see a translucent dark spot visible from under her makeup. It’s Angelina Jolie’s famous tattoo that makeup artists tried to hide.

The Edge of Love

In one of the scenes where the main characters are fooling around and lifting their legs up, we can see flesh-colored shapewear on Keira Knightley. However, the flick takes place in the ’40s, a time when tights, as we know them, haven’t even been invented yet.

Dirty Dancing

Despite the fact that the movie takes place in the ’60s, the costumes and the appearance of the main characters correspond to the ’80s way more. Jennifer Grey’s character walks around with free-flowing hair, while Patrick Swayze gives preference to the mullet hairstyle, which would become trendy a bit later.

The Vikings

In the flick, Janet Leigh’s character wears a strapless, cone-shaped bra, which totally corresponds to the fashion of the ’50s. However, they hardly knew about the existence of such a thing in early medieval Scandinavian society.

Emma

As a rule, the coifs popular in the nineteenth century were worn outside. In order to prevent the headgear from flying off in the wind, its ribbons were tied under the chin. But in the movie, we see a totally different situation. The hat’s ribbons on the main character in the recent on-screen version of Emma are either tied weakly or are about to become untied — yet the girl manages to miraculously keep the coif on her head.

The Virgin Queen

Over the course of the entire series, Tom Hardy’s character keeps appearing in an open doublet which, at those times, was comparable to an unzipped fly in modern times in terms of the degree of indecency.

One Million Years B.C.

Studiocanal Films Ltd / Mary Evans Picture Library / East News, East News

The action of this movie unfolds in a fictional prehistoric era — the characters have to survive while fighting with giant insects, dinosaurs, and lizards. While men, more or less, correspond to our idea of what our ancestors looked like, the women in the movie actually look quite funny with their plucked eyebrows, beautifully styled hair, perfect makeup, and smooth skin.

Marie-Antoinette

In the movie, servants bring Marie Antoinette incredibly beautiful mules, and we can notice a significant difference between the left and right shoes. But the queen died in 1793, long before a “pair of shoes” was created, and moreover, long before they started to use different templates for left and right parts of shoes. Of course, this movie also intentionally gave the queen a pair of blue Converse shoes in her collection to emphasize her as a young girl trying to find her place in the world.

Troy

The female characters in the movie are gorgeous, but there are some inaccuracies in this movie as well. In those days, Greek women would gather their hair in a bun after marriage, but in the movie, the actresses appear with loose curls.

Easy Virtue

The costume designers of this flick missed one important fact when creating the costumes. The plot takes place in the ’20s, the last decade where young men’s silhouettes boasted straight designs without waistlines, lacking any hint of a neckline. In order to correspond to the androgynous image, women would wear special underwear. However, the movie’s creators focused on Jessica Biel’s body shape and put tight outfits on her.

In the movie Death on the Nile, Gal Gadot’s character wears a necklace with a yellow “Tiffany Diamond.”

This valuable gem, one of the world’s largest and priciest diamonds, was unearthed in 1877. Despite its discovery, it wasn’t fashioned into a necklace until 1957, even though the related film is set in 1937.

Here are a few more blunders that attentive viewers noticed but filmmakers and costume designers overlooked.

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