| |
- During the night scenes, the 20s style
gangster car is shown driving in traffic
among 60s style automobiles. The setting
is suppose to be during the roaring 20s.
- pat
- In the opening of the movie there is a
shot of Manhattan from the Brooklyn docks
and across the river you can see the twin
towers which were not built yet as the movie
take place much earlier. - marty
-
(Spoiler)
At the end after Adam pulls the mask off
to reveal the killer he and Kate see that
it is Dorothy. Well does that mean that
Dorothy was the killer? Or was it Adam?
We may never know. - Kim/Raymond
-
(Spoiler)
Correction: The confusion about
the killer really confuses me. See Jeremy
Melton supposedly gets revenge against
the girls that humiliated him at the
valentine's dance in junior high by
sending them cards and stuff. Well shouldn't
he be the killer then? This is Adam
by the way who changed his name and
appearance and is dating Kate. Why in
the world would it be Dorothy which
was one of the girls he's getting back
at. It just wouldn't make any sense
if she was the killer. I mean why would
she want to kill her own friends? Well
what happens at the end is really creepy.
You'll have to see the movie to find
out. The killer could possibly be Adam.
I'll never know. - Raymond
-
(Spoiler)
Explanation:
To clear up the "whodunit?"
fiasco, I will help you...JM did the
killing, he was the little boy everyone
laughed at in the beginning, everyone
but Kate. She told him "maybe later"
when he asked her to dance, that is
why he was so in love with her and he
killed everyone else. Dot (Dorothy)
just fell down the stairs onto Kate,
so she could have been already dying
then before he shot her. So there you
have it, JM was the killer, was the
drunk boyfriend with the bloody nose
who didn't kill Kate because she didn't
diss him in front of everyone at the
dance. Retarded huh? - Mad
- No more comments on this
subject - it's not really goof-material.
- I'm not really sure if this is a goof or
not. But in the scene where Lily and Max are
kissing in the hall. The woman named Amy walks
up and sees them kissing. Now who is this
woman anyway? Is she Max's ex or previous
girlfriend or something? He never mentions
that at all. He just says "That's Amy".
Plus Lily saw her earlier in the previous
scene and doesn't say nothing. (DVD) - Kim/Raymond
- In the scene where the prostitute bites
----- in the neck, you can see where he
is going to be bit beforehand because the
area is really wrinkly and shiny. - David
|
- In the beginning of the movie in
his dream he leaves in his Porsche,
you can clearly see a what looks like
a yellow Porsche seal on the car.
When he wakes up he leaves in the
same car, but there no seal on the
car! - Chubb's
- Correction:
I watched the movie and in his
dream he had a Porsche but in
reality he has a 67 Mustang. -
Chubb's
- Correction:
It is not a Porsche it is a Ferrari.
- larz
- Look closely at the part where Cameron
Diaz and Cruise are in the car driving
and she drives it off the bridge.
If you look close enough (slow mo)
there seems to be no one in the car.
What a goof. (VHS) - PixieShaq
- Addition:
Yup,
when I saw this movie in the theatre,
I noticed the same thing. You
can see it without slow motion.
|
|
- (Crew/equipment visible) The scene,
where car comes to red lights (don't
remember who's driving) you can see
cameraman and the whole crew, reflecting
from glass of the car. (DVD) - gainsb
- (Misc.) In the scene where Tom Cruise
first goes to Penelope Cruz's apartment
and she is showing him the pictures
on her fridge, if you look at it in
slow motion you can see the ex-boyfriend
balls are hanging out of his shorts.
(DVD) - michelle
|
-
All through the movie,
the Dodge Challenger that Kowalski is
driving sports Chrysler factory "road"
wheels. - Travis
v.
- During the final crash scene, though,
the wheels have mysteriously changed to
a cheaper chrome reverse style! I guess
they wanted to save money! (Of course, several
versions of the car were actually used in
the movie).
- Addition:
It has been pointed out that the 1970
Challenger changes wheels for the end
crash. But what happens is not a wheel-change,
but a whole car-change. It is easily
visible on screen. It's common knowledge
among Challenger fans that the car wrecked
at the end of the film is a 1967 Chevy
Camaro. - Miked
- In one of the scenes of Kowalski in the
desert (close-up), he appears to be driving
a right hand drive Dodge Challenger ! (VHS)
- Amar
Haddadi
- (Continuity) In the last crash scene were
the Challenger is destroyed it is not a
Challenger at all, instead it is a 67-69
Camaro. When you see the hood come flying
off you can clearly see the change. This
was done to save the Challenger, Camaros
were a lot cheaper. (VHS) - monte
j.
- (Audio/visual unsynchronised) Van tells
Taj to play a Barry White song when he is
with a girl to get her in the mood. When the
scene comes around where Taj is with the girl,
"Stumblin' In" by Susie Quatro and
Chris Norman is playing in the background
and the girl says, "I like that music."
and Taj says, "It is the White, Barry."
But Barry White was never played in that scene.
(DVD) - lkw
- When Darcy comes out in her whip cream
bikini, she kisses Mox. Some whip cream
gets on his shirt, then when they show his
shirt again there is no whip cream there.
- Liz
- When the football players go out to the
strip club, how did they get in? They are
only 18. And how did they drink? Why did
they go on a Thursday night when they had
a game on the next Friday? (the next night)
If they were smart, they would have did
it on the next Saturday. - TommyLee
- Comment:
I'm not about to defend this movie,
but I thought strip clubs were for 18+.
Speaking of underage drinking though,
they didn't seem to have trouble acquiring
beer at that convenience spot - and
how come there was no punishment for
stealing a cop car (and even running
the lights and siren!) - and how come
they made this stupid movie anyway?!?
"I give it a ten" ... minus
the ten! - Andrew
- Comment:
I agree! The movie itself is a goof
that deserves to be slapped silly!
- JP
- Comment:
This entire town was built around the
high school football team, they were
all considered heroes. That's why when
they get into the club, the waitress
tells them that the drinks are on the
house- obviously she knew who they were
and they were getting preferential treatment
for being football players. Same with
the cop car. - Jessica
- Explanation:
In small towns like the
one in Varsity blues, Football is
life to them, hence the billboard
with their sons on it. The kids
can pretty much do whatever, and
everyone knows everyone else , for
instance... stealing cop cars, and
getting drinks at a strip club or
getting liquor instead of pop is
simply overlooked by the people
of the city. The whole going to
the strip club the night before
their game was part of the plot
giving a reason to why they played
like crap. (DVD) - ligaguini
- Correction:
You people are so fucking
retarded!!! Ever heard of fake
ID's???? Also, easily getting
beer, not getting punished for
stealing the car and other things
were deliberate you morons!!!!The
point of the movie was to emphasize
the pressure and grim reality
of what American football can
be like!!!It was also to show
what Americans think of the
great game, meaning they take
it very seriously.The players
know this and take advantage
of it, thus you have an absence
of penalty when they commit
crimes among other things!!!!
This isn't even a hard movie
to analyze, what the fuck is
a matter with you dumbasses?!?!?!?!
- Jag
- When the coach is yell at James Van Der
Beek (John) he has his hand on the face
mask from the bottom coming up, then in
the next scene his hand is holding the mask
from the top down. - grant
- Eddie (Quaid) takes Clark (Chase) to the
casino buffet for dinner. As they fill their
dish with food, Clark tells the server behind
the buffet table that the chicken and beef
dishes are labeled incorrectly. The server
then switches the tags, placing them in
each dish. In the next scene he repeats
the switch. - Da King
- In a scene at Wayne Newton's house when
Wayne and Ellen (Beverly D'Angelo) are eating
pasta and Clark (Chevy Chase) comes crashing
through the wall, Ellen throws her pasta
into the air. In one frame she has pasta
on her shoulder and nowhere else, in the
next frame she has pasta on her shoulder
and her head. - Ranee
- When Rusty first gets his fake ID, he
plays a slot machine that costs 25 cents.
He put in a quarter, and he won the grand
prize (the car). At the end of the movie,
when he explains to his dad how he won all
of the cars, he says, "I put in a dollar,
I won a car." (Or something to that
effect.) Perhaps he forgot the details of
the story from all the partying he did?
=) - Janice
-
Madame Blueberry's hair
changes color from blonde to black for no
particular reason. - Cathy
- In the scene where Scottie and Judy are
driving to the mission, if you look in the
background, you can tell that they are driving
on the left side of the road. I'm pretty sure
you have to drive on the right side in california.
(VHS) - whodi
- When driving to the mission they are on
a divided road. The other part is the south
road is a split road you can't see it . (VHS)
- AL
Fleischer
- Also they are driving north and they were
coming from San Francisco. The mission is
San Juan Batista. They would be coming from
Salinas going north. (VHS) - AL
Fleischer
- After the rescue crew reached the end of
the train in the subway and saw the lava coming
at them, the leader said he had to find the
driver before they could leave. But they were
already at the end of the train, where else
could he be? Hadn't they already searched
the rest of the train? - Jeanne
- When they are trying to find a way to stop
the lava from going in to the museum, Tommy
Lee Jones has an idea to push a bus up against
the museum to divert the lava. The plan works
but the lava does not melt the bus like it
melted the Tommy Lee Jones' car or the firetruck.
- Da
King
- When the co-star Anne Heche goes to check
out the flow of the lava in the red line tunnel
she goes to a payphone and calls Tommy Lee
Jones' cellphone but his cell phone burned
up in his car. The phone she calls him on
is a phone that he took from a news reporter.
So how did she get his number to call him.
- Da King
- When they are trying to stop the lava from
flowing down the street, they make a "U"
shape in the street with the cement highway
dividers. If they had laid the dividers the
other way, they would have supported themselves,
and not need the trucks behind to hold them.
- Da King
- Near the beginning there is a train pulling
into (out of?) the subway station and you
can see the reflection of the cameraman and
his camera in the glass of the train. - Da
King
- In the scene where they are allowing the
lava to pool, all of the firefighters are
in heavy gear, while the reporters are not.
The heat from the lava should have been so
intense that they would have been heavily
burned from it. - Da King
- When the crew finds the subway car being
overrun by lava, the leader of the crew (forget
his name) resuces the conductor by jumping
into the lava and throwing the guy. For one,
the guy must be adreneline-pumped because
he threw a hefty guy. Secondly, he jumped
into lava, which should have caught him on
fire and consumed him (and the guy he was
carrying) pretty dang quickly. Thirdly, if
the lava was in the tunnel with them, the
heat would have been too much for the crew
to handle. - Kraken
- The aircraft in World War 1 were constructed
of wood or metal tubing covered with fabric.
In this movie the mockups that crash or burn
are clearly made of plywood or cardboard.
- Olav Westerman
- The Royal Canadian Flying Corps squadron
that Brown belonged to in real life flew Sopwith
Camels and not S.E.5a:s as in the movie, and
Richthofen wasn't the only pilot in his Flying
Circus who flew a Fokker DR1 Dreidekker, but
the movie-company had to manage with the aircraft
replicas they could get hold on, since the
budget didn't allow them to build new ones.
- Olav Westerman
- When one of the main characters (most people
probably know who) is shot down, the plane
lands without getting damaged. In real life
it got damaged, even if it wasn't totally
wrecked. - Olav Westerman
|
|
|