Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

Movie Bloopers

I Know What You Did Last Summer

How could the killer break through the metal door with all those locks on it on the ship and not be able to lift the gate that Julie was holding shut?

How did Helen get lost in her own workplace? She cornered herself in a dead end!

How does the killer move so quickly? Helen is walking towards the front of the store when the lights go out. When she turns around, though, the killer is wrapped up in a plastic covering and jumps out at her.

How did the killer drag a dead body across a street with a parade, get to the ship to put all his "gear" away, and still be ready for Ray when he comes running?

How does Ray get knocked out in the head when the killer is shorter than him? Ray doesn't bend over; the killer doesn't have time to put his hand that far up.

Wouldn't the trunk of Julie's car smell rancid, even though the killer was very cunning? There's no way the smell of a decaying body in a trunk full of maggots and worms could be extinguished in less than five minutes!

Okay, this one isn't really a blooper, but I wanna know this-- Why is the movie so different from the book?

Why did the killer keep the bodies of Helen, Barry, Max, and Elsa in the first place?

Titanic

In the scene when Jack and Rose are running away from Cal and enter the dining room (which is underwater at 1:00 A.M), light is coming in through the windows! Is that possible?

In the same scene, when Jack and Rose run down the ship (into the part that is in the water), the get out of the water. So there's water on the top of the ship, but not in the part that is actually IN the ocean!

The third class mother who is tucking her children in and reading them a story, supposedly dies quickly (because of her position on the ship. Her children would then, also, die. But then why do they appear later on the deck when the ship has nearly vanished, scrambling to get on a life boat? The same with the two old people comforting each other. They seem to have given up and just lay there, watching the water rising. But, again, you can see them again when the ship is going under, only the first floor remaining above water!

In the scene in which Jack and Rose are looking out into the water and the sky, something crashes into the bluescreen. You can tell, because you hear a slight, very quiet "thump" and the sky sort of protudes towards the two on the ship.

When Rose's mother is tying Rose up, she stops to talk to her, nearly finshed tying. When she stops talking and returns to tying Rose up, she starts all over again at the bottom.

When the guards are searching for Jack and Rose under the deck, they are carrying torches. According to some research, torches weren't even invented in 1912.

Why was the sun hitting the side of the ship while it was setting? The Titanic was heading west from the east. The sun would be setting out in the front of the ship.

When the one ship came back for passengers and the man yelled out, "Can anyone hear me?", there was an echo. But what did his voice echo off of? Certainly not the ship, and the iceburg was miles away!

Rose gave her bodyguard the finger as her and her run-around partner went down in the elevator. Two things wrong with this- One: The finger wasn't even "invented" until World War II, so how could Rose use it? Two: Even if the finger was around, Rose surely wouldn't know what it meant? According to the movie, Rose was a high-class, fancy, rich girl. Meaning she didn't know any sort of slang or utter rudeness used by Jack and his kind. So unless Jack had quickly taught her all these swears and curses, Rose couldn't have known. She more likely would have given the guard a two-finger wave (an insult in that time).

Shown in Rose's room was the water-lily painting by Monet. We did some research finding this- that particular painting wasn't even started yet, much less up for sale.

The Statue of Liberty's torch wasn't even lit with flame until late 50's, so how could they be lit in 1912?

When Jack and his friends are looking out at the dolphins, they are the wrong kind. The Titanic was sailing on the Atlantic, but the dolphins were from the Pacific.

Rose breaks the fire emergency box to get an ax. The glass is shattered to tiny pieces and are scattered all over the floor. When the camera hits a different angle, Rose is standing in front of the emergency box, the glass intact.

When Rose is talking to her mom, she's wearing a necklace. When seen in the next sequence, talking to Jack, she is not.

Homepage

Email: truechica@hotmail.com