By on April 28, 2008

csi-miami_02.jpgThere's a rich tradition of cinematic misinterpretations where the automobile is concerned. Some of the classics include Tom Cruise downshifting to win the race in Days of Thunder. Or in Back to the Future where the entire plot revolves around a DeLoreon getting to 88 mph under its own power. As Garfield would say, "Fat chance." Our own Frank Williams just caught an excellent one, "A few weeks ago on CSI Miami, they tracked down a hit and run driver by the impression of a partial license plate in the victim's briefcase (stamped there by the impact) and the diesel fuel the vehicle leaked. When they tracked down the vehicle, it was a Dodge Charger and they CSI guys still referred to it as a diesel." Not in Miami, Mr. Caruso. You seen any good ones?

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72 Comments on “QOTD: What’s Your Favorite Movie/TV Automotive Flub?...”


  • avatar
    andyinsdca

    Does the green VW Beetle in the chase in Bullitt that shows up in every single frame count? (the chase still kick ass in any event)

  • avatar
    thalter

    Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: In all the driving scenes at the beginning of the movie, the Chevrolet convertible is clearly in park (the column shifter is all the way up in the top position). Obviously the car was being pulled/trailered for while they were doing the filming.

    All time best – the magically regenerating hubcaps in Bullitt.

  • avatar

    When Brian Spilner shifts his eclipse into the 8th gear in F&F1

  • avatar
    william442

    Bullitt’s Mustang being able to keep up with the Charger.Didn’t anybody go to drag races back then?

  • avatar
    seoultrain

    The entire final sequence in Bad Boys was full of engine revving and down-shifting when the chase was pretty much in an open lot, and the cars ran in a straight line. Typical Michael Bay..

  • avatar
    matt

    I get the feeling that we’re going to have a lot of references to actors having a magic 9 spd transmission shifting and downshifting 17 times.

  • avatar
    steronz

    Andy:

    You could probably write a book about flubs in the F&F series. My favorites:

    When they pop the hood on the beat-up Supra and gasp in amazement at the fact that it’s a 2JZ (they all were).
    The entire 3rd movie where people race while drifting.
    Blowing the welds on the intake manifold (?), and the floorboard falling out of the car (?).

    I also want to add every scene in every movie and show where a car jumps more than 2 feet into the air and is somehow still driveable after impact.

  • avatar
    210delray

    At the local film festival last fall, there was a documentary about a Swarthmore College on-campus murder that occurred in early 1955. Trouble is, in a grainy black-and-white flashback showing the attacker leaving his mother’s home to do the deed, he drives off in a 1956 Chevy!

  • avatar
    Jeffer

    My all-time favorite car movie “American Graffiti” has the race scene betwen John Milner’s car and the bad-ass ’55 Chevy. When the Chevy rolls, there is a piece of sheet metal to conceal the lack of an engine. When the car catches fire the flames illuminate the empty engine compartment.

  • avatar
    willbodine

    The gearshift lever in Park is way, way too frequent. If the director doesn’t pick up on it from the day’s rushes, one might think that the actor “pretending” to be driving would…sheesh!
    Yes, counting the loose Charger hubcaps in “Bullitt” is always fun. My personal fave is the James Bond “Goldfinger” Lincoln crusher scene. The 64 is replaced by a 63 before being lifted to the compactor, and one without an engine at that. When the “cube” is driven away on the bed of a Falcon Ranchero it looks cute, but one wonders how a 1/2 ton pickup is supposed to manage 5300+ lbs of Lincoln, gold bullion and dead gangster.

  • avatar
    Kman

    I second steronz‘ s nomination of every scene where a car jumps more than 2 feet into the air and is somehow still driveable after impact.

    I dont’ recall the number from the Dukes of Hazzard movie, but more than a handful of Chargers were “sacrificed” for the various jumps.

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but I also recall, that in the original series, there is something on the order of magnitude of some 200+ cars that were trashed during all the filmings.

  • avatar
    Kman

    Okay, here’s another:

    Pierce Brosnan’s James Bond who drove the shit out of a BMW 7-series through a tight indoor parking garage… crouching in the back seat, using a hand-held controller.

  • avatar
    joebar32

    Some of the engine notes in Ronan. I can’t recall exactly, but I think there was an S8 that sounded distinctly not.

    All of the Mini Cooper antics in The Italian Job. No amount of suspension tweaks will prevent the unibody from crumbling under that much weight. I’ve watched a Ferrari door stop a car that was accidentally started in reverse and it certainly didn’t shut straight after. A motorcycle at speed is going to rip that door right off.

  • avatar
    jolo

    In the b-movie Terror Squad (filmed in Kokomo, In), a full sized school bus hits a bump and goes air borne, but the slow motion shot of the bus in the air is a short bus. Abosolutely hilarious. The movie should be shown in movie production college classes as an example of the WORST MOVIE in history.

  • avatar
    JuniperBug

    Another one from The Fast and the Furious: when Vin Diesel’s character mocks Spilner for “granny-shifting, not double-clutching like you should.” Now correct me if I’m wrong, but wouldn’t double-clutching upshifts in a drag race be the slowest thing in the world?

  • avatar
    jetfast

    The one that gets me most is the scene in Transformers where Megan Fox pops the hood on Bumblebee and rambles on about a double pumping carb, but when they show the engine it is obviously fuel injected.

  • avatar
    miked

    You beat me to it Jonny. I read the headline and started to think about Days Of Thunder reference to write about, then I got to the second sentence and you stole my thunder.

  • avatar
    red60r

    Double-clutching upshifts — sometimes necessary for a 1-2 shift in an early Jags with the parade-slow/stump-puller, unsynchromesh 1st gear. Really slowed you at stoplight drags, or made nasty grinding noises hitting 2nd at the 30 mph limit of 1st gear in a 3.4/3.8 saloon.

  • avatar

    How about the jump scene in the original “Gone in 60 Seconds”.
    When Eleanor hits the ground during the slow motion not only the front end is totally shaken to bits but you can see the car obviously spins out; but when the action cuts to regular speed the car successfully makes the jump with no error.

    and oh yeah the reappearing hubcaps in Bullitt are another of my favorites :)

  • avatar
    Jonny Lieberman

    One of my faves is in the otherwise perfect Big Lebowski

    Tara Reid is driving a red Jaguar XJS convertible. To show that she still has all 10 toes, they cut to her feet. She’s pumping a clutch.

    Now, some of you out there might be saying, “But Jonny — Jag imported a few XJs in 1994 with a 5-speed!”

    Yes they did. About 9, total.

    So………

  • avatar
    optimummike

    “The Mod Squad” had a good one. The girl character steals her boss’s Cadillac STS(4-door). A few scenes later she is shown blowing it up after it has turned into an Eldorado(2-door)!

  • avatar
    foolish

    Really, pretty much all of the 1st Fast and the Furious movie counts, but I especially love:
    1. The semi-trailers that magically change height so that the Civics can run under them. You can clearly see that the trucks getting loaded are normal-height.

    2. The YELLOW helmet on the stunt driver in the scene where Vin Diesel rolls his dad’s Dodge! Odd, Vin wasn’t wearing a helmet during the race.

    3. The roll cage that magically appeared in the rolled civic. Until one rolled and was shown upside-down, none of them had cages!

  • avatar
    sean362880

    Mine is another Bond one, in Diamonds are Forever, where he drives a Mustang into a narrow alleyway on two wheels (left side down), and drives out on the other two (right side down)!

    You just know that they realized they screwed it up during editing, so they put in this little scene in the middle with the car switching sides in the middle.

    If it could do that, why wouldn’t 007 have driven through normally?

  • avatar
    AuricTech

    I also want to add every scene in every movie and show where a car jumps more than 2 feet into the air and is somehow still driveable after impact.

    Unless, of course, the vehicle in question is a Suzuki Sidekick….

  • avatar
    TexasAg03

    In many chase scenes, a car runs into the back of another vehicle and suddenly becomes airborne. I really liked watching Chips because you could usually see the ramp attached to the back of the car being hit.

    I was watching CSI:NY the other day and Detective Taylor’s vehicle (an Avalanche, I think) was show in several scenes to clearly be a 2007 or 2008 model with the current front end. While driving down the street, the moving shots were clearly of the previous generation front end. Even my wife noticed that one.

  • avatar
    SherbornSean

    How is it possible that the chimp in the old Speed Racer comics knew so much about cars?

    The rest of it was so realistic.

  • avatar
    bfg9k

    How about the 2nd Matrix movie where the Cadillac CTS is repeatedly shot with automatic weapons, is riddled with holes, none of the occupants are injured, the tires are miraculously missed, and the car still drives fine…truly GM has remarkable engineering!

  • avatar
    ljw

    Not quite of the 4-wheel variety, but what about the Mission Impossible 2 motorcycle chase scene when the bike goes from having road tires to off-road tires back to road tires? I remember a view of the bike from behind in the dirt where the knobby rear tire practically filled the whole screen.

  • avatar
    trk2

    Another Bullit mention…

    Both vehicles seem to be equipped with the rare eight speed transmission option. This is especially noticeable once they get on to the highway.

    Once you notice it the first time, every future viewing is spent counting the gear changes. Sorry everyone.

  • avatar

    The entirety of the new Knight Rider series.

  • avatar
    trk2

    I just recalled what has to be one of the most ridiculous vehicle flubs to have been featured in a major motion picture.

    License to Kill.

    Timothy Dalton revs the semi he just captured from the drug cartel and then pops the clutch causing the semi to ‘pop a wheelie’ through a wall of flame. The pursuing vehicles, fortunately, could not replicate the semi’s acrobatics and exploded saving Bond for another day (but not for Dalton).

  • avatar
    rudiger

    The end of Vanishing Point when an exploding ’68 Camaro has obviously been substituted for a Dodge Challenger.

    BTW, the biggest errors in Bullitt are a lot easier to explain when one understands that the cars really only went down the big hill once, but it was shot from at least three different camera angles. The Charger only loses its hubcaps once, but we get to see it from three different points of view.

    But, as someone else pointed out, the whole idea of a 390 Mustang (one of the slowest big-block musclecars of the era, even with a cam and open exhaust) being able to keep up with a 440 Charger is pretty laughable. They even put smaller tires on the Charger in an effort to slow it down – that’s why it’s seen sliding all over the place.

  • avatar
    N85523

    I can’t believe nobody has said anything about the Dukes of Hazzard, although the automotive antics of that production bordered on comically ridiculous. I think they went through 300 some General Lee’s and who knows how many Plymouth cop cars.

  • avatar
    richeffect

    Sylvester Stallone in “Driven”. Pick any scene. I’m still waiting for my refund.

  • avatar

    The Bus Jump in the first “Speed” movie.

    –chuck

  • avatar
    Mj0lnir

    In “The Road Warrior” there’s originally some sort of white Dodge Dart (or whatever the Aussies called it) in front of the gate to the good guys fort. Shortly after that the Dart disappears and the vehicle is a black Falcon almost identical to the one Max is driving. It actually looks like a stunt car wrecked for the movie.

    That movie has several great “flubs”.

  • avatar
    Lumbergh21

    andyinsdca :
    April 28th, 2008 at 3:08 pm

    Does the green VW Beetle in the chase in Bullitt that shows up in every single frame count? (the chase still kick ass in any event)

    Try counting the number of hubcaps lost during the chase scene. Still one of the best chase scenes, as it was the birth of the modern chase scene. I also like the quote attributed to the Director regarding the lack of a musical score during the chase scene, that the music from the car’s engines was the perfect score for that scene.

  • avatar
    solo84

    In TERMINATOR 2, T1000 is in a semi truck chasing Arnold, who is on a motorcycle. T1000 jumps the semi off of a bridge, totally destroying his windshield in the process. After the windshield is obliterated, T1000 pushes the windshield out to clear it out of his way. Next scene? Windshield back in place in perfect condition.

    In THE ROCK, Nicholas Cage is speeding through San Francisco in a stolen borrowed yellow F355 (my favorite Ferrari). He then smashes through a series of parking meters, which destroys the windshield of the Ferrari (and brings tears to my eyes every time I watch the scene). Next scene? Windshield fixed!

    T1000 and Nicholas Cage sure have some speedy windshield repair guys working for them. :)

  • avatar
    Lumbergh21

    I have to second the bus jump from “Speed.” I remember watching that on video with another engineering buddy in college (to make things even better he drove semi’s in the summer to pay for college). We were both laughing about the specially equipped busses down in LA. In general, Hollywood is populated by people who don’t know the first thing about cars or science (I’m not allowed to watch CSI because I ruin it with my coments about the “science” in her favorite show). Yet, we-well, a lot of people-still listen to these actors when it comes to scientific issues, cars, etc? Why? Because they’re famous and we trust them?

  • avatar
    dean

    Great QOTD, getting several chuckles out of this one. I’m wondering how everyone is remembering all these flubs. I have a terrible memory for that kind of thing.

    Chuckgoolsbee: why let a pesky thing like gravity get in the way?

    Re: Days of Thunder. This isn’t the only race-oriented movie where a downshift and a floored accelerator on the backstraight wins the race. As if everyone is holding that last gear and inch of pedal travel in reserve!

  • avatar
    UltimateX

    There was an episode of CSI:Miami where the street racer gang had dug down the a fuel pipeline that delivered fuel to the airport so they could steal jet fuel for their cars. Jet fuel is a very close relative to diesel fuel and would not run it gas engine. BTW AV gas, they stuff they use small piston planes cannot be shipped in pipelines because it is leaded and would contaminate the other fuels pumped through the pipeline. It is only shipped in tankers.

  • avatar

    All the movies and tv-shows with cars exploding with enormous fireballs, secondary explosions and … wait for it … tertiary explosions. What’s doing all the exploding?

    This is as big a cliché as the “being jerked off your feet by a bullet hitting you” dime-a-dozen that no film can be without.

    And – all the movies and tv-shows that have tires squealing, on gravel, grass, sand and wet road surfaces.

  • avatar
    fortpierce34951

    Another goof on that particular episode of CSI Miami (the one with the bio-diesel Charger)…Florida doesn’t have front license plates. They’ve done this a few times.

  • avatar
    quasimondo

    Really, pretty much all of the 1st Fast and the Furious movie counts, but I especially love:
    1. The semi-trailers that magically change height so that the Civics can run under them. You can clearly see that the trucks getting loaded are normal-height.

    2. The YELLOW helmet on the stunt driver in the scene where Vin Diesel rolls his dad’s Dodge! Odd, Vin wasn’t wearing a helmet during the race.

    3. The roll cage that magically appeared in the rolled civic. Until one rolled and was shown upside-down, none of them had cages!

    But there’s more if you have a discerning eye!

    1. Brian Spilner’s “ten-second” Eclipse was actually the non-turbo version that uses a completely different engine.

    2. While rival racer Johnny Tran assaults a shop owner, he speculates on the street value of Spoon SR20 engines. Problem is that the SR20 engine is manufactured by Nissan, and Spoon racing is an aftermarket tuner who works exclusively on Hondas.

    3. After Spilner blows up his engine in the opening race, his Eclipse easily fires up when the police show up to bust the raid.

    4. When Dominic Turetto (Diesel) catches a ride in Spilner’s Eclipse, his feet aren’t poking through the now missing floorboard.

    5. Nitrous oxide (not nosss) is neither flammable nor explosive. Therefore, it would’ve been impossible for Spilner’s Eclipse to explode by simply shooting at it. You also don’t shoot flames out the exhaust when you hit the trigger.

  • avatar
    DearS

    Ah, this is painfully enlightening me out of my blissful denial. I mostly now better, but cars are my higher powers (by ignorant choice), I want to think grandiose of them.

    Kitt from Knight Rider was one big fantasy addiction growing up.

    I hate FandF1, I though 2 was better because cars were not the main subject at least. Part 3 I thought had a lot of BS also, my favorite though.

    Anyhow, one of the things about movies that bothers me most is when cars are really driven very slowly and depicted as going very fast. It gets me F-ing Angry. I wanna F-ing scream. Kitt was a big liar.

    Also how did most Autobots become GM vehicles when GM’s market share is around 25%?

  • avatar
    yankinwaoz

    (1) No rear view mirrors.
    I’ve noticed that lately film makers are leaving them in. But as a rule, most cars don’t have them.

    (2) Sloppy Steering.
    I crack up when I see the actor constantly turning the wheel 20 degrees or more left and right like they are doing a slalom course.

  • avatar
    morbo

    Payback

    Braveheart and companion are in a 70’s muscle car racing head first through a narrow alley into a mid-80’s Sedan deVille filled with Chinese gangsters.

    They hit in head-on collsion.

    The Chinese gangsters die or are dying from the impact.

    Mel Gibson’s character (and crony who betrays him) walk out of wrecked muscle car because, unlike the Chinese gangsters, they wore seat belts.

    Seriously.

    Otherwise though, one of my top 10 movies.

  • avatar
    golden2husky

    How about Back To The Future I? The Delorean must have 12 forward gears! Also, in the quest to “see if those bast**rds can do 90”, the odometer mileage actually drops as the chase with the VW goes on.

  • avatar
    Gregzilla

    No one mentioned the 13 speed tranny in the Trans-Am Burt Reynolds drove in Smokey and the Bandit. Also, (realizing it’s a comedy/musical/fanasy) let’s talk about the Bluesmobile in The Blues Brothers….amazing cornering ability and brakes. Not to mention still being able to pull 6000rpm with a “thrown rod”…

  • avatar
    Detroit-Iron

    I can’t believe with all the FF references, nobody mentioned the relativistic effects that take place when your car exceeds 140 mph. There must have been a major speedo error on all the cars that I’ve been in above that magical speed because I never saw the lights shift like I was going into hyperspace in Star Wars. It seems like relativity should have been discovered a lot longer ago if it is observable at 2.25 x10-7 C.

  • avatar
    joe_thousandaire

    I can’t believe nobody has mentioned the scene in ‘Commando’ where Arnold crashes into a yellow Porsche, and you can clearly see where its smashed in on the side, then the next scene when he drives away, the Porsche is fine, later its shown smashed in again. link goes to video http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CAtX9wmPo18

  • avatar
    AuricTech

    Also, (realizing it’s a comedy/musical/fanasy) let’s talk about the Bluesmobile in The Blues Brothers….amazing cornering ability and brakes. Not to mention still being able to pull 6000rpm with a “thrown rod”…

    Ah, but the Blues Brothers were on “a mission from God,” so any miraculous performance from the Bluesmobile is clearly due to Divine intervention….

  • avatar

    In Back to the Future, the biggest glaring error that bugs me to this day!

    You can’t tell when you do 88mph in a DeLorean. The speedo only goes up to 85mph per federal mandate. Look it up!

    I used to have one, and when people would ask, I would point to the speedo… its stupid…

  • avatar
    Sanman111

    The Italian Job….Mos Def opens the car door to hit a motorcycle rider and there is no damage to the door. Apparently asidefrom suspension upgrades the Italian Job crew highered some Saturn engineers to to install those dent resistant door panels.

  • avatar
    big_gms

    I have one…

    In the movie Fargo, there’s the scene where Steve Buscemi’s character is shot in the face and is tearing around a parking lot in a gold Oldsmobile Cutlass Ciera. In most shots, it’s a 1988 model, but in one very quick shot, it’s a 1989 or ’90 model. It’s easy to miss, but really obvious if you go through the scene frame by frame.

  • avatar
    tony-e30

    Remember that one Oscar-worthy Stallone movie involving race cars? No, I didn’t think so, but anyway, evidently you can have un-helmeted race car conversations at 200mph on city streets. All those F1 Fernando Alonso hand gestures? Completely unnecessary!

  • avatar
    casper00

    fast and furious movies series and Gone in 60 Seconds….

  • avatar
    Dimwit

    Ahhh, the lovely world of continuity errors and willful ignorance by the directors because it “looks better”.
    Remember The Rockford Files in 1977? They were screwed because GM changed the Firebird’s nose to the quad lights. Anytime Jim was going to do a chase they would sub out to an older model. You’d get quad then round lights… drama, then quad again.
    What about The Driver. When O’Neal was driving the GM red Stepside chasing the Firebird sideview has it as a standard with a 4 on the floor T shifter. He’s a driver, right? When they shifted to a through the windshield view from a camera mounted in the bed it became a auto column shifter.
    Smokey and The Bandit II had weirdness where all the cop cars crashed went from old Furies to relatively new Pontiac Lemans in the same shot. Usually it’s the other way around!

  • avatar

    Last night on Medium, Alison dreams that her old Volvo wagon blows up. When she can’t get up the nerve to start it, she gets out and locks the Volvo with the remote key fob (so her husband won’t immolate himself). The alarm makes that tchuk-tchuk noise beloved of Hollywood, but never seen in Sweden. Hubby buys a possessed Acura MDX (with the Acura badge removed, Ray). Alison LERVES it– until the MDX goes all Christine in a dream and she sees the previous owner’s wife’s murder. She jumps out and locks it. The CUV makes the exact same tchuck-thcuk sound as the Volvo. And then, my pet peeve. When the MDX refuses to start, the engine makes that same whiney no-start starter sound from the Starsky and Hutch era. It’s the same sound in THOUSANDS of movies and TV shows. In real life, these days, a dead battery makes a clicking sound (if anything). And cars trying to turnover sounds NOTHING like a crapped-out Ford Torino.

  • avatar
    Zeitgeist

    – Spinning wheels on the Batmobile in the ’60s Batman series. The car has a jet engine.
    – Squealing tires on a Mercedes W126 S-class in “Smilla’s Sense of Snow”.
    – A little bit off topic: American movies featuring a Mercedes. You know at once, the driver must be a bad guy or girl.

    First post here!

  • avatar
    osnofla

    i think that in the movie blue streak when martin lawrence’s character first takes the wheel of the crown vic (which does not look like it’s police issue anyways) you can see a 3rd pedal. can anybody confirm this? i’d hate to have to make someone watch such a horrible movie but i don’t remember if it was that movie. I’m pretty sure though

  • avatar
    Mike66Chryslers

    @ Zeitgeist: IMO the spinning tires of the Batmobile aren’t a flub. Real (prototype) cars that had a turbine engine, most notably the Chrysler Turbine but there were others, used it to drive an output shaft that drove the wheels.

    My favorite auto-related movie flub that hasn’t been mentioned yet is in Death Proof when the woman ties ropes to the window frames of the doors of the white 1970 Dodge Challenger so she can hold onto them and ride on the hood….. Challengers didn’t have window frames on the doors. The movie people added them just so she had something to tie the ropes onto.

    Speaking of movie cars in Park, in one scene in Grand Theft Parsons the passenger stops the 1966 Chrysler convertible on the highway by reaching over and moving the shift lever up to Park. In real life, that will shear-off the pin in the trans that holds it in Park, but it won’t stop the car at that speed!

    In the video for the Blue Oyster Cult song Burnin’ For You, there’s a guy driving around in a 1966 Chrysler New Yorker 4-door hardtop. near the end of the video, he spontaneously combusts and sets the car on fire. In that scene, the car has magically transformed into a 1965 Chrysler Newport sedan.

    In the highway carchase scene of the 3rd Matrix movie, every car on the highway is a GM product. (I know, they sponsored it.)

    In the movie (and novel) Christine, the car was a red 1958 Plymouth Fury. In that year, Furies weren’t available in red.

  • avatar
    NeonCat93

    @ Jonny Lieberman

    You could also point out that Big Lebowski is set in late 1990/early 1991, if you really wanted to dash the objectors’ hopes.

    I think a lot of the problems described by people here, especially the sound problems Robert Farago mentions, arise because it’s just cheaper to use the same sounds a Foley guy recorded back in the 70s. Since Everybody Knows what a car that won’t start sounds like, or that cars explode when you shoot them in the gas tank (unless they don’t because the actors can’t bail since they have to advance the plot), well, only people who are really into cars/reality will object, and (in terms of the all important box office) it’s more important to be entertaining than accurate, after all. And keeping the budget down is even more important.

    Just don’t expect reality from fiction. In fact, it’s probably best to think of movie physics the way Morpheus describes the rules of physics in the Matrix to Neo: Some of them can be bent, some of them can be broken. It would be nice if it were less absurd, but as long as it isn’t grossly stupid and an insult to your intelligence, is it really that bad?*

    *This does not excuse F&TF or any movie like it. Offer void where prohibited, post no bills, your mileage may vary.

  • avatar
    NickR

    Ah yes, the magically jumping cars. My favorite has to be the Taurus in ‘Jade’ that jumps at least 8 feet in the air and must be airborne for about 20 feet, but lands and keeps going.

    My favorites are the movie-chase matches, i.e., two cars with vastly different power and handling run neck and neck. The most ridiculous example of that was ‘Basic Instinct’ where, on a twisting mountain road, Michael Dougles driving a Dodge Diplomat is able to stay right in the heals of a Lotus Esprit. Riiiiiiiight.

  • avatar

    NickR: Snap! Timothy Dalton’s first Bond movie: Ferrari F355 (evil villainess) vs. Aston Martin DB4 (Timo) in the hills above Monaco. Bond wins! Yeah right.

  • avatar
    Geotpf

    NickR-I dunno, in the chase in Basic Instinct, there was traffic that the two had to weave through, limiting how much pure speed would affect how far ahead Stone could get-and eventually she did break free and Douglas just stumbled across the parked Lotus.

  • avatar
    wildcmc

    There was something that cought my attention in Tom Hanks’ Cast Away. The beginning of the movie takes place in 1995. Helen Hunt drives a Jeep Cherokee. They use a 1999 or 2000 one because that model had redesigned tailights (they were rounder at the top). The 95 model still had squared tailights. So it was funny (and very anal of me) to noticed a newer Cherokee in 1995.

    Also…. the pilot episode for Knight Rider (1982). I guess they couldn’t figure out were exactly to place the scanner light, because depending on the shot… it was either where it normally is, or just inside a hole cutted on the OEM front bumper at the very front of it.

    Check it on this video… at beginning of it

  • avatar

    morbo :
    Payback

    Braveheart and companion are in a 70’s muscle car racing head first through a narrow alley into a mid-80’s Sedan deVille filled with Chinese gangsters.
    They hit in head-on collsion.
    The Chinese gangsters die or are dying from the impact.
    Mel Gibson’s character (and crony who betrays him) walk out of wrecked muscle car because, unlike the Chinese gangsters, they wore seat belts.

    Sorry but that scene isn’t a flub. The Nova they were in had a rollcage & they were wearing 5-point harnesses (and mouthguards for that matter). One could infere from the cage that they reinforced the rest of the car for the impact as well.

    But then the movie fails on the “cigarette in a puddle of gas will cause a fire” front.

  • avatar
    kydiwl

    Most of the classics have been pointed out, but one that really annoys me is when it’s raining, the rain runs down the windshield: even though the car is “traveling” at highway speed. I see this over and over again. But when I drive my car and it’s raining, the rain moves up the windshield.

  • avatar
    TexasAg03

    “You can’t tell when you do 88mph in a DeLorean. The speedo only goes up to 85mph per federal mandate. Look it up!”

    True, but the DeLorean in Back to the Future had a separate digital speedometer added along with the controls for the “Flux Capacitor”.

    I have a true story. I have often seen people in a movie or TV show shoot a tire. In every instance I have seen, the tire deflates almost immediately. In 1981, a couple of guys attempted to rob our house as my dad slept (he worked midnights and it was a Sunday afternoon). He heard the noise and greeted the would be bandits with a 38 Special and a “What the F— are you doing?”

    One of the guys ran to his car (a Vega station wagon) so dad proceeded to follow him and shoot the tire. The guy drove away, much to dad’s chagrin. We found out later that the tire didn’t go flat till the next morning. Dad held the other guy until law enforcement arrived.

  • avatar
    Zeitgeist

    @ Mike66Chryslers
    You are right about the turbine engines; I thought the Batmobile was something like this.

  • avatar
    abr2

    Andy- I always thought that the reason they were all gasping at the engine in the Supra was because they actually found a toyota with more than 60 thousand miles on it that didn’t have a blown engine.

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