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  • Creating a full-length feature film is a monumental task for any director. In the storm of actors,

  • set designs, production assistants and the cameras catching them all, the finished movie

  • is just a tiny glimpse of the actual workand talented people - that goes into making

  • it. Usually, it’s the editor’s job to make sure that what’s outside of each shot

  • stays therebut theyre only human. Which means some truly incredible mistakes

  • can make it into the final product for our viewing pleasure. Here are Screen Rant’s

  • Movie Mistakes That Slipped Through Editing.

  • The Bourne Identity

  • Matt Damon’s role as a CIA Assassin suffering from amnesia singlehandedly re-defined modern

  • spy thrillers, showing Jason Bourne to possess superhuman levels of stealth and battlefield

  • awareness. When he first arrives on land after being rescued from the sea by a fishing crew,

  • he quite literally disappears into the surrounding city, illustrating how effective his innate

  • ability to remain undetected truly is. Until viewers take a closer look at his disappearance,

  • and notice the pair of extras attemptingand failingto conceal actor Matt Damon ducking

  • behind the truck driving across the set, with his feet and bright red jacket clearly visible.

  • Maybe another take would have been wise.

  • Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

  • By the time the Chamber of Secrets rolled around, Harry Potter and Draco Malfoy were

  • already each other’s worst enemies. So it’s no surprise that when the children of Hogwarts

  • began their training in magical duels, the two wound up crossing wands. As always, Harry

  • winds up getting the better of his foe to the delight of the students present. The students,

  • and the camera man who the director either didn’t notice, or somehow assumed audiences

  • wouldn’t spot. How this unplanned cameo wasn’t defeated by some editing magic is

  • beyond us.

  • Back to the Future

  • Aside from the questions of time travel and parallel universes, Marty McFly’s trip backwards

  • and forwards through the decades is home to several small mistakes or inconsistencies.

  • But it’s the most inconsequential error that has become the most well-knownand

  • frankly, the most unsettling. When Doc Brown returns with his family in tow in the final

  • scene of the trilogy, his youngest son offers a gesture that once noticed, can never be

  • ignored. Most accept that the young actor was simply signaling that he was in need of

  • a washroom break, but were not buying it. They don’t have toilets on time-traveling

  • trains?

  • Jurassic Park

  • The fact that Steven Spielberg’s dinosaur adventure has aged better than most other

  • special effects-driven films is usually credited to Steven Spielberg’s use of real dinosaur

  • models along with completely CGI creatures. But that decision didn’t come without a

  • few drawbacks. No fan will forget when a pair of raptors pursued the movie’s child stars

  • through the park’s kitchen, but it turns out the dinosaur models were less graceful

  • than their CG versions. Apparently needing a crew member’s hand to help keep their

  • balance.

  • The Hurt Locker

  • It isn’t just dinosaurs that can use a hand from an off-screen crew member. In this story

  • of a bomb disposal team deployed during the Iraq War, soldiers on the ground had more

  • to worry about than just explosives. When investigating an enemy-controlled warehouse,

  • someone on the film’s set decided that star Jeremy Renner needed some help moving through

  • a curtain of plastic sheeting, putting his entire hand into frame. Why the shot wasn’t

  • cut a moment sooner is a mystery, meaning it’s entirely possible it was missed altogether.

  • Gladiator

  • In a film as massive as Ridley Scott’s Roman epic, audiences are willing to overlook some

  • small mistakes. But the director put that theory to the test, peppering the movie with

  • too many mistakes to count. There’s the crew member who somehow stumbled into a shot

  • as hero Maximus greets a Roman horse, Barbarian extras who decide to take a break in the midst

  • of a fierce battle, an exposed air canister used to flip a chariot in the Roman Coliseum,

  • and the downright awful body padding used to protect one actor from arrows and swords.

  • But nothing beats star Russell Crowe’s famous question, posed after he singlehandedly wiped

  • out multiple opponents. It’s taken as a political statement for those watching the

  • fight, but it was clearly directed at the camera crew visible in a wider shot.

  • Jaws

  • When word first breaks of a man-eating shark off the shores of Amity, everyone in possession

  • of a boat takes off in search of the bounty placed on the great white’s head. The chaos

  • that follows is a nightmare for Police Chief Brody, but is clearly perfect for the filmmakers.

  • Apparently, director Steven Spielberg got so captivated by the excitement, he assumed

  • audiences would be as well, leaving the entire camera crew’s boats visible in the middle

  • of frame, revealing to audiences exactly how they had captured the shots shown immediately

  • beforehand.

  • Raiders of the Lost Ark

  • Given the number of extras used in the first Indiana Jones adventure, and how large some

  • of the movie’s action sequences were, a mistake or unfortunate error is impossible

  • to avoid. Take, for instance, the reflection of the entire camera crew in the cockpit of

  • a Nazi aircraft, or the infamousgun vs. swordsequence starring the world’s worst

  • butcher. But the film’s most ridiculous mistake is also its most ironic. To make sure

  • their Tunisian backdrop resembled 1936 Cairo, the crew famously removed over 300 TV antennas

  • from surrounding rooftops. That level of dedication pays off in the finished film... until a man

  • wearing blue jeans and a t-shirt strolls through the background just minutes later.

  • The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

  • The second chapter of Peter Jackson’s fantasy trilogy begins with three of the Fellowship

  • stumbling into the land of Rohan, leading to a tense introduction with Eomer, a noble

  • soldier and ally in the rest of the story. An embodiment of honour and dignity, Eomer

  • ends the standoff by giving his new allies horses and sending them on their way. Unfortunately,

  • allowing his entire sword to slide out of its sheath in the process. Clearly too embarrassed

  • to acknowledge the mistake, we can only assume he left as quickly as possible to find a suitable

  • replacement.

  • Frozen

  • Just because animated films are created a single frame at a time, that doesn’t mean

  • mistakes won’t slip by just as easily. One of the most well-known sequences in Disney’s

  • smash success Frozen stars the magical Queen Elsa, embracing her powers with a performance

  • of the award-winning songLet it Go.” In all the excitement, it seems the artists

  • decided to let the laws of physics go as well, allowing Elsa to let down her hair, and have

  • it pass from front to back, phasing through her left arm in the process. The ability to

  • control ice and snow and create an eternal winter is one thing, but we have to draw the

  • line somewhere.

  • Those are some of our favourite movie mistakes that seemed to slip by the filmmakers unnoticed.

  • Are there any we missed? Sound off in the comments section below and be sure to subscribe

  • to our channel for more videos like this one!

Creating a full-length feature film is a monumental task for any director. In the storm of actors,

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