No one knows how to hold or use a kitchen knife properly.
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Surely that's realistic? Few people irl have good knife skills
I should have specified that it only REALLY bothers me when they are playing a chef/cook. Same goes for grossly misusing kitchen terminology.
Yes I see your point
One thing I can't help but see all the time is when someone walks to a group of people and singles one person out to talk and the pair say something like "give us the room" and everyone else leaves. Scenes similar to this happen all the time. Even in casual settings in movies. At some point I realized it's probably because it's easier to not have a second set for a private space just for a quick conversation. I can no longer unsee this.
Helicopters that didn't produce much wind when people are nearby.
Everyone knows that all helicopters can do is explode.
Guy 1: Can you enhance that grainy camera picture so I can make out that license plate so I can read it? Even though the license plate is just two pixels in the original recording?
Guy 2: Sure. I'll just use this wondertech to... ah, there you go. One click did it.
You can just say "zoom in, enhance" and everyone knows what you mean. It became such a meme that I think shows lean into it.
I think I've seen one show where it was phrased "is this all the resolution we have?"
I've had a good moment with a german crime show where the tech guy just said "Nope, not possible."
A cool subversion of this one might be to zoom out, rather than in. That viewing the image close up reveals a useless jumble of pixels but zooming out reveals an image. Or they've been focusing on the center of frame so narrowly that a detail at the edge of shot goes missed for awhile. So many toys to play with!
I'd like a cop show that does this but it's conventional AI and it confidently makes up a licence plate but the cops take it seriously and commit to tracking it down.
And there should be maybe a few instances of people trying to explain in various ways "this is AI, the letters and numbers are made up, that car has like a 0.000001% chance of having had that specific random licence plate, please, stop looking for it, you're being dumb" then the cops pretend like they understood and had an interesting conversation then they go right back to tracking the generated license plate to the best of their ability. A bit like cops who go on to order polygraphs the day after their nephew passionately tried to explain the insanity of the whole "lie detector" charade.
It's not an error exactly, but I cannot help noticing prop paper bags (made of fake paper that doesn't make crinkly noises) now. They stand out so glaringly.
Weight of objects is definitely something actors don't seem to be trained in anymore. Everything looks light as a feather.
A less obvious thing is tossing a drink in somebody's face wrong. Most actors toss the drink upward from the waist, which probably sends it right up their fellow actor's nose. Sometimes you can even see a reaction when this happens. Not fun. There's a definite technique that's sort of a backhand flick of the wrist, that sends the liquid straight into their face instead of up their sinuses. It also puts your hand, the glass and the face a lot closer together, so they all fit in a much tighter shot. Not that I would know.
Videogames and boardgames. Videogames are always depicted as the players wildly buttonmashing and getting into weird positiona for some reason.
Boardgames are not as common, but if they are they have glaring issues if they are made up or not played correctly if they aren't. The only pefect example of doing it right i know of is hokagou saigoro club, which uses real boardgames and explains them in detail. You can play some of those games without reading the rulebook if you watched the show or read the manga.
If you've ever used a lobster grip you aren't allowed to complain about weird grips on controllers on screen.
There was some old TV show...it might have been Bewitched or I Dream Of Genie, something like that. A man and a woman are playing chess during a dialog scene. He makes a move and says "Check." She immediately makes a move and says "Checkmate."
I guess it's possible but extremely unlikely you're going to simultaneously move out of check and into a checkmate.
In Searching for Bobby Fischer they played board games correctly, I think
"Level 4 Cleared!"
When was the last time you saw a game that had numbered levels?
Three of the last three games I've played have numbered levels, what the hell are you talking about? UFO 50 has them all over. Deep Rock Galactic Survivor has numbered floors and tiered levels of hazard. I played some random tower defense game on my phone that has numbered waves.
I'm a pilot. Sometimes screenwriters do a pretty good job with aircraft, sometimes they extremely don't. They'll show the wrong instrument when talking about a reading (a vertical speed indicator pointing to 200 feet/min climb over dialog that says "descending through 2,000 feet) or ATC will clear someone to turn to a heading of 540 or clear them to land on runway three niner, and don't get me started on aircraft engineering.
There's a scene in The World Is Not Enough where James Bond shoots a powered parachute in the wing and we hear engine struggling sounds.
My favorite has to come from the movie Iron Eagle. Near the beginning, Louis Gossett Jr is tinkering under the oil dipstick door on a Cessna 150, and the following dialog is exchanged:
"How come you're making my mixture so rich?"
"As lean as you were running, if you went into a stall you'da lost your engine and you'd never be able to pull it out."
What the Appalachian cousin fuck are you talking about, Louis?
There’s a scene in The World Is Not Enough where James Bond shoots a powered parachute in the wing and we hear engine struggling sounds.
I know the exact scene you're talking about, but you're misremembering. He doesn't shoot it, he skis on it.
https://youtu.be/MQQLqRYm4vg?t=269
And then presumably dies from the hard landing as he broke the fall with his legs.
we hear engine struggling sounds.
Heh.
Medical dramas often have the xray films displayed upside-down or backwards, also chess boards are nearly always set up wrong with either the pices in the wrong places or the board turned 90°
I'm a bit of an anatomy nerd. They get a lot wrong.
My friend told me about Xrays! It's weird cos it's not hard to find a medical practitioner to ask.
We're basically everywhere lmao
It's super minor, but I think the ones that annoy me the most are when they're showing an off angle of someone talking, but their jaw doesn't match the words. Normally it's to show the responders face.