I am always impressed when I see oxen.Started to watch Arizona on Grit Tv last night. The 1940 one. What struck me was the large number of wagons and the number being pulled by oxen. Also it looked much more authentic than many westerns made today. Sorry I didn’t watch more but it was past my bedtime. I may have to see if I can find it to watch.
Got to agree with you on that one.And that's just in The Patriot alone!
Title says it all. What mistakes have you noticed in movies/tv shows that happen in the BP era like Daniel Boone, Patriot etc? Eventhough they try not to slip anachronisms, sometimes you can spot things that just don't fit with the era or even something in the background or an actor who forgot to take off his watch or whatever. Next weekend being Canada Day, I'm gonna have a 3 days weekend and have a second look at one or two movies and try to spot mistakes, out of place or out of period things for fun.
I noticed that. Seems like such an obvious error would have been noted.Don’t think it’s been mentioned, but what ruined watching the Revenant was shooting the flintlock with the frizzen open during the bear attack
I thought that frontier series was the stupidest thing I ever watched..I'd like to see more smoke but that won't happen in the older and "B" movies!! Like actual black powder smoke.
Much of TURN was filmed not far from where I was living at the time. I was selling a lot of original tinware at the time at my booh in an antique mall. I went to check my booth and all the tinware was gone, the lady at the desk said one woman had bought it all, and had also left me a note. Turns out she worked for the prop department of the series and was buying stuff for military camp scenes and wanted to know if I had more stuff. I invited her to my house and let her pick what she wanted from the inventory in my garage. She bought lots of tinware, wool blankets and iron ware. (Those are my cooking tripods in the Hessian camp scene) most of my stuff is appropriate for the 1840 - 1870 time frame, when she would pull out stuff that I knew to be incorrect for the rev war period, I would try to talk her out of buying it. Her response, “we hate people like you who pick our movies apart, but 99% never notice. She was actually quite nice, even invited me out to the set, I regret not going.Gee where to begin.
Let me start with the series TURN which i could watch over and over, however….
The sound the chains rattling every time a flintlock is cocked makes me ask who the hell designed that special effect.
What is the movie "Turn"...Much of TURN was filmed not far from where I was living at the time. I was selling a lot of original tinware at the time at my booh in an antique mall. I went to check my booth and all the tinware was gone, the lady at the desk said one woman had bought it all, and had also left me a note. Turns out she worked for the prop department of the series and was buying stuff for military camp scenes and wanted to know if I had more stuff. I invited her to my house and let her pick what she wanted from the inventory in my garage. She bought lots of tinware, wool blankets and iron ware. (Those are my cooking tripods in the Hessian camp scene) most of my stuff is appropriate for the 1840 - 1870 time frame, when she would pull out stuff that I knew to be incorrect for the rev war period, I would try to talk her out of buying it. Her response, “we hate people like you who pick our movies apart, but 99% never notice. She was actually quite nice, even invited me out to the set, I regret not going.
I think the Spaghetti Westerns only had that one sound effect for every gunshot.Another thing! Having each and every "shot" accompanied with a "pe-ow!" ricochet sound, even thought the shot didn't hit a rock or steel in order to caroum off with the typical "whine" of a true ricochet. Drives me crazy.
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