Character looks through binoculars/telescope/sight at something. We see the classic "scope" POV shot...and there are sound effects for what we're seeing. What, the lens has a telescopic microphone, too? (and speaker?) THEY'RE A JILLION YARDS AWAY, WE SHOULDN'T HEAR THEM.
70s cop shows were the worst for this. You knew a stunt was coming up on CHiPs due to the skid marks. Also, they'd smash one side of the car in the rehearsal/first take, then do the stunt the other way to smash the other. So frequently, all of a sudden a car's side would be seen trashed for no reason.Seeing skid marks/ ski tracks/ foot prints in a shot where they've obviously done several takes beforehand (check out the ski jump in The Spy Who Loved Me, lots of tracks from when they've made several attemps to get it looking right).
70s cop shows were the worst for this. You knew a stunt was coming up on CHiPs due to the skid marks. Also, they'd smash one side of the car in the rehearsal/first take, then do the stunt the other way to smash the other. So frequently, all of a sudden a car's side would be seen trashed for no reason.
Oh, and those stunts where they'd put a ramp on the back of a car so another car would go up on two wheels and flip. THIS NEVER HAPPENS, the car would just have a rear end collision!
This reminds of the scene in Star Trek 4, when Kirk tells Uhura to put the whales on viewer. And whats her face is like, how can you do that. I thought the same thing. I mean I know its 23rd century tech, but how do they do that.
That scene actually had me laughing out loud the first time I saw Star Trek IV. Almost every Trek fan I know has always wondered how they could possibly magnify the view of something that isn't in their line-of-sight, or view it from a different angle, and when a character finally questions it on-screen they just ignore it and move on. :lolThis reminds of the scene in Star Trek 4, when Kirk tells Uhura to put the whales on viewer. And whats her face is like, how can you do that. I thought the same thing. I mean I know its 23rd century tech, but how do they do that.
Glad to know that wasn't just me. That drove me nuts as a kid, when someone in a movie/TV show would be watching someone else and the angle didn't match up at all for the angle being shown.I always thought it was kinda stupid that they tried to make the screen look 3D by whenever you saw the person on it talking from a different angle, they were looking at who they were talking too, even thou you could tell they just shot the same scene again from the side of his head. I understood what they were trying to do but it just didn't work for me
How about sometimes, the bad guys speak in their native language and sometimes they don't?opcorn
Poorly done voice or speaking accents.
Extra stuff or movie continues unexpectedly after or within the end credits.:eek