Wonder Woman

Wonder Woman (1976)

118 mistakes - chronological order

(8 votes)

Fausta, the Nazi Wonder Woman - S1-E3

Continuity mistake: Wonder Woman reveals her belt gives her superhuman strength. In the scene where she is strapped to a board, the Nazi officer throws the belt and lasso at Wonder Woman, but she only catches the lasso. Wonder Woman still regains her strength though and breaks free of the straps. In the next shot however, she is holding both the lasso and the belt.

Beauty on Parade - S1-E4

Factual error: In the opening sequence, a man placing dynamite on the truck is dressed in a camo-type uniform. This type of clothing was not introduced until 1981, and the episode was set in World War II.

Movie Nut

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Suggested correction: The camo type/color seen was around during WWII. It should also be pointed out the mistake claims it wasn't introduced until 1981, but the real life filming occurred in 1976. So they can't have been using camo type during filming that wouldn't even be introduced for another 5 years.

Bishop73

The Feminum Mystique: Part 1 - S1-E5

Plot hole: If her younger sister Drusilla is sent from Paradise Island to retrieve Diana, how did she get to Washington DC or wherever, she had no way of knowing where her older sister would be.

Rob245

Wonder Woman mistake picture

The Feminum Mystique: Part 1 - S1-E5

Visible crew/equipment: After General Blankenship is shoved into the back seat of Captain Radl's car, when the front passenger door is opened, we can see the reflections of the cameraman's feet, set lighting, the camera dolly on the surface of the door. Then as the car drives off, more crew members are reflected on the side of the car.

Super Grover

Wonder Woman mistake picture

The Feminum Mystique: Part 1 - S1-E5

Continuity mistake: When Diana comes home and spins into Wonder Woman there's a plant on the table under the mirror, but when she walks out of the kitchen with Drusilla that plant is on the floor. Then, note the only thing atop the hutch is a crystal basket, but when she changes back to Diana Prince two more large items are atop the hutch, now the plant is back on the table, and a tall lamp has suddenly appeared beside the chair.

Super Grover

The Feminum Mystique: Part 1 - S1-E5

Revealing mistake: When Wonder Woman goes to flip the guy out of the Jeep, he jumps out of the Jeep and right into her hands just before she flips him. The problem is that when she grabs him, just before she flips him, you can see his shirt all puffed out in the back with the distinct outline of a big pad or cushion of some kind to cushion him after he's flipped.

The Feminum Mystique: Part 2 - S1-E6

Continuity mistake: When Wonder Woman is spinning the XPJ-1 around, she's seen approaching the jet with her hands empty and her lasso on her side where it usually is. As the scene progresses, her golden lasso magically appears in her right hand even though she never reached down to pick it up.

The Feminum Mystique: Part 2 - S1-E6

Continuity mistake: While Nazis are invading Paradise Island, back at the deserted warehouse when one of the Nazis brings Drusilla a hot meal he slams the door shut, but when Drusilla hits him in the stomach the door is suddenly wide open, but when she rushes out of the room the door is closed and she pushes it open.

Super Grover

The Feminum Mystique: Part 2 - S1-E6

Other mistake: On Paradise Island, while the Nazis are distracted by the quarreling Amazons in the water, when Wonder Woman jumps and lands beside Queen Hippolyta her boots are flat, but the heels soon appear when she rushes off with the bracelets. This happens again later, when Wonder Woman chases after the XPJ-1 on the runway.

Super Grover

Trivia: Jeannie Epper, Lynda Carter's stunt double's son, was bullied in school by his peers who didn't believe his mother played Wonder Woman. Lynda Carter heard this and invited them to the set.

Rob245

More trivia for Wonder Woman

Answer: There is no logical reason. Any normal person would notice these type of absences. The show employs a "suspension of disbelief," which is a literary device where the movie audience or a book reader accepts that certain things are unreal for the sake of the story to be told. It is similar to no-one noticing that Clark Kent looks exactly like Superman because he wears glasses.

raywest

Answer: Thank you.

Rob245

More questions & answers from Wonder Woman

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