Hancock Goofs, Mistakes and Bloopers

Hancock Goofs, Mistakes and Bloopers

Hancock Movie Details

Hancock taglines:There are heroes. There are superheroes. And then there’s…
Hancock - DVD Cover

Hancock DVD Cover

Actors:
Will Smith John Hancock
Charlize Theron Mary Embrey
Jason Bateman Ray Embrey
Jae Head Aaron Embrey
Eddie Marsan Kenneth ‘Red’ Parker Jr.
David Mattey Man Mountain
Maetrix Fitten Matrix
Thomas Lennon Mike
Johnny Galecki Jeremy
Hayley Marie Norman Hottie
Dorothy Cecchi Woman in Dive Bar
Martin Klebba Convict #12
Akiva Goldsman Executive #1
Michael Mann Executive #2
Brad Leland Executive #3
Directors: Peter Berg
IMDB Rating: 6.6/10 out of 93,445 votes

“Hancock” 2008 by Peter Berg – Movie Goofs

“Hancock” Plot Summary

A hard-living superhero who has fallen out of favor with the public enters into a questionable relationship with the wife of the public relations professional who’s trying to repair his image.

Hancock  - Movie Still 1 - Movie Mistakes Hancock Movie Still 2 - Movie Mistakes Hancock Movie Image 3 - Movie Mistakes Hancock Screen Image - Movie Mistakes
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“Hancock” Goofs List

  • Continuity: SPOILER: When Mary is in the hospital bed, just after being shot, the blood stain on her shirt changes between shots.
  • Revealing mistakes: SPOILER: Near the end of the movie, when Mary is ‘dying’, the monitor has a label at the top of the screen that says ‘leads off meaning the monitor isn’t hooked up.
  • Incorrectly regarded as goofs: SPOILER: According to the movie’s premise, Hancock and Mary become mortal and weak when they are close to each other. However, the weakness happens over time as they spend more time together. That explains why Hancock was unfazed when Mary threw him through the wall, and why Mary was unharmed when Hancock attempted to stab her in the kitchen.
  • Incorrectly regarded as goofs: SPOILER: When we find out that Mary has powers, she says she and Hancock are brother and sister. They are regarded as husband and wife for the rest of the movie. This is due to the movie hinting at Hancock and Mary being Zeus and Hera. In Greek mythology, Zeus and Hera were both husband and wife, and brother and sister.
  • Incorrectly regarded as goofs: SPOILER: In the unrated version, Hancock demonstrates the problem with sex because of his strength. That version implies that Hancock cannot have normal sex with ordinary women because of the force of his ejaculation. Mary wouldn’t have that problem.
  • Incorrectly regarded as goofs: SPOILER: When Mary regained consciousness as Hancock distanced himself, she would have regained her gag reflex as well, and would have choked on an endotracheal tube being used to maintain her airway. However, the device in her mouth was a much shorter tube called a Guedel or laryngeal airway, which can be used in semi-conscious people to prevent tongue-swallowing.
  • Revealing mistakes: SPOILER: When Hancock is dying, the paramedic shines a flashlight in Hancock’s eyes. The assumption is that Hancock is unconscious, so his pupils should have been dilated. However, Hancock’s pupils are fully contracted.
  • Factual errors: SPOILER: Near the end of the movie, as Hancock and the villains are slugging it out in the hospital, one of the bad guys picks up a medical gas cylinder and proceeds to use it as a weapon, striking Hancock several times. At one point the cylinder explodes, causing a large fireball as the two combatants crash through a wall. The problem here is with the type of cylinder that is used. Internationally, all compressed gasses are denoted by the colors of the container, in the United States, for example: green = oxygen, red = acetylene, and light blue = nitrogen, etc. The cylinder that is being used for the fight scene is what looks to be either silver or light gray – which would indicate carbon dioxide. While it is incredibly useful as a medical gas, and would certainly explode with considerable force should the container be breached, it is also non-flammable and therefore would not produce the firestorm as seen in the movie. In fact, the carbon dioxide would displace the oxygen in the vicinity and would act to suppress any flames present.
  • Errors made by characters (possibly deliberate errors by the filmmakers): In one scene, the TV news announcer states that Hancock has been taken to “Los Angeles General Hospital.” In the following scene, an exterior shot of the hospital reveals the name “Mercy General Hospital”.
  • Continuity: When Hancock first arrives at Ray’s house, the amount of spaghetti and meatballs in the bowl changes between shots.
  • Continuity: When the SUV is fleeing the police, it turns a corner and crashes into the side of a car. In the next scene, the side of the SUV has no damage.
  • Revealing mistakes: When Hancock picks up the police cruiser to protect the downed female officer, the car has no transmission or prop-shaft.
  • Continuity: During the car chase, Hancock breaks a bottle behind a suspect’s car. In next shot, he holds a different looking, obviously fake broken bottle.
  • Continuity: When Ray is waiting in traffic on the train tracks, he is talking on a cell phone, holding it up to his left ear. He ends the conversation. In a later long shot, the phone is still at his left ear.
  • Continuity: After impaling the SUV on the tower, Hancock is drinking in a bar. In close-ups he holds a bottle of beer in his left hand. In long shots, the bottle is in his right hand.
  • Continuity: Hancock talks to Mary while eating a banana, which changes from eaten to uneaten, and back again.
  • Continuity: When Mary throws Hancock out of the house, he crashes into a gold Dodge Intrepid. When we see the aftermath the next morning, the Intrepid is fine, but the cars on the other side of the street are damaged.
  • Incorrectly regarded as goofs: In the latter part of the movie, Hancock talks to Mary about the way they kissed. They never kissed in the theatrical cut; because Mary threw him through the wall before their lips touched. The kiss is restored in the DVD version.
  • Crew or equipment visible: Monitors are reflected in Hancock’s glasses throughout the movie.
  • Errors made by characters (possibly deliberate errors by the filmmakers): In the YouTube video of the whale, Ray calls ‘Walter’ a gray whale. Walter is clearly a humpback.
  • Continuity: When Hancock throws Ray’s car into the other cars and stops the train, Ray’s windshield cracks. When Hancock drags the car into the driveway a few moments later, the windshield is as good as new.
  • Incorrectly regarded as goofs: After Ray meets Hancock for the first time, when the camera follows Ray and Mary’s dog across the bedroom, what appears to be a crew member pushing the dog from behind the dresser is actually the shadow of the dog’s tail on the wall. If you look closely, the dog is watching something/someone behind the bed for a signal.
  • Anachronisms: The date on Hancock’s 1931 Frankenstein movie ticket reads 21 June 1931. Universal’s Frankenstein was released November 4 1931.
  • Continuity: When Ray is about to be hit by the train, long shots show his car on the tracks. Shots from inside the car show that the car isn’t on the tracks.
  • Factual errors: To throw Michel high up into the air, Hancock would have to use so much force that the boy would have suffered massive, lethal internal injuries. This is also true for when Hancock catches Michel, he would have certainly not survived.
  • Continuity: In the Youtube scene, the full screen viewings of the Youtube clip show the Youtube logo superimposed upon the bottom right of the clip. In the wide shot, it is on the left.
  • Revealing mistakes: When Hancock and Ray are talking through the glass in prison, the cutout that Hancock is about to make in the glass is clearly visible, especially running across Ray’s right cheek.
  • Continuity: When Mary takes the fork from Hancock to straighten it up, the fork is straight a fraction of a second before she moves her hand over it.
  • Continuity: Ray picks up a tri-colored towel, then opens a jar with a green and gold towel.
  • Factual errors: The locomotive engineer would have been seriously injured, if not killed when Hancock stopped the train, due to the impact speed. After the train has stopped, the engineer is unhurt.
  • Incorrectly regarded as goofs: When Hancock throws Michel in the air, then catches him, the car in the background, which is later hit by the refrigerator, is already damaged. Only the windows are broken, which could have been caused by flying pieces of asphalt or the concussion of Hancock’s landing.
  • Audio/visual unsynchronized: When Hancock is sleeping at the bus stop, a whiskey bottle rolls away from him. It’s plastic, but makes the sound of glass rolling on concrete.
  • Continuity: When Ray is on the train tracks, his seat belt is stuck. After Hancock flips the car, Ray is shown laying on the inside of the roof; with the seat belt undone. A seat belt is harder to unlatch when it has tension on it; as would be the case when hanging upside-down.
  • Continuity: When the train comes to a halt, the freight car behind the locomotive is a gondola, but when Hancock walks around the locomotive and sees the rest of the train piling up behind it, the gondola has changed to a boxcar.
  • Continuity: When Ray is drunk and laying on the bed talking to Hancock, he asks Hancock to help him up. In the first shot, they grab each other’s forearms to for leverage. In the following shot, they are using their hands.
  • Errors in geography: Ray holds a cup from Dunkin’ Donuts. The film takes place in Los Angeles. There are no Dunkin’ Donuts in the Los Angeles, California area.
  • Factual errors: In the final scene there are several factual errors: a flash explosion would not trigger a fire sprinkler to go
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“Hancock” 2008 Trailer

‘Hancock – There are heroes. There are superheroes. And then there’s…

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