That’s what really gets to me: they could easily and cheaply avoid SO many of these anachronisms (notice the word ‘chronos’ in there? I just did).
Hairstyles? They’re already in the makeup chair, just tell the makeup artists you want them to do a period style. And they could probably make the teeth look less ‘Hollywood Veneers’ in a couple of minutes (not making them crooked, but a bit scuffed and brownish).
Titanic did a pretty good job on the historical details, but there was a passing reference to visiting the Santa Monica Pier to ride the roller coaster, which was still 4 years away from being built.
I believe I’ve posted this one elsewhere on this board, but the 1992 TV-movie To Catch a Killer about John Wayne Gacy has police detectives interviewing the mother of one of Gacy’s victims in the boy’s bedroom. On the wall is a Ryne Sandberg/Chicago Cubs poster…
The last Gacy victim, Robert Piest, disappeared in 1978.
There is a Renaissance painting in the Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota of Jesus blessing a musician holding a violin. The violin wasn’t invented until 1,500 years after the time of Christ.
Archaeologic findings suggest tooth decay was common in prehistoric hominids.
And their dental care was…primitive.
There were early helicopters in use by the Germans in WWII, but not the Bell 47 seen landing in the castle courtyard in Where Eagles Dare. That model wasn’t developed until after the war (apparently it was also used in “MASH”).
In the movie “Flight of the Intruder”, which is set during the Vietnam War, there’s a brief scene of the main character in the ship’s library, which features a copy of the book “Children of Dune” in a book rack. That book wasn’t published until after the Vietnam war ended.
A minor thing, but the way the scene was framed, the book really stood out. I caught it immediately wen I saw the movie in the theatre.
In The History of the Holy Grail (Estoire del Saint Graal, part 1 of the Arthurian Vulgate (early 13th century), when St. Joseph of Arimathea and his son Josephus bring the Graal to Britain around the 2nd century, they find it full of “Saracens”.
As far as teeth and Star Trek are concerned, watch “Let That Be Your Last Battlefield” some time. The close-ups on the actors’ mouths while they’re activating the self-destruct mechanism definitely show 20th century teeth!
In Robin Hood, Prince of Thieves, I thought Morgan Freeman’s telescope was supposed to show how much more advanced the Islamic world was in the 12th century, compared to Europe. Whether Muslims had such things at the time, I don’t know, but the movie is impossible to take seriously anyway.
Not a movie, but in the Poldark series of novels, the author talks about using dynamite in Cornish mines of the 18th century. Dynamite was invented by Alfred Nobel a century later. The Cornish would have been using black powder instead. (I don’t remember if this crept into the TV series or not.)
Also in the Poldark novels, news of George Washington’s death seems to have crossed the Atlantic in less than two weeks. That’s pretty fast sailing for 1799!
The last two examples are surprising, considering the amount of research Winston Graham obviously did while writing the novels.
Graham also has one of the characters playing with “elastic” at one point. I’m not sure what he was referring to, but I once looked up when elastic was first used in clothing. IIRC, the year was 1913.
Also, why would spray bottles on the Enterprise be considered an anachronism? I have lots of them in my 21st century apartment, and I expect they’ll be used far into the future. (It’s the way they were always left standing around unsecured in the laboratories that bugged me. And they never seemed to fall or bounce around when the ship was hit by a phaser blast or photon torpedo.)
Ancient Egyptians apparently had good teeth too. There was an episode of Newton’s Apple where a mummy was brought into the studio. Ira Flatow was impressed by the condition its teeth were in: “My teeth should look so good!”
Watching TV shows set during WWII back in the '60s, my mother always commented on how wrong the women’s hairstyles were. Watching shows like Little House on the Prairie in the '70s, I was struck by how the men and boys always had neatly trimmed, blow-dried hair. No punchbowl cuts, lice combs, or bacon grease at all.
I don’t recall any of the Scots in Braveheart wearing armor, helmets, or even padding. Were they still painting themselves with woad at the time? They looked like an army the Romans would have faced, not the English.
It isn’t an anachronism, the Braveheart battle scenes are basically modern-day Motherwell on a Friday night. I kid, they stopped painting themselves with woad 20 years ago.
One anachronism, that may be a misremembering on my part, but didn’t Han Solo mention “Einstein” when rebuking C3PO?
Which would be out by a factor of “a long time” and in a different galaxy altogether.