Movies and television shows can spend millions of dollars on production while still missing tiny details. While most viewers are willing to suspend disbelief for the sake of entertainment, certain inaccuracies became unintentionally hilarious because of how obvious they seemed on screen. In many cases, these mistakes ended up becoming more memorable than the scenes themselves, especially among fans who love pointing out every little detail Hollywood gets wrong.

Gravity (2013) — Orbiting Space Stations
The movie compresses orbital distances so heavily that multiple space stations appear unrealistically close together.

Grey’s Anatomy — Doctors Doing Everything
The doctors constantly handle tasks that would normally involve dozens of other hospital employees and specialists.

Hackers (1995) — Hacking Looks Like a Video Game
The movie portrays hacking through giant floating graphics and impossible computer animations that feel more like an arcade game.

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull (2008) — Surviving a Nuclear Blast in a Fridge
Indiana Jones escapes a nuclear explosion by hiding inside a refrigerator thrown across the desert.

Jurassic World (2015) — Running in Heels From Dinosaurs
Bryce Dallas Howard spends much of the movie escaping dinosaurs while wearing high heels without slowing down much at all.

Lucy (2014) — Using 100 Percent of the Brain
The entire premise depends on the long debunked myth that humans use only a tiny fraction of their brains.

NCIS — Two People Typing on One Keyboard
One infamous scene shows two agents typing simultaneously on the same keyboard to stop a cyberattack faster.

Swordfish (2001) — Superhuman Coding Speed
A hacker writes advanced code in seconds while surrounded by chaos and distractions that would destroy concentration.

The Core (2003) — Restarting Earth’s Core With Nukes
The entire movie revolves around detonating nuclear bombs to restart the planet’s core rotation.

The Day After Tomorrow (2004) — Running Away From Cold Air
One scene suggests characters can physically outrun freezing temperatures, moving through a building.

24 — Endless Action Without Exhaustion
Kiefer Sutherland somehow survives nonstop injuries, interrogations, and gunfights across single day storylines.

2012 (2009) — Escaping Continental Destruction by Car
Characters repeatedly outrun collapsing cities and massive geological disasters with almost impossible timing.

Armageddon (1998) — Training Oil Drillers for Space
NASA decides it is easier to train oil drillers to become astronauts than teach astronauts how to drill.

CSI: Miami — Instantly Enhancing Images
Characters somehow turn blurry reflections into perfectly clear photographs with impossible levels of digital enhancement.

Friends — Massive Affordable Apartments
The characters somehow maintain enormous Manhattan apartments despite jobs that realistically could not support them.
The post 15 Details Movies and Shows Got Hilariously Wrong appeared first on Den of Geek.
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