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With a nostalgic eye to detail, we are looking back on this iconic effort and calling out a handful of blunders and continuity mistakes. More specifically, we’ve uncovered seven oversights that you won’t be able to unsee.
1) The Guy in the Alley Has a Magic Drink

When Kyle Reese (Michael Biehn) successfully arrives in 1984 after traveling back in time from 2029, there is a transient fellow in the alley with a brown bag-wrapped bottle in his hand, witnessing Reese’s epic arrival. However, between cuts, the bottle moves back and forth between the gentleman’s left and right hands multiple times. Since his drink isn’t the focal point of the scene, this goof is rather be easy to miss, yet eagle-eyed viewers have pointed out this continuity mistake on both Reddit and IMDb. It turns out that they are right. If you advance in slow motion, it’s easy enough to verify that the bottle changes hands several times.
2) What Day Is It?!

After Kyle arrives in the alley alongside the unhoused man with the bottle prone to transfer between hands, the police arrive on the scene and give chase. Kyle eventually overtakes a cop and commandeers his service weapon. From there, a disoriented Kyle asks for the date. The lawman tells Kyle that it’s Thursday, May 12. The only problem with that statement is that May 12 fell on a Saturday in 1984 when the film is set. That’s a fairly innocuous inaccuracy, but still one that astute fans have picked up on in the years since the film’s release.
3) What Is Sarah Connor’s Actual Address?!

When the Terminator (Arnold Schwarzenegger) rolls up on Sarah Connor (Linda Hamilton), he first looks her up in something called a phone book and sees a total of three listings. One lists the house number as 1823, the next is 2816, and the third is 309. Yet, when the cybernetic organism arrives at the home of the first Sarah Connor in the very next scene, the house number is 14239. It seems surprising that the script supervisor didn’t pick up on that fairly noticeable continuity error. Even still, it gives us something to talk about all these years later.
4) Did That Shotgun Handle Just Grow Back?

After Kyle escapes the police officers who chased him following his arrival in the 1984 timeline, he steals a second weapon from one of their vehicles, a shotgun. Shortly thereafter, Kyle saws off the handle to give the weapon a lower profile, allowing it to go unnoticed under his jacket. Yet, in the sequence where he and Sarah find themselves creeping through a parking structure with the police in hot pursuit, the handle of the shotgun has mysteriously returned to full length. Is this some sort of futuristic magic trick, or perhaps just another continuity error?











