Scent of a Woman
Scent of a Woman (1992)

Scent of a Woman

3/5
(26 votos)
8.0IMDb59Metascore

Detalles

Elenco

Errores

When Simms and Slade meet in Slade's apartment, the amount of whiskey in Slade's glass and bottle repeatedly change.

When Slade and Simms get ready to leave for NY, Slade's tie changes from straight to crooked and back again.

Slade's tie during the suicide scene repeatedly switches between disheveled and neatly tied.

When Slade is driving the Ferrari, the crew is reflected in the paintwork.

The camera is reflected in Slade's sunglasses while he is talking with the political science teacher at Baird.

When Donna and Frank descend to tango on the dance floor a microphone boom can briefly be seen overhead.

When Colonel Slade is threatening to shoot Charlie (and himself), the position of his tie changes between shots (from tilted to the right, to straight).

The small amount of paint seen inside the balloon above Mr.

Trask's car before he pops it, is not consistent with the amount that actually falls on the car.

During the tango scene, Donna's earrings can be seen in one shot and in the next scene, they're gone.

Then, at the end, the earrings return.

In the scene where Frank crosses the street and falls in the grass, Charlie, helps him to stand up again.

At first, Charlie doesn't have the walking stick, but when Frank stands up, Charlie inexplicably has the walking stick in his hands.

Frank mispronounces "espresso" as "expresso" - extremely unlikely for an Italiophile.

Several times during the movie, Slade handles what is supposed to be his U.

Army issue M1911A1.

45 caliber pistol.

But the pistol has a bright blue finish, white highlighted sights, and wood grips with a medallion.

These features identify it as a civilian copy of the M1911A1.

While Slade is explaining to Charlie the proper way to perform the military salute, he says the right hand should be positioned "at the hairline.

" Doing this would result in a ridiculous-looking salute.

The proper position for the hand is adjacent to or just above the right eye.

Additionally, in a proper salute the arm is raised and lowered in a fluid motion.

The right arm is never "snapped" to or from the right eye as the salute is rendered.

Finally, the outside of right hand is always canted towards the individual receiving the salute, in accordance with Army custom.

Slade does not cant his hand properly when he salutes Charlie.

Four unit citation emblems are mounted in one row over the right pocket of Slade's Army dress uniform.

In actual practice, the emblems would be arranged with only three in the row, with the fourth being placed just above and centered on the first three.

In the scene where Slade directs Charlie to get his dress blues from his closet, there is no Silver Star ribbon on the jacket.

In all the later scenes with the dress blues there is a Silver Star ribbon.

During the driving scene, a left turn is made and a the rear of the car begins to drift.

Application of counter steer (to the right) can be observed from the external shot, and then on the next camera angle from the inside of the vehicle, Al Pacino's character is seen recovering the steering wheel from the left.

In the scene where Slade is threatening to commit suicide, he has tears coming out of his left eye and not his right.

When the camera breaks away and then returns, the tears are flowing down his right cheek and not his left.

Lt Col Slade sternly warns Charlie not to refer to his.

45 pistol as a "gun", but rather to call it a "weapon" or "piece" in accordance with military custom.

Moments later just after Charlie refers to it as a weapon, Slade then refers to the pistol as a gun (which was most likely an intentional contradiction of what he had just told Charlie).

When the colonel and Charlie get out of the cab at the airport to catch their flight bound for New York, they are clearly at Newark airport less than 10 miles from the Holland Tunnel into New York City.

Slade didn't declare his pistol when he was checking his luggage with the skycap.

In the hotel scene following the Thanksgiving family scene, Frank is assembling his.

When Charlie calls the.

45 a "gun," Frank corrects him, saying it is a "piece" or a "weapon," but "never a 'gun'".

A few moment later, Frank tells Charlie "a Colonel never gives up his gun!" When Pacino falls on Park Ave, his hair is messed and dry.

When they get back to the hotel immediately after, his hair is slicked back and obviously wet.

When discussing travel plans, one of boys says he thought they were going to Stowe (rather than Sugarbush).

Phillip Seymour Hoffman's characters corrects him, saying, "Sugarbush is Stowe.

" The two are not the same, nor connected.

Sugarbush Resort is in Warren, VT, while Stowe Mountain Resort is 40 miles away in Stowe, VT.

- PLOTFrank and Charles order drinks before Frank does the tango.

The waiter never arrives with the drinks.

Even though Frank and Charles had changed tables, they hadn't moved so far that the waiter would not have been able to find them.

After Slade's speech Trask can be seen hitting the gavel on the podium but the sound does not match for each hit.

Trask manages to pop the balloon with his keys even though he did not actually make contact.

Al Pacino's hands are often in different positions during the school assembly between the long shots and the close-ups.

The car is being driven next to the Brooklyn Bridge with the World Trade Centers in the background.

With the east river on the left, they are looking north while the WTC's are south of the Brooklyn Bridge.

Box Office

FechaÁreaBruto
USA USD 63,895,607
worldwide USD 134,895,607
Non-USA USD 71,000,000
Australia AUD 4,865,895
Sweden SEK 10,984,208
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
23 December 1992 USA USD 357,468 20
FechaÁreaBrutoPantalla
8 August 1993 USA USD 26,605 70
1 August 1993 USA USD 29,625 75
25 July 1993 USA USD 29,520 72
18 July 1993 USA USD 31,450 74
11 July 1993 USA USD 37,345 77
5 July 1993 USA USD 47,630 80
4 July 1993 USA USD 42,030 80
27 June 1993 USA USD 50,575 85
20 June 1993 USA USD 78,105 123
13 June 1993 USA USD 109,075 164
6 June 1993 USA USD 137,740 194
31 May 1993 USA USD 270,630 279
30 May 1993 USA USD 214,830 279
23 May 1993 USA USD 334,495 452
16 May 1993 USA USD 531,225 664
9 May 1993 USA USD 581,100 745
2 May 1993 USA USD 500,045 463
25 April 1993 USA USD 659,695 597
18 April 1993 USA USD 1,018,850 720
11 April 1993 USA USD 1,150,825 685
4 April 1993 USA USD 1,635,410 766
28 March 1993 USA USD 1,317,525 766
21 March 1993 USA USD 1,203,705 759
14 March 1993 USA USD 1,110,795 918
7 March 1993 USA USD 1,727,075 1100
28 February 1993 USA USD 2,489,760 1248
21 February 1993 USA USD 2,935,445 1208
15 February 1993 USA USD 3,189,145 1208
14 February 1993 USA USD 2,766,330 1208
7 February 1993 USA USD 3,806,085 1252
31 January 1993 USA USD 4,131,605 1252
24 January 1993 USA USD 4,745,865 1244
18 January 1993 USA USD 6,350,900 1212
17 January 1993 USA USD 5,538,840 1212
10 January 1993 USA USD 6,476,340 1083
3 January 1993 USA USD 493,815 20

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