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  <title>Mistakes in The Passion of the Christ</title>
  <description>The top mistakes in The Passion of the Christ</description>
  <link>http://www.moviemistakes.com/film4027</link>
  <language>en</language>
  <pubDate>Sat, 10 May 2008 05:55:20 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #1</title>
	<mistake_id>53421</mistake_id>
      <description>When Jesus tells Peter to stop fighting against the  temple guards when in the garden, you can see the background behind him: a small tree by a large one. The shot cuts to Peter and then back to Jesus telling him to again stop. The background is now reversed.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #2</title>
	<mistake_id>51898</mistake_id>
      <description>During the scene where the Romans soldiers raise Jesus' cross, they use two ropes on each arm of it. If you look at the rope on the left side of the screen, you can see that it is slack, it's obviously not supporting the weight of the cross. There must have been some device lifting it off screen.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #3</title>
	<mistake_id>72443</mistake_id>
      <description>Just before the Roman soldiers pressed Simon of Cyrene to help Jesus carry the cross, Jesus has fallen and we see that the bruised and swollen-shut eye is now his left. The shot changes and when it comes back to Jesus his right eye is swollen shut again. The film must have been flipped.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #4</title>
	<mistake_id>67690</mistake_id>
      <description>In the flashback scene where Jesus is confronting the stonethrowers (represented as the chief priests) who are approaching to stone Mary Magdalene, when Jesus bends down to draw the line in the sand he is reaching over with his right hand, with his right index finger pointed. The close-up of the hand drawing the line is a left hand.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #5</title>
	<mistake_id>129100</mistake_id>
      <description>In the scene where Mary the mother of Jesus cleans with white clothes the copious blood spread on the Pretorium is peculiarly red showing no traces of the normal biological process of coagulation and condensation in that season of the year (pesach or Jewish Easter) as shown in Lee White's hematology tests. No coagulation can be seen in the scene despite the amount of blood.</description>
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