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  <title>Mistakes in Munich</title>
  <description>The top mistakes in Munich</description>
  <link>http://www.moviemistakes.com/film5408</link>
  <language>en</language>
  <pubDate>Sat, 21 Nov 2009 06:55:06 +0000</pubDate>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #1</title>
	<mistake_id>99651</mistake_id>
      <description>In the scene where Avner shoots the first Palestinian, the dead man falls forward onto his groceries, but the next time the body is seen, he is lying on his back.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #2</title>
	<mistake_id>99898</mistake_id>
      <description>In the final scene with the New York skyline in the background, the new glass/stainless steel Manhattan complex at 731 Lexington Avenue is seen; this building is just being finished now in early '06. The building stands where Alexander's dept store once was. (On a related note, it is a nice touch on Spielberg's part to overlay the Twin Towers onto the skyline in that same scene.)</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #3</title>
	<mistake_id>117517</mistake_id>
      <description>When Avner finds Carl dead in the hotel bed, you can see a pulse in Carl's neck.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #4</title>
	<mistake_id>149163</mistake_id>
      <description>In the scene towards the end where Avner is speaking with his mother, there is a central-air-conditioning-type vent in the wall. It seems to me unlikely that an Israeli house/apartment in the 1970s would have had such a system. Air conditioning units were not very common and what would normally have been found was a single-piece unit installed through a wall.</description>
    </item>
    <item>
	<title>Mistake #5</title>
	<mistake_id>149070</mistake_id>
      <description>In the background at Avner's debriefing is a water cooler. Israel's two earliest mineral water companies (Mei Eden and Neviot) weren't founded until the 1980s, so it is unlikely that there would have been such a water cooler there (assuming that the debriefing was taking place in the mid/late 1970s). </description>
    </item>
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