Corrected entry: After the final bank robbery and shoot out Toby (Chris Pine) is riding in the back of the getaway truck and shouts to his brother, "this has gone too far Ben" using the actor's name, Ben Foster, not the character's name, Tanner. (01:10:00)
Hell or High Water (2016)
1 corrected entry
Directed by: David Mackenzie
Starring: Chris Pine, Ben Foster, Dale Dickey, William Sterchi
Continuity mistake: In the first getaway scene Tanner Howard is driving the blue car with blue latex gloves still on from the robbery. As he drives he pulls off the gloves, but in the very next shot of him driving he has the gloves back on. (00:04:35)
Lawyer: Now, they can foreclose on Friday. Come hell or high water, be at the bank in Childress on Thursday. Knowing them f-ers, they will close early.
Toby: We'll be there.
Lawyer: Oh, and Toby, the trust needs to be managed by a bank. You really wanna cover your tracks? You get Texas Midland to handle this trust.
Toby: [Nods "okay"] (00:48:23)
Question: Can someone be shot through the side and just duct tape the entry and exit holes? (Wouldn't the bullet have mushroomed in the body and not exited anyway?) If there were a real gunshot wound like that, how long until he bleeds out?
Answer: Duct taping the wounds may seal the injury and hold the bleeding, but it may not be effective. If something along the lines of this would happen in real life, it would be best to tend to the wounds properly in case of infection. Whether or not the bullet would get stuck inside the body depends on if whether or not the bullet hits something, that would cause it to get stuck inside the body. How long until someone would bleed out in real life depends on the severity of the gunshot wound and whether or not something major was hit.





Correction: No, he calls him "Tan", he doesn't say "Ben."
Bishop73