Revealing mistake: Tom drives at least two differently equipped Ford 4x4 Supercrew trucks. In particular, there are two different grille guards, with one being smaller and less protruding than the other, as well as less-menacing looking. Although inconsistently used, the switch to a grille guard that can cause less damage is used at the gas station when Tom runs into the guy who tried to help Rachel get away from him and when ramming the rear-end of Rachel's Volvo. One truck has fog (or running) lights below the grille guard, making the two differently-equipped trucks more noticeable/discernable.
Unhinged (2020)
1 revealing mistake
Directed by: Derrick Borte
Starring: Russell Crowe, Gabriel Bateman, Jimmi Simpson, Caren Pistorius
Continuity mistake: The amount of rain on The Man's shirt is relatively light when he reaches the doorstep but his shirt was saturated before he even started going up the sidewalk. He was in the house for a couple of minutes to kill the two people and set the house on fire (not enough time for his shirt to dry) yet his shirt was almost dry when he exited the house. The Man's shirt got soaked again on his way to his truck. The shirt looks dark blue when saturated with rain but light blue when it is dry. (00:02:53 - 00:03:51)
Trivia: "Aggressive driving" and "Road Rage" are not the same thing, but there is some overlap: Not all aggressive driving is road rage, but road rage is an extreme form of aggressive driving. In general, aggressive driving (such as tailgating) is classified as a traffic offense or summary offense (typically punishable by a fine but can result in suspension of driver's license and possibly include a short jail sentence) whereas road rage is classified as a criminal offense (and also falls under civil offenses or torts) because the intent is to cause harm. Road rage can take the form of an aggravated assault by vehicle (felony offense); less serious incidents are sometimes written up as "reckless driving", lowering the classification to a summary (traffic) offense. When a driver becomes angry, wants to cause harm to another person/driver, and a person is injured, the driver's behavior is deemed violent and subject to criminal prosecution as a felony offense.
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