tromatic

10th May 2003

Blackadder (1986)

Beer - S2-E5

Corrected entry: In the episode "Beer", set in the 1560s, the "Happy Birthday" song is sung by several characters. This song was not written until 1893 by two American school teachers, copyrighted in 1935. Neither is the song in the public domain. It still earns significant fees to the copyright holders each time it is recorded for sale, i.e. in a movie or on television. In most of the episodes, the various historical inaccuracies are intentional. This one, though, appears to have been an accident, a genuine mistake on the part of the writers. It should be noted that unintentional historical errors are very rare in Blackadder, "unintentional" being the key word.

tromatic

Correction: There is no way this mistake could have been overlooked in the production process. For starters the producers would have had to pay the royalties. This is entirely a deliberate gag by the writers.

4th Jul 2003

Blackadder (1986)

Show generally

Corrected entry: In the first series the lead character's name was written as two words, "The Black Adder" (well, technically three words), and in subsequent series it was written as one word, "Blackadder". This is not a mistake, however; this is the normal way that languages evolve. The name evolved from the two word pseudonym used by Prince Edmund into the one word name used by his descendants.

tromatic

Correction: This is not valid trivia. It's obvious to anyone who watches the show, or even just reads the title.

Corrected entry: The ray-gun used by Retik, the ruler of the moon people, is of a very inefficient design, as it will only fire a single shot before needing to be reloaded, a process that takes a surprisingly long time.

tromatic

Correction: Much like the fire-locks, flint-locks and other muskets that were one shot and took a long time to reload. Who knows how technology advanced on the Moon for the moon people. Maybe that was their first creation of a ray-gun.

Rlvlk

Corrected entry: It is quite obvious, in all the scenes in which it appears, that the titular "giant spider" is, in reality, an automobile (to be specific, a Volkswagen Beetle).

tromatic

Correction: It is not at all obvious what the "spider" is made from. One see's no wheels, or parts of the spider that even closely resemble or give away the vw bug with the exception of the headlights doubling as eyes. Unless you knew this info before viewing the film I doubt that you'd guess what it was made from. (I've seen the spider up close and personal and can attest to this - even off screen you cannot tell what's underneath it.).

Join the mailing list

Separate from membership, this is to get updates about mistakes in recent releases. Addresses are not passed on to any third party, and are used solely for direct communication from this site. You can unsubscribe at any time.

Check out the mistake & trivia books, on Kindle and in paperback.