Wonder Woman vs Gargantua - S1-E7
Visible crew/equipment: When the truck carrying the caged gorilla pulls into the alleyway, just as Hans and Carl exit the truck and walk away, the blue-sleeved arm of the cameraman/crew member is visible as it moves upward, at the right side of the screen.
Wonder Woman vs Gargantua - S1-E7
Continuity mistake: An alarm button vanishes from the safe house room wall between shots.
Wonder Woman vs Gargantua - S1-E7
Visible crew/equipment: While Wonder Woman searches for Steigler at the deserted oil refinery the Nazis force Steigler to shout for help, then when they all hide and Wonder Woman breaks into the room, the actors' two tape marks are visible on the floor near Steigler.
Wonder Woman vs Gargantua - S1-E7
Revealing mistake: While the circus crowd is gathered around the cage with Gargantua, there's a closeup of the gorilla as he roars and we can see the stuntman's human teeth behind the gorilla's teeth. It happens again in Gargantua's closeup while he's climbing up to Steigler's window.
Wonder Woman vs Gargantua - S1-E7
Continuity mistake: After the Nazis capture Steigler, while they're at the oil refinery Gargantua is in a cage behind them, and when Erica blows the whistle the gorilla reaches through the bars and grabs a large cardboard cutout of Wonder Woman, which was leaning against the wall, but the problem is that in the previous shots that cardboard cutout was not there.
Wonder Woman vs Gargantua - S1-E7
Visible crew/equipment: When Erica and Hans pay a visit to Dr. Osmond, just as Erica walks into the lab and stops in front of Gargantua's cage, the tape mark is visible on the floor in front of her feet (fullscreen version).
Wonder Woman vs Gargantua - S1-E7
Continuity mistake: When Wonder Woman arrives at the warehouse where Steigler is being held, as she's using her lasso to scale the building the high heels on her boots have vanished, and they're now flats. This switch also occurs in previous shots, as well as at the start when Erica Belgard is disguised as Wonder Woman.
Answer: There is no logical reason. Any normal person would notice these type of absences. The show employs a "suspension of disbelief," which is a literary device where the movie audience or a book reader accepts that certain things are unreal for the sake of the story to be told. It is similar to no-one noticing that Clark Kent looks exactly like Superman because he wears glasses.
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