Continuity mistake: When Wonder Woman tries to escape from the building, she's in the room with the padded floor and walls. Her heels are missing from her Wonder Woman boots, but they were on when she was in the hallway.
Continuity mistake: Diana is initially seen wearing a dark brown short-sleeved dress, but when she picks up the coffee, the dress inexplicably appears grey.
Continuity mistake: When Diana spins around, the computers are on. When she transforms herself into Wonder Woman, they're off.
Continuity mistake: When the bad guy brings the suitcase to the control room, the time on the timer behind him jumps forward and backwards between shots; no continuity. (00:05:30)
Continuity mistake: Diana puts the seatbelt on the robot. A shot later, it's gone.
Continuity mistake: Before Wonder Woman jumps on the bad guy, he runs past a rectangular lid on the ground. When she catches him, he is metres behind, next to the rectangular lid again.






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.
raywest ★