• InvalidName2@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    This is my curse, as well. Your film is set in the desert surrounding ancient Egypt. WHY ARE THERE CACTI?

    • oppy1984@lemdro.id
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      14 hours ago

      I get it, my dad worked in corporate aviation, my aunt worked in commercial aviation, and I worked in cargo aviation. I also have a little second hand knowledge of military aviation. Anytime there’s something with planes in TV or film, I cringe… well except for Airplane! but that should go without saying.

        • oppy1984@lemdro.id
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          6 hours ago

          I couldn’t agree more, why I remember the first time I saw Airplane! it was during the war, my wingman George Zipp suggested the film while we were on R&R. I agreed to go with him, more to keep him company than an actual desire to see the film, but to my surprise I actually enjoyed it. On our way home we stopped by a disco… <entire comment section self-immolates>

  • blackbrook@mander.xyz
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    16 hours ago

    I have no idea of this person is expert enough to tell the difference, but there are loon species in Europe that sound pretty similar to the common loon.

  • TankovayaDiviziya@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    You’re all complaining about the minutest detail, but if you watch the 1965 film Battle of the Bulge, you’d have aneurism. A battle famously occured in Europe during one of the coldest snowy winter, and the finale was filmed on dry semi-arid landscape. The Allies used M4 Sherman tanks in larger numbers, but the film used M24 Chaffees as if they were more ubiquitous. You don’t need to be nerd on WWII but having the basic knowledge of conflict would make one cringe of the film’s deliberate errors. Ridley Scott’s Napoleon was somehow more tolerable and given a pass because Scott never intended the film to be taken aa seriously.

  • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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    23 hours ago

    If I were a filmmaker, I’d be so tempted to troll the ornithologists by putting in, say, a faint but distinctly recognisable kookaburra call in a scene in the Peloponnesian Wars or something. And add another layer of trolling by having the scene filmed somewhere where there are no kookaburras.

    • Barabas [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      1 day ago

      That situation is the most I’ve ever been involved in internet lore. My partner showed me a Reddit post of a jackdaw where the top comment was Unidan calling it a crow (pretending to be an authority on it as he usually did) and I told her to correct him (in a friendly way) because jackdaws are one of my favourite birds and I want people to know what they are. This was only a few weeks before he had his meltdown over the subject.

      Kind of funny to know that it bothered him enough that he would implode his entire internet persona over it.

    • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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      1 day ago

      Is it on the same planet? Yes. No one’s arguing that.

      As someone who is a geologist who studies continents, I am telling you, specifically, in science, no one calls common loons North American. If you want to be “specific” like you said, then you shouldn’t either. They’re not the same thing.

      If you’re saying “North America” you’re referring to the tectonic grouping of the Americas, which includes things from North America to Central America to South America.

  • Sergio@piefed.social
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    1 day ago

    They were bringing coconuts to England because the swallows weren’t big enough to do so.

  • Denjin@feddit.uk
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    22 hours ago

    I’ll give you one Canadian dollar for each Loon call you can find in a film not set somewhere that Loonies are endemic.

  • 1rre@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 day ago

    Watch Deadpool vs Wolverine. The entire woods scene was so clearly filmed in a European woodland, it ruins the whole film.

      • sepi@piefed.social
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        19 hours ago

        They did film on Tatooine. They couldn’t film on Endor so they had to go to Romania. That’s why everybody looks like that.

      • 1rre@discuss.tchncs.de
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        23 hours ago

        Yeah there is, it’s in the growth patterns where you can tell the trees were either planted or allowed to grow in an arrangment that maximised yield, are all very similar in age, and historically but not recently regularly trimmed for wood and sticks without chopping them down.

        Asia and Africa (other than Japan, which did it with evergreen trees) historically used other materials (mainly grasses/palms), and in the Americas they used different construction methods both pre- and post-colonisation, so you don’t get (as many) old managed woodlands.

        Interesting video on the topic

        • starlinguk@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          That is the weirdest generalization I’ve ever read.

          Houses are built differently all throughout Europe. Trees were planted at different times, with different varieties. Sweden has huge swathes of pine, where I live it’s mostly oak and beech. A lot of that pine is fairly young while the forest near me is hundreds of years old. Hell, Wales has an ancient rain forest.

          There is no such thing as a European anything.