Did You Catch The Most Outrageous Costume Mistakes In These Major Films?

Entertainment | 11/22/24

Movies rely on costuming to set the scene for the action. Costumes need to convince us that a film is set in a certain place and time. That's why it can be so disheartening when movies get it wrong. Costume designers have a lot to think about when they're coming up with a look for a movie.

Keep reading to see all of the most glaring costume mistakes in your favorite movies.

Legends of the Fall: Brad Pitt's Blonde Hair Was Too Perfect

cost2
Photo Credit: @jmclark1181 / Twitter
Photo Credit: @jmclark1181 / Twitter

In Legends of the Fall, Brad Pitt plays Tristan Ludlow, a cowboy coming of age in the early 1900s.

His hair, however, looks like it belongs in the '60s. Also, his shoddy shave would never pass in those days. He looks more like a glam rock star than a turn of the century farm hand.

ADVERTISEMENT

Raiders of the Lost Ark: An Extra Is Actually Wearing Jeans

ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: zoo-death / Imgur
Photo Credit: zoo-death / Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

If you look closely in the background of this shot, you can see that there's an extra walking around wearing a pair of blue jeans.

ADVERTISEMENT

I just don't think that jeans were a thing in Egypt in the 1930s. Maybe that guy was part of the crew and he wasn't supposed to be in the shot.

ADVERTISEMENT

Captain America (The First Avenger): Hair Needs To Be Up Here

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost4
Photo Credit: @clarkesatwell / Twitter
Photo Credit: @clarkesatwell / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Look, we can all agree that Peggy is super attractive. I know that I love her gorgeous wavy brown hair. The thing is, that hair just isn't army appropriate.

ADVERTISEMENT

Even though it fits the time period, during the war, women were required to have their hair up off their collar and tied back.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Ten Commandments: Nefertiri's Dress Is Just Too Advanced

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

I still think that The Ten Commandments is the best biblical film ever made. That doesn't mean that it's perfect, though. Anna Baxter as Nefertiti wears a stunning blue dress.

ADVERTISEMENT

The problem? Nobody had access to blue dye during that time period. It was incredibly difficult to make and even when it was available much later, it was reserved for royalty. I know Nefertiti was royalty, but it's just a little too early for that shade of blue.

ADVERTISEMENT

Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves: Telescopes Didn't Exist Yet

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: SomeoneTookMyUsernameToo / Imgur
Photo Credit: SomeoneTookMyUsernameToo / Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

The scene where Costner and Freeman look through their telescope in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves isn't entirely accurate. Telescopes like this one were invented in the 17th century after the events of this film take place.

ADVERTISEMENT

There's no way Robin Hood would have a compact telescope at his disposal.

ADVERTISEMENT

Captain America (The First Avenger): The Headset Didn't Exist Yet

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost8
Photo Credit: @TheMCUExchange / Twitter
Photo Credit: @TheMCUExchange / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

I commend Marvel for doing a period piece, but if you're going to do it, do it right. That radio earpiece that Jim Mortia wears in the film looks a little bit out of place.

ADVERTISEMENT

The system was designed much later, around the year 2000. That means there's no way the military had it during WWII.

ADVERTISEMENT

Almost Famous: The Black Sabbath T-shirt

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

Almost Famous has become something of a modern classic. It follows an aspiring rock and roll journalist as he tours around the country with one of his favorite bands.

ADVERTISEMENT

For a movie all about rock and roll, it seems odd that they missed this piece of rock trivia. One of the cast members wears a Black Sabbath t-shirt in the movie, but those shirts were made in 1997. The movie is set in the early '70s.

ADVERTISEMENT

Django Unchained: Sunglasses Didn't Exist Yet

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost10
Photo Credit: @DeeZeyDeeZe / Twitter
Photo Credit: @DeeZeyDeeZe / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

It's a good thing Tarantino wasn't exactly going for realism in this film. This movie was everything we didn't know we needed. It made almost $300,000,000 worldwide, but this awesome movie still had its flaws.

ADVERTISEMENT

Those sunglasses were invented in 1929. Sorry, Django, you're just going to have to squint.

ADVERTISEMENT

Saving Private Ryan: The Case Of The Black Boots

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost11
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

This epic war thriller has become the film that kids watch in school about WWII. I bet you saw it for the first time in a high school history class.

ADVERTISEMENT

The film isn't entirely historically accurate, though. The black boots that Matt Damon wears throughout the movie weren't introduced until the 1950s.

ADVERTISEMENT

American Hustle: No Rolex Watches In The 70s

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost14
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

This costume mistake is so small and insignificant that you may have totally missed it— but don't worry, we caught it for you.

ADVERTISEMENT

In American Hustle, Louis CK wears a Rolex that didn't exist until 2010. That seems pretty out of place for a film that's set in the 70s.

ADVERTISEMENT

Gangs of New York: Firefighters Modern Uniforms Don't Make Sense

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost15
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

Gangs of New York takes place in the mid 19th century, and yet, the firefighters in the film are dressed in modern firefighting gear.

ADVERTISEMENT

I expected more than this from Martin Scorsese. You have to pay attention to history if you're going to make a historical drama.

ADVERTISEMENT

Amadeus: Mozart's Zippers Didn’t Exist Yet

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: WolgangGrimmer / Tumblr
Photo Credit: WolgangGrimmer / Tumblr
ADVERTISEMENT

Zippers are a modern invention, historically speaking. They definitely didn't exist when Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was alive in the 18th century.

ADVERTISEMENT

A bunch of zippers are visible in this film even though they wouldn't be invented for another hundred years. Get your facts straight, people!

ADVERTISEMENT

The Tudors: Wearing Ruffs Is Scandalous

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

We think of ruffs as some kind of old-timey fashion accessory, but just because they existed a long time ago, it doesn't mean you can just throw some into a film and hope for the best.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ruffs were worn in a very specific way. Nobody would wear one without an undershirt. That was considered inappropriate and even scandalous in the 1500s.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Other Boleyn Girl: Portman's Hair Needs To Be Pulled Back

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Tumblr
Photo Credit: Tumblr
ADVERTISEMENT

I think filmmakers wanted us to see Natalie and Scarlett's hair so we could identify one as the blonde one and one as the brunette. The problem is that this is not how French hoods were worn during the time period.

ADVERTISEMENT

Their hair should have been pulled back and hidden under a veil.

ADVERTISEMENT

Back to the Future: This Guitar Didn't Exist Yet

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost20
Photo Credit: @TheChickenWing / Twitter
Photo Credit: @TheChickenWing / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Marty McFly might travel through time, but that doesn't mean that guitars can do the same. I don't think a misplaced guitar is the weirdest thing about this movie, but it does stand out as inaccurate.

ADVERTISEMENT

The guitar that Marty plays in the 1955 scene wouldn't be invented until 1958.

ADVERTISEMENT

Pearl Harbor: Bare Legs Weren't Appropriate

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

It's important to do some historical research before you start making a movie. If you skip out on this very important step, you end up with glaring mistakes like this one.

ADVERTISEMENT

There's no way that women would be seen without stockings in the WWII era. It would simply be too revealing.

ADVERTISEMENT

Public Enemies: A Robe That's Too Advanced

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: IMgur
Photo Credit: IMgur
ADVERTISEMENT

Public Enemies takes place during the depression era in America. Johnny Depp nails his performance as bank robber John Dillinger. He certainly acted like a '30s bank robber, but he didn't really dress like one.

ADVERTISEMENT

The high quality, flexible, light fibers we make jackets out of today were unavailable back then. The character's jacket should be a lot heavier and more structured.

ADVERTISEMENT

The King's Speech: Wrong Kilt

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

Everyone on the set of The King's Speech did a great job making the film look realistic and believable. Everyone except for the kilt expert, apparently.

ADVERTISEMENT

The kilt design that the king wears in this scene was "not made to an authentic Scottish pattern," according to multiple tartan experts. Adding insult to injury, one manufacturer says that the sporran (pouch) he's wearing only dates back to the 21st century.

ADVERTISEMENT

Baywatch: Transparent Swimsuit

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: @menschen / Twitter
Photo Credit: @menschen / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Baywatch was one of those shows that everyone watched, but there were a lot of things going on behind the scenes that we didn't know about.

ADVERTISEMENT

One time, actress Gena Lee Nolin almost had an embarrassing incident when she discovered that a swimsuit she was supposed to wear on the show became transparent when it got wet. Luckily for her, they figured it out before they started shooting.

ADVERTISEMENT

Glory: A Digital Watch During the Civil War, Really?

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: MisterWonka / Reddit
Photo Credit: MisterWonka / Reddit
ADVERTISEMENT

Somebody, please explain to me how this one happened. Glory is set during the civil war. Nobody had wristwatches like the one in this scene. This movie had a big budget and it was full of big name actors.

ADVERTISEMENT

Wristwatches didn't exist until the '20s, and even then, they weren't digital until much later.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Mummy Returns: Meema's Skirt Is Not Battle Friendly

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

I really don't think that branding was a thing in ancient Egypt. During an epic fight scene between Nefertiri and Anck Su in The Mummy Returns, you can see some tags on the women's undergarments.

ADVERTISEMENT

I just didn't peg Nefertiti as a Fruit of the Loom kind of girl.

ADVERTISEMENT

Troy: Umbrellas Didn't Exist Then

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: @ThorioumBr / Twitter
Photo Credit: @ThorioumBr / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Check out the tasseled red umbrella behind Orlando Bloom in this shot. Well, this little detail is totally inaccurate. The umbrella was actually invented in the 5th Century BCE, way after the Battle of Troy took place.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sometimes you just have to suspend your disbelief.

ADVERTISEMENT

Dirty Dancing: Baby's Cut-Off Shorts Needed To Be A Skirt

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: @didiine76 / Twitter
Photo Credit: @didiine76 / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Baby's style wasn't so much emblematic of her time as it was an inspiration for her time. The movie was set in 1963, even though it was filmed in the '80s.

ADVERTISEMENT

Those cut-off jean shorts she wears came into fashion in the '80s. Nobody would be caught dead in those in the '60s.

ADVERTISEMENT

Sharon Stone Didn't Realize This While Filming Total Recall

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Sharon-Stone
MovieStillsDB
MovieStillsDB
ADVERTISEMENT

Total Recall stars Arnold Schwarzenegger as the lead character Douglas Quaid, who has dreams of going on vacation to the planet Mars. The film was released in 1990, but takes place in 2084, a time where maybe it's more believable that someone could go to Mars on vacation?

ADVERTISEMENT

Either way, Sharon Stone plays the slightly unhinged wife of Quaid, who in one scene, attacks him with a knife! However, movie goers weren't convinced, as the knife flops around and is clearly made of rubber.

ADVERTISEMENT

Pride and Prejudice: Rubber Boots Didn't Exist Then

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: princesanadie / Tumblr
Photo Credit: princesanadie / Tumblr
ADVERTISEMENT

Pride and Prejudice is a classic story about a woman finding love in an unlikely partner. At first, Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy went together like rubber boots and the Georgian Era.

ADVERTISEMENT

That's right, rubber boots weren't invented until twenty years after the events of the book. Maybe they should have rethought that costume choice.

ADVERTISEMENT

Good Night and Good Luck: Name Tags Equal Nope

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

Army uniforms have very strict rules and regulations. You can't just make up what they look like as you go along— you have to do a bit of historical research.

ADVERTISEMENT

This film takes place in the 1950s, but there are some casually dressed military officers in the movie who wear name tags that were only introduced in the late sixties.

ADVERTISEMENT

Braveheart: Gibson's Scottish Skirt Was Totally Premature

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: @CalebSynan / Twitter
Photo Credit: @CalebSynan / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

Braveheart is one of those films that everyone has seen but almost nobody remembers. Like, what even was this movie? For some reason, it has continued to stay relevant.

ADVERTISEMENT

The thing is, it got the costumes all wrong. It takes place in the 13th century, but Scots only began wearing kilts in the 16th century.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Color Purple: Clip-on Ties Didn't Exist Yet

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

The Color Purple tells the story of African American women living in the South during the 1900s. It's based on a novel by Alice Walker.

ADVERTISEMENT

Danny Glover appears in the film wearing a clip-on tie, a fashion accessory that wouldn't be introduced to the market until 1928.

ADVERTISEMENT

Gladiator: Crowe's Lycra Shorts Don’t Make Sense

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: Imgur
Photo Credit: Imgur
ADVERTISEMENT

I really don't think that spandex lycra shorts existed in ancient Rome. Russel Crow is wearing some pretty epic leather armor. but I just can't get over what he's wearing underneath it.

ADVERTISEMENT

I don't think anyone was too focused on comfort or stretchy pants in gladiator times.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Curious Case Of Benjamin Button: Ray Bans Ahead Of Their Time

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Benjamin Button
Paramount Pictures
Paramount Pictures
ADVERTISEMENT

Actor Brad Pitt has always been known is a considerably stylish guy, even when he's off-screen. In the 2008 film The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, he is depicted wearing a really stylish accessory in one scene — a sleek pair of Ray Ban sunglasses, specifically the 3025 Aviator model.

ADVERTISEMENT

The scene in question takes place in 1945, but the 3025 Aviators were not introduced until 1952.

ADVERTISEMENT

Cinderella: An Accidental Costume Change

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cinderella
Disney
Disney
ADVERTISEMENT

It's hard to forget the iconic and gorgeous white wedding dress Cinderella wore in the classic 1950 Disney animated feature film of the same title.

ADVERTISEMENT

Most viewers remember the dress being a modest long-sleeve style, but in the scene when she is riding away in the carriage after the ceremony, the dress suddenly becomes short sleeved.

ADVERTISEMENT

Catch Me If You Can: Braces Didn't Look Like This Yet

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Photo Credit: @ThomasJLuca / Twitter
Photo Credit: @ThomasJLuca / Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT

This movie about a world-class fraud played by Leonardo DiCaprio took place in the 1960s. In one scene, we see Amy Adams as a nurse with stainless steel braces that are adhered to the front of her teeth.

ADVERTISEMENT

In the 1960s, most braces were made of gold and were wrapped around the teeth rather than being glued to the front. Stainless steel and adhesives weren't universally integrated into orthodontics until the 1970s.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Wizard Of Oz: What Happened To The Ruby Slippers?

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Wizard Of Oz
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
ADVERTISEMENT

"There's no place like home." It’s a phrase many know well and one that helped Dorothy escape the wrath of the Wicked Witch. That phrase, paired with the magical red slippers of course.

ADVERTISEMENT

In the scene after Dorothy and Scarecrow are fighting with the tree, look at her shoes. Uh oh, she is wearing plain black leather shoes instead of ruby red slippers.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Shawshank Redemption: Beers From The Future

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Shawshank Redemption
Columbia Pictures
Columbia Pictures
ADVERTISEMENT

There is a scene in The Shawshank Redemption when Andy earns beer for his friends after helping one of the prison guards. However, there's one small mistake. If you look closely at the beer bottles, you’ll notice that they have spiraled tops, indicating that it is a twist-off beer.

ADVERTISEMENT

Yet, this was overlooked when picking the props because twist-off beers hadn’t been invented yet in the late 1940s.

ADVERTISEMENT

My Girl: Interesting Ring...

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
My Girl
Columbia Pictures
Columbia Pictures
ADVERTISEMENT

The ring character Vada wore in My Girl was not just some regular ring with a basic stone in it. No, it was the ring we always wanted to try when we were teenagers: a mood ring.

ADVERTISEMENT

The movie was set in 1972, but what's wrong about that is. Mood rings were not invented until 1975.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Informant: A Mistake On The Links

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Informant
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros.
ADVERTISEMENT

The Informant was set during the early 1990s. In The Informant, a biographical/crime/drama film which follows a whistleblower during a price-fixing controversy, there are various times when you see stars such as Matt Damon, Joel McHale, and Scott Bakula wearing Nike brand golf shoes.

ADVERTISEMENT

This was a pretty big oversight considering that Nike didn't release a line of golf shoes were until years later, in 1996.

ADVERTISEMENT

Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade: Nice Medals, Nazis

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
The Last Crusade
Paramount Pictures
Paramount Pictures
ADVERTISEMENT

In the film Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Nazis definitely live up to their reputation by playing the movie's bad guys. The Steven Spielberg-directed movie is set in 1938, which was one year before World War II began.

ADVERTISEMENT

As you watch the film, you can see that the Nazis are already wearing medals that did not come into use until World War II had started.

ADVERTISEMENT

Pirates of the Carribean: Blame It On The Royal Navy

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Pirates Of The Caribbean
Disney
Disney
ADVERTISEMENT

During the film Pirates of the Caribbean, the men are seen wearing British Royal Navy uniforms. Those uniforms were not introduced until 1747.

ADVERTISEMENT

Yet, in the film, the King of England at the time was George I, and George I was the King of England between 1714 and 1727. These Navymen must have just been ahead of their time.

ADVERTISEMENT

Singin' In The Rain: Too Poofy For The Time

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Singin In The Rain
Loew's Inc.
Loew's Inc.
ADVERTISEMENT

In Singin' in the Rain, the 1952 romantic comedy musical, Lina Lamont (as played by Jean Hagen) wears a large poofy dress.

ADVERTISEMENT

But wearing this style of dress would have been more correct if it were the 1950s, when the film was created. The movie is set in the 1920s, making the dress choice a huge style conflict

ADVERTISEMENT

Seabiscuit: Safety First

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Seabiscuit
Universal Pictures
Universal Pictures
ADVERTISEMENT

Toby Maguire played a horse jockey in the film Seabiscuit named Red Pollard. The movie is set in 1930 and follows the story of a Thoroughbred racehorse.

ADVERTISEMENT

Looking at Red Pollard’s helmet you will probably notice that it has chin straps. The thing is, chin straps were not around until 1956.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Untouchables: These Lapels Were Still Being Adapted From Earlier Versions

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
cost12
Photo Credit: Culture Buzz
Photo Credit: Culture Buzz
ADVERTISEMENT

The jacket Costner wears as Eliot Ness in The Untouchables came to define gangsters for years, but did you notice the one little mistake with this costume choice?

ADVERTISEMENT

The single-piece type of lapel that Ness wears in the film was concurrently being adapted from earlier versions which used three-part patterns. This just shows that he was right on top of the latest fashion trends.