When Jane Russell gets hired to sing at the casino, she is introduced to Gimpy, who is told that she has been hired as a singer and that he should arrange for new new outfits for her to wear and sing in. She immediately runs into Robert Mitchum and introduces him to Gimpy as her piano player.
She has not yet been told that Gimpy is her piano player or even seen him playing a piano.
At the end of the film, Mitchum dives into the sea to rescue the villain and hands him over to the police boat. He then swims to the villain's boat and climbs aboard. While his face and hair look wet, his suit, although crumpled is dry, despite Jane saying'You're all wet.'
Commander Stewart reports that the detective was found murdered with a knife in his back. After Detective Lombardy is killed, the killers drag his body up on the dock and throw him back into the water face down. There is no knife in his back any longer.
When Nick and Julie embrace on the sampan, Julie is on the right of Nick. In the next shot coming out of the embrace, Julie is on the left of Nick.
The photographer hands the developed photos to the police within five minutes of taking them. There was no technology like that in 1950.
In the DVD subtitles, some of the Portuguese police commander's dialogue has the words "señor" and "señora," spelled in the Spanish way. The Portuguese forms are "senhor" and "senhora."
Either the Casino is ridiculously unfair, or the script writers don't know odds. That a triple six pays only 35 to 1 is surely a mistake. The odds are 215 to 1.
Jose (Thomas Gomez) introduces himself as "Jo-zay" instead of the correct "Ho-zay."
This film is set in a Portuguese colony, not a Spanish one. In Portuguese, Jose is pronounced "Jo-zay."
This film is set in a Portuguese colony, not a Spanish one. In Portuguese, Jose is pronounced "Jo-zay."
Whenever Julie Benson sings in the gambling den, the piano and bass guitar accompaniment don't match the sound of the full orchestra backing her up.