In the previous episode, Harry is writing a letter to his mother dated 22nd May 1940 at the time when Lois is not yet visibly pregnant. In the opening sequence of this episode, Belgium has surrendered (which happened on 28th May 1940) and Lois now appears about six months pregnant.
When Harry's men come across Geoff, who is suffering from an acute case of PTSD, his face is covered in bright red blood. They travel with him over the course of at least two days, and they visit a field hospital, yet no one ever washes the blood off Geoff's face.
Real dried blood darkens visibly after a few hours, yet the blood looks the same a few days later as it did when they first found Geoff.
Real dried blood darkens visibly after a few hours, yet the blood looks the same a few days later as it did when they first found Geoff.
When Harry's men break out the windshield of the vehicle they commandeer, it spiderwebs into tiny shards, which shows that it is modern tempered glass. This glass didn't exist in the 1940s. The glass would have broken into large, dangerous shards.
It's also unclear why the men leave a frame of shards rather than breaking every piece out. The shards could come off as they're driving and injure them.
It's also unclear why the men leave a frame of shards rather than breaking every piece out. The shards could come off as they're driving and injure them.