Shawshank Redemption Sex Scene
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Shawshank Redemption Sex Scene
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The Shawshank Redemption
(1994)
Circa 1963, Heywood is shown listening to the record "24 of Hank Williams ' Greatest Hits", released in 1970.
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Federal income taxes were due on March 15th in the 1940s, not April 15th as they are today.
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When Tommy goes out into the yard to talk to Warden Norton, Warden Norton offers him a cigarette. The pack of Marlboros that he offers him has Marlboro Miles on them, which weren't around until the 1990s.
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The stamp used by the parole officers in 1947 prints in the Helvetica font, which was not invented until 1957.
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When they are on the roof during the tar job, in either 1949 or 1950, Andy tells Hadley that the IRS allows a gift to a spouse tax free. At that time, the Internal Revenue Service was known as the Bureau of Internal Revenue. It did not become known as the IRS until the 1950s.
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On Andy's cell door in 1947 is the famous picture of a laughing Albert Einstein which was not made until 1951.
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When Red was sitting under the oak tree in 1967 and pulled the money out of the envelope, the top bill was signed by Nicholas F. Brady who was Secretary of the Treasury from September 1988 to January 1993.
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Andy is introduced to the library by Brooks in 1949. Brooks points out a Louis L'Amour section, but L'Amour's first book under his own name wasn't published until 1953. L'Amour wrote a series of "Hopalong Cassidy" novels in the late 1940s under the name "Tex Burns", but didn't produce enough books to warrant his own section until the 1960s. He was still somewhat known having written many short stories for pulp magazines, but these featured many writers and stories. Brooks also points out a section of Reader's Digest Condensed Books, which were first published in 1950.
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The full-size photo poster of Rita Hayworth that Red procures for Andy in 1949 comes from a series of celebrity posters that went on sale in the early 1960s.
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When Red's (Ellis Boyd Redding) parole form is stamped by the parole board, the typeface on the form is called American Typewriter which was not invented until 1974. The typeface is also not monospaced as a manual typewriter would, meaning it was most likely printed by a modern computer.
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When Red narrates Tommy Williams's arrival at Shawshank in 1965, he mentions he was caught sneaking TVs out the back door of a JCPenney. That store was not known by that name until 1971, after its founder and namesake, James Cash Penney, died and they were renamed in his honor. Before then it was known simply as Penney's.
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Towards the end of the film as Red goes to Fort Hancock, the bus drives down a highway showing a yellow solid line and yellow dashed lines. In 1967, when Red was apparently released, the dashed lines would have been white as the current system was not introduced until the early-mid 1970s.
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The recording of "Le nozze di Figaro" is from 1968 (recorded by Deutsche Grammophon and directed by Karl Böhm ).
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The "Jughead" comic book being read by the guard in the bathroom during the playing of The Marriage of Figaro record wasn't a stand-alone title until 1965, more than a decade after that part of the story takes place.
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Near the beginning during the Shawshank Prison fly-over, several later-model vehicles can be seen in the distance.
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When Andy and Red are playing checkers outside after discussing Randy Stevens in the library, the checker board they are playing was manufactured by Pressman in the 1980s/90s.
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When Red blows one note on his harmonica, he has it reversed. He's blowing through the flared end, which makes no sound. The sound must have been overdubbed.
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When the warden is having a cigarette with Tommy in the yard, a train horn can be heard in the distance. This type of horn did not exist until the 1980s while the scene is set in the mid 1960s.
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Andy's 1955 library letter carries a 1954-series 3-cent stamp, which is correct; but the letter beneath his has a 1923 series, which hadn't been issued since 1938, and the other two have just two cents in postage.
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Andy's escape takes place in 1966, presumably in spring. The poster of Rachel Welch in his cell is from the movie "One Million Years B.C.", which wasn't released until 30th December 1966.
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During the warden's "Inside Out" speech, a CP-16R camera with new style magazine is visible. Additionally, a Pentax k1000 SLR still camera is visible, which was produced in 1975-1997.
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After Andy helps a guard set up a trust fund for his kids' education, Brooks later tells the other inmates that all Andy needed was "a suit and a tie and a jiggly hula gal on his desk". First of all, Briggs had been in prison since 1905 and there was no TV, so he'd have never seen one. The time frame is 1949 and although hula girl figurines existed since the 1920s, the jiggly kind didn't exist until the 1950s, so either way Brooks should not have known about them.
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The edition of Mozart's "Le Nozze Di Figaro" that Andy handles is a 3-LP Box Set on the Italian Cetra label released in 1983.
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When corrections officer Byron Hadley is arrested in 1965, the police office says, "You have the right to remain silent...", reciting the well-known Miranda Warning. However, it was a Supreme Court decision in June 1966 that made this warning a requirement. It's also not required at the time of arrest, but before the suspect is questioned.
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When Red stuffs a pack of cigarettes into Brooks' pocket for delivering the rock hammer to Andy, a surgeon general's warning is seen on the side of the pack.
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When the warden says the roof of the license plate factory needs resurfacing, the Boom Mic can be seen reflected from the left side of both eyes of his glasses.
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Andy Dufresne is obviously a very intelligent man, and fond of playing chess in his cell. However his improper backwards set up of his chess board is obvious. Unfortunately the chess board was incorrectly set up, so that the bottom-right square is black. Unfortunately as a consequence, the black queen and king plus the white queen and king are all on the wrong starting squares. No one ever plays the game of chess with the bottom-right square as black, because then all the kings and queens would then be incorrectly placed on the wrong color starting squares. How to set up the pieces on a chess board: First set up the board so that the bottom-right square is white . . . Place a rook on each of your two corners . . . Place the knights next to the rooks . . . Place the bishops to the inside of the knights . . . Place the queen on the remaining, matching-color square . . .
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Captain Hadley said his brother left him $35,000 in 1949, and said after taxes it would be "enough to buy a car". Adjusted for inflation, that would be almost $352,000 in 2015. The average price of a car during that time period was approximately $1,650.
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In the original scene where Andy is switching the books and shoes he hands the warden the deposit slips and says, "three deposits, Sir". When Red is retelling the story and the scene is repeated Andy says, "three deposits tonight."
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When Red describes the escape, he says that they found "... an old rock hammer, damn near worn down to the nub." But in the snapshot where an officer holds up the hammer they found, it doesn't look worn down much, certainly not near down to the nub.
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A friend of the warden bribes him with a pie made by his wife which was baked in a disposable aluminum pan. The warden later gives the pie to Andy, who shares it with Red. While Red's eating it, the pan is now made of strong metal.
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When Red and Andy meet for the first time, an extra is seen behind each of them. It is the same scene but as the lines were filmed at different times, the extra is wearing different shirts - one prisoner shirt the day that Red's lines were shot, and a different shirt behind Andy the day his lines were filmed.
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When they're tossing the cells, Hadley knocks over the small stone-works Andy has made. The bishop is alternately standing up/knocked over between shots.
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At one point, one can clearly see Andy aging - his hair becomes more gray - but a few minutes later, there is less gray and he looks younger again.
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When Andy is assigned to the prison library, Brooks tells him he'll give him a tour. As he says this, Brooks is standing in the doorway to the library. The room is very dimly lit. But when Brooks and Andy walk in seconds later, it is full of sunlight.
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At the very beginning of the film Andy (while sitting in his car) goes to grab his bottle and the gun in his lap vanishes and reappears between shots.
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When Red is on the bus, one shot shows all of the windows on the bus open. In fact, Red's arm is hanging outside the window. In the very next shot of the bus (a long shot from a distance), all of the windows are closed.
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When Red is talking to Andy for the first time, he is throwing a baseball between himself and Heywood. Just as Andy stoops down, Red catches the ball and seconds later, catches the ball again without throwing it back.
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In the aerial shot where Andy's bus approaches the prison, next to the gate is a red brick building and it's sidewalk is strewn with debris. As the bus pulls in seconds later and we see the gate and same brick building from the vantage point of guards who hurried from a tower, the sidewalk is clean.
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When Andy talks to Red for the first time, several prisoners in the background can be seen wearing khaki trousers. All other prisoners in the movie are wearing dark trousers, possibly jeans.
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When Andy Dufresne's cell is about to be searched, as the Warden and guards are first approaching the cell, the shot shifts to Andy sitting in his cell holding an almost new indigo blue Bible as if reading it. Throughout the scene Andy holds the Bible in his hand as the guards ransack the cell. At the end of the scene, the search complete, the Warden enters the cell and, facing Andy, notices him holding the Bible then asks him about his favorite passages. As the Warden and Andy discuss Mark 13:35, the Warden reaches for and Andy hands him a worn and stained, black Bible.
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Andy left the evidence with the bank to mail to the newspaper. It seems that the mail was picked up, delivered and read, the story written and published, authorities alerted, charges drawn up, and arrest warrants for Captain Hardley and Warden Norton issued and served, all before lunch.
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When Hadley is holding Andy by the collar and threatening to push him off of the roof that's being tarred, his left hand changes position between front and rear shots.
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Red is playing catch with some of the other prisoners. He catches the ball then catches it again without having thrown it to one of the other prisoners.
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During Andy's nineteen year detention and for about a year afterwards (until Red meets him again) he doesn't seem to age a single day. A prisoner suffering a harsh regime and poor diet would age considerably during that time.
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When Andy is putting the files in the warden's safe on the night of the escape they go in smoothly but in the flashback they hit the side.
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When Warden Norton is throwing the rocks towards Red and the guards in frustration a guard can clearly be seen at the bars ducking away from each rock but when Norton throws the rock at the poster the guard is gone.
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When Andy arrives at the prison and the line of convicts exits the bus in chains, the "horse" that Heywood picks is 5th in line. When placing his bet he says "I'll take the chubby fat-ass there, 5th from the front". But when they march into the room where they are addressed by the warden, his position in the line has changed to 4th.
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Andy is sitting at the back of the bus when he arrives at Shawshank Prison, and when the men disembark, it's seen they're all chained together. This would be possible if Andy was linked to the middle of the chain, but instead he is near one end.
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Andy is right-handed. He is shown using the adding machine with his right hand, and it is placed to his right in every shot but one during the "tax season" sequence, where it is on his left.
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Red says that at the same time Warden Norton discovers Andy missing, he walks into the bank. he was discovered missing before breakfast "I want him found now, not later, not after breakfast, now." The earliest the bank would open would be 9:00 AM.
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After Andy escapes, multiple police cars are shown driving toward Shawshank, ostensibly to try and find him. A few minutes later the exact same shot of the police cars driving toward Shawshank is recycled to represent the authorities coming to arrest Norton and Hadley.
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Towards the beginning of the film, during a beautiful aerial shot of the bus entering Shawshank Prison, the camera flies over the buildings
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