A visible inconsistency between consecutive shots — wrong hand position, changed hairstyle, or jumping props.
Technical Details
Continuity errors are categorized into five main types: Position Continuity (object placement deviates by more than 30%), Costume Continuity (clothing details change between takes), Action Continuity (sequences of movement do not align), Lighting Continuity (lighting angles differ by more than 15°), and Eye-Line Continuity (gaze directions deviate by more than 20° from each other). Script Supervisors document these parameters with digital cameras in 4K resolution and create frame-accurate comparison photos. Modern Digital Intermediate workflows allow for pixel-perfect analysis at 2048x1080 or 4096x2160 resolution.
History & Development
Systematic continuity monitoring was established in 1915 with the position of "Script Girls" in Hollywood studios. Dorothy Arzner introduced standardized continuity reports in 1919, documenting position, costume, and props. With the introduction of the multiple-camera setup in the 1950s, continuity errors increased exponentially. Digital Video Assist (DVA) since 1999 and iPad-based script supervisor apps from 2010 onwards have reduced continuity errors by an average of 70% compared to analog productions.
Practical Application in Film
"Pulp Fiction" (1994) exhibits 23 documented continuity errors, including changing bullet holes in the apartment scene. "The Shining" (1980) shows deliberate continuity breaks: the Gold Room photograph appears inconsistent across different shots. Script supervisors today use witness cams with 60fps recording in parallel to the main camera. Post-production teams digitally correct minor continuity errors with an average time investment of 2-4 hours per corrected shot at standard VFX rates.
Comparison & Alternatives
Continuity errors differ from jump cuts due to their unintentional nature – jump cuts deliberately break continuity. Match cuts represent the opposite: perfectly aligned transitions between shots. Modern virtual production with LED walls reduces lighting continuity problems, as lighting conditions remain digitally constant. AI-based continuity checking software like CineMatch has been automatically analyzing footage for inconsistencies since 2021 with 94% accuracy at a processing speed of 1:4 real-time.