The red car that Arthur drives is the same one the private detective drives.
When Victor shoots the attorney in her car, she falls against the steering wheel and grabs it with one hand. However, in the next shot, as Victor turns and runs, both of the attorney's hands are on the wheel.
When Ben is on the phone learning of his attorney's death, he is shirtless. The camera briefly cuts away to Arthur, then it cuts back to Ben, who has a sweater on. Ben could not have donned the sweater in the two seconds the camera was on Arthur.
In the coffee shop scene, there are three customers to which Arthur attends to. When there is a close-up of one of the customers, the other two customers are no longer visible despite their chairs being in the shot.
When Arthur leaves the apartment to pick Ben up from the hospital, there is a Halloween poster hung near the door. In the next scene, when Arthur returns with Ben, the poster is gone, and a table that wasn't in the previous shot appears.
The airplane shown taking off from "Vermont" is a FedEx cargo plane - which does not carry passengers.
Ben tells Tammy that gays can get married in the state of Vermont. This is not true; at the time of the film's production, Vermont only allowed civil unions and didn't allow gays to get married until 2009.
Victor is excommunicated from the Catholic church for being related to a homosexual; being related to a homosexual is not considered a sin by the Catholic church and an individual cannot be kicked out of his or her congregation over it.
Neither Catholicism or any other mainstream branch of Christianity teaches that murdering a sinner absolves them of their sins and permits them to enter Heaven, as Victor repeatedly claims and which Father Rabin appears to endorse.
Father Rabin claims that the church is afraid that Victor will transfer bad Karma and negative energy to the congregation through his association with Ben and Arthur. Karma is a concept found only in Indian Religions, and is opposed as a theological concept by the Catholic church. Bodily energies is a concept derived from the New Age movement, and is also opposed by the Catholic church.
When Ben & Arthur meets the lawyer, the setting of her 'office' is her living room.
When Ben & Arthur meets Victor & Stan for dinner, Stan looks away at the crew for a brief couple of seconds before switching back to his role.
When Victor & his hit-man came out of Ben & Arthur's apartment (with only Ben was in the apartment) in an attempted assassination. As Victor was walking to his car, a airplane background sound can clearly be heard, however in the next scene while Victor was unlocking his car, the sound is clearly gone.
Near the beginning of the movie, the main characters pack up their things as they plan to fly to Hawaii. In our shot, a tripod is clearly visible in the background.
The plane in one scene is supposed to be landing in Vermont, yet as it lands it passes a string of palm trees.
The plane that is seen landing in Vermont is a plane from the Alaska Airlines company, which would not fly from California to Vermont.
Ben tells Arthur, "I know a great lawyer right here in Beverly Hills. We can give him a call." In the next scene, they are talking to the lawyer - who is female.
The attorney mentions to Ben and Arthur the "Good Faith and Credibility Clause", although the actual title is "Full Faith and Credit Clause."