(around 1 hour 53 minutes) Amantha is telling Rau-Ru of her love for Hamish. When it cuts to a reverse side angle you can see Amantha's mouth moving but you don't hear any sound coming out.
(around 51 mins 45 seconds) When Hamish and Torin are out on the patio, a storm begins to break out. It then cuts to a shot of the house, windows, doors, and shutters being drenched in a heavy wet downpour but when it cuts back to Hamish and Totin on the patio, you don't see any rain.
Stuart arrives at Hamish's plantation and informs him that everyone is burning their cotton crop to keep it out of Yankee hands. Hamish eventually agrees to help Stuart burn his field and asks Stuart to help burn his. Then scenes of burning fields are shown to demonstrate "fait accompli". BUT the crops are NOT in fact cotton. Rather, the crops being burned are fields of dried corn stalks.
Both Michele's and Manty's dresses are closed in the back with zippers which were not yet
invented in the 1860s.
Torin Thatcher arrives at Clark Gable's house and they sit at a table in the garden. Torin puts his hat on the head of a boy who goes off with it. Some little while later with no return of the boy, there's a shot of them still at the table now joined by Sidney Poitier but Torin now has his hat on.
When Potter reports to Butler in New Orleans, the Confederate Stars and Bars were just being hauled down and the Union Stars and Stripes being hoisted, demonstrating that the time setting is May 1st or May 2nd, when the city surrendered and was occupied. Yet, on Butler's walls is a portrait of Grant. But Grant was NOT Butler's superior. Instead, both men were Major Generals and peers. Therefore, Butler would NOT have placed a portrait of Grant on his wall. Rather, any portrait that Butler would have had on his walls would have been of one or both of his superiors: President Lincoln, and/or Secretary of War Stanton.
At 40 minutes, the heroine takes off her stockings, which were not yet available in those days.
The insignia on Rau-Ru's kepi is wrong. The crossed rifles for infantry did not come about until 1875. During the Civil War, the infantry wore a hunter's bugle usually on top of the kepi or bummer's cap.