- Continuity: The group dries off too quickly after emerging from the pond in Central Park.
- Miscellaneous: While everyone (male) is dancing in jail, extra goes to jump at fence/bars and misses terribly.
- Continuity: During the "Flesh Failures" scene near the end of the film, when the soldiers are marching into the back of the transport plane, the soldiers change places in mid-march.
- Continuity: When Berger first appears before the judge there are two pitchers of water that are moving as if the table was bumped. In the next shot they are standing perfectly still.
- Continuity: During "Easy To Be Hard" a redheaded woman disappears and reappears on a park bench.
- Continuity: Toward the end of "Easy To Be Hard" the UPS delivery truck on the corner disappears and reappears.
- Continuity: While Steve and Sheila are driving to the school on their own, Sheila's hair is straight. After Berger "joins" them, it is curly.
- Continuity: The seasons in central park are constantly shifting between spring, summer and fall, sometimes within the same scene.
- Continuity: Before the skinny-dipping, Sheila is asking George, "What are you going to do?" and her hair is messy, but in the very next shot of her, her hair is fixed neatly.
- Continuity: The fold in the money Bukowski holds in court changes orientation and is also folded more neatly between shots.
- Continuity: During the "Good Morning Starshine" scene in the convertible the mirror in the middle is removed (you see only a dot) to get a better shot at Sheila, who is sitting in the middle. Later when Berger drives to the army camp the mirror is back where it belongs.
>>> WARNING: Here Be Spoilers <<<
Goofs below here contain information that may give away important plot points. You may not want to read any further if you've not already seen this title.
- Incorrectly regarded as goofs: SPOILER: When Berger goes to Vietnam the army only knows him as Claude Bukowski, but on his tombstone it has Berger's real name. However, at the beginning of the movie Berger is burning his draft card. It is possible that he could have told someone of the mistake, and, since Berger was supposed to be drafted anyway, they kept him.
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