While "Alien" (1979) is widely considered to be among the most important sci-fi films of all time, it features an absolutely glaring, unforgivable error in its first scene.

The film opens as we slowly explore the dim bridge of the star freighter Nostromo, empty with its crew long in hibernation. We pan the creepy interior, which includes a classic bobbing duck toy busily bobbing into a small container of liquid. And ... wait a sec. Hold everything!

The crew is in hibernation. That appears to be an ordinary container of what is probably water, sitting alone, unconnected to any tubes, pipes, or other infrastructure. Any liquid in that container would evaporate completely in a matter of days. If the duck can't dip into liquid to moisten its beak, it will stop bobbing.

There's nobody around to refill that container, no sign of any mechanism to do so.

This shameful lack of realism could have ruined the entire film. Luckily, most people didn't notice this nightmarish error.

@lauren Alternate theory: There is a slow drip from the ceiling, and instead of bothering to do the work of tracking it down and fixing it, Parker just put a cup under it to catch the water, and used the bobbing duck to enhance its evaporation.
@michaelgemar Hmm. I would think if you knew there was a water leak, given how such things can quickly get worse, you'd definitely want to fix it BEFORE going into hibernation. Yeah.

@lauren @michaelgemar

Maybe it’s not water. Many liquids do not evaporate. Like the liquid that forms in a damp rid container that stuff stays liquid for months.

Heck I could imagine a humidity sensor set with that, when the ducky stops tipping it means the ambient humidity is too low and the solution is drying out, cue the humidifiers.

@MCDuncanLab @michaelgemar The bobbing duck REQUIRES the evaporation of the liquid picked up by its beak to operate.

@lauren @michaelgemar

Ah did not realize that

Drinking bird - Wikipedia