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 I thought Bishop didn't hibernate?
@ben Sure he did. The whole point was to convince everyone he was a human.
@ben No wait, you're confusing different movies. Ash was the android in "Alien" and was masquerading as human. Bishop was in "Aliens" and was known to be an android all along.
@lauren You're right. I always mix Ash and Bishop up.
@ben The easiest way to remember is that at the end of Aliens, when Ripley and the girl are on the collapsing platform, the Xenomorph is about to get them, and she thinks Bishop has abandoned them, she screams out "BISHOP!!!!!!"
@lauren See, I can hear her yelling it, but I don't have a strong visual memory of the scene, so I forgot that the kid and I think Paul Reiser were there too. (Right? Or am I confused again? I just rewatched all of those back to back a year or so ago and they are running together.)
@ben It's just Ripley and the kid and they're about to be grabbed by you know what. Then at the last second the shuttle rises up with Bishop piloting and they're saved. For the moment, anyway.