(at around 1h 50 mins) A large pool of blood disappears from around killer's body.
(at around 1h 7 mins) Cans and boxes behind Graham and his son in the supermarket.
(at around 1h 45 mins) Obvious editing shows where Will Graham jumps through Dollarhyde's window in the climactic sequence: the pose that William Petersen is holding when he jumps at the window in slow motion is clearly not the same as that of his stunt double who actually falls through the window (following the cut between shots).
(at around 29 mins) Graham loosens his tie after running from the hospital, but it is soon done up again.
(at around 14 mins) In the Atlanta hotel at the beginning, Will Graham is viewing the home movies in his hotel room. The TV set is a different size when there is an angle change. The first person shot is a multi frame rate monitor, and the shot from the back is a regular TV set.
(at around 26 mins) In Lecktor's cell, the hinges are on the inside. Prison doors swing outward, so the prisoner can't compromise the hinges.
(at around 50 mins) The Chinese character carved in the tree (zhong1) doesn't mean "red dragon", it means "middle". The term "dragon tile" is a Western convention introduced by Joseph Park Babcock in his 1920 book introducing mahjong to America, and the zhong tile was originally related to archery: it indicated a hit on a target.
(at around 9 mins) Graham is told that the films of the families have been transferred to 1/2-inch VHS, but the tapes appear to be 3/4-inch.
"Peg lateral incisors" means the second tooth on either side of the upper front teeth does not develop correctly. It is small, often pointed, and looks like a cone. The upper lateral incisors on the plaster cast look completely normal.
As Will Graham and his son talk in a supermarket without moving
products behind them change,
(at around 1h 50 mins) The movie implies that Will Graham uses a Charter Arms Bulldog .44 special pistol. If this were true, then Will could not shoot Francis Dollarhyde six times. A Charter Arms Bulldog only holds five rounds. Graham actually shoots the gun seven times, but two of the shots are repeated; the first and second shot that we see are actually the same one, as are the six and seventh. Thus, he only actually fires five bullets, which is the number that the gun can hold.
(at around 1h 50 mins) After Graham shoots and kills Dolarhyde, just after he walks out of the shot, Dolarhyde swallows.
(at around 1h 50 mins) The two cops on the front porch are taken by surprise by Dollarhyde with his shotgun, despite there being eight foot high windows on either side of the door.
(at around 1h 45 mins) When the St. Louis police officer is thrown into the windshield of his car, the glass is already damaged before his head hits it.
(at around 14 mins) FBI man Will Graham attempts (sucessfully) to play a 3/4-inch video tape in a VHS machine.
When Dolarhyde shoots the police officer with his shotgun, he only holds the gun with a single hand and it has no shoulder stock, yet it is not kicked back by extremely violent recoil (revealing it is a prop gun).
(at around 3 mins) During Will Graham's conversation with Crawford at his home that starts the movie, there is a shot where Graham's chin is obviously moving, as he spoke some dialog, but no words are heard.
Wires for a squib charge visible on kitchen floor when Dollarhyde shoots at the glass bottles.
(at around 13 mins) When Will Graham hears the answering machine in the master bathroom of the Leeds murder scene, he walks out of the room. As he passes by, a crew-member's forearm is revealed.
(at around 1h 45 mins) Towards the end of the movie, just as Dollarhyde is throwing Graham into the refrigerator, a person can be seen in the lower, left-hand corner. He is wearing a blue shirt. The victim is wearing a pink shirt and is later shown as still being on the table.
As Graham walks through the woods toward the house in the final scene, the dolly tracks for the camera are visible on the ground.
(at around 1h 50 mins) In the final raid on the house, the elastic bungee cord used to propel a policeman is clearly visible against the ground.
(at around 31 mins) When Dr. Lektor has the operator make a phone call for him, he gives a Maryland area code (301) and gets a University of Chicago operator.
(at around 1h 40 mins) When the St. Louis police pull up Dollarhyde's driver's license, it says he lives in "Chester, MO 64101". 64101 is a Kansas City, Missouri zip code, and Kansas City is 250 miles from St. Louis.
When Graham and Crawford argue over the videotapes and The
Tooth Fairy, you can first see the boom pole, then the boom mic itself, very clearly. This has been corrected on the DVD version.
(at around 52 mins) One of the headlines shown on the Tattler is "FBI Persues Pervert". "Persues" should be spelled "Pursues".
(at around 32 mins) Graham's house number changes during the film. When Dr. Bloom's secretary gives it to Lecktor, it's 3680. Later in the movie, when Crawford mentions it (at around 1h 1 min), it's 3860.
(at around 30 mins) The pulse dialing telephones, such as the one given to Lecktor in his cell, had the ability to dial a number even without the rotary dial. All Lecktor needed to do is tap the digits of a telephone number on the switch hook to establish connection. While Lecktor in 'Manhunter' seems unaware of that fact, Lecter in Red Dragon (2002) uses this method to dial the number he needs.
When one detective tells other investigators about the perpetrator's teeth, he explains that he has "pegged lateral incisors", but he then points to at least one wrong tooth on the plaster cast, namely the right cuspid instead of the lateral incisor.