The kid supposedly made mustard gas in the Chemistry class, but if it was mustard gas, everyone should have been coughing up blackened pieces of lung by the time Clem pulled them out. They would have been in no condition to start chanting Joe's name. [This is also Joe recalling this story and a flashback and just like a dream are not always completely accurate nor logical. Also, it is in Joe's character to have embellished the memory. ]
Great sites
Mistakes
When Clem stops dancing and starts talking to the fire extinguisher, he throws the duster broom handle down, which is in the same direction as the duster. Then when he asks question, "Does your mother sew?" the handle of duster is now sticking out the wrong way. See more...
Trivia
When Joe Dirt finds out where he lives in Louisiana, there is a guy (Framer Fran) that speaks very strangely. He is played by Blake Clarke who played the same farmer character in The Waterboy. See more...
Joe Dirt (2001) - 18 corrections
Directed by Dennie Gordon, starring Brittany Daniel, Christopher Walken, David Spade, Fred Ward, Jaime Pressly, Kid Rock (add more)
Genres: Adventure, Comedy, Mystery, Romance
Comments made in brackets are corrections from other visitors. As such, any aggressive/abusive corrections (and I get quite a few) written as if they're comments I've made myself will be ignored. To submit your own corrections for mistakes, just click the edit icon under an entry, then choose "correct entry". Some entries have "duplicated entry" after them - these are entries which were already listed on the main page, but were submitted again. I occasionally leave these online for a while, just in case they were moved in error, so don't worry about pointing them out to me.
The kid supposedly made mustard gas in the Chemistry class, but if it was mustard gas, everyone should have been coughing up blackened pieces of lung by the time Clem pulled them out. They would have been in no condition to start chanting Joe's name. [This is also Joe recalling this story and a flashback and just like a dream are not always completely accurate nor logical. Also, it is in Joe's character to have embellished the memory. ]
When Joe is ordered to go secure the tooth balloon down it appears that there is a storm. The shot has high wind like a storm, but as the balloon rises in the air you can see perfectly clear skys. [The "boss" from the Dentist Office tells Joe that the wind is picking up. Wind can easily be created without a storm present, especially if the town rests in the valley of neighboring hills, which it does as shown during Joe's first arrival to the town.]
Joe Dirt lives in the boiler room in the studio. Why was he driving to work if he lives there? You might say he was just driving around, but he had his nametag on... [Surely he does not have permission to live rent-free in the boiler room. It's highly likely that he leaves sometimes and returns later to not draw any unwanted questions.]
Joe would be dead from spending the night in a fumigation tent. [It is a comedy. There are several times he would have died, such as freezing to death in a balloon at 37,000 feet at night, breaking his neck in the oil rig fight, falling from the top of the oil rig when he crashed into it, etc. It was done for comedic effect to make us laugh.]
When Joe Dirt is working on the carnival ride, he has long body hair above his navel. Later, when Joe is in Buffalo Bob's pit, Joe has no hair above his navel. [Buffalo Bob is a spoof of the Buffalo Bill character from Silence of the Lambs. In that movie, and also referenced in this film, he was going to make a suit from the skin, hence the lotion. If the skin had to be smooth, it's likely he had Joe Dirt shave certain areas.]
Automotive enthusiasts will easily recognize the car Joe drives in the beginning as a Superbird, which came from the factory with a Hemi engine, which is what Joe brags about his custom ride having... [Joe Dirt's car is actually a 1969 Dodge Daytona, not a Plymouth Superbird. Additionally, the correct engine for this car is in fact a 440, NOT a 426 hemi. The 426 hemi was an option for this car, the 440 was standard and is the engine that was in the car on the set. It is possible that the GTX he drove later did have a 426 Hemi, as that was an option for the GTX. There is a website for Daytona at http://www.californiaclassix.com/archive/69_Joe_Dirt_Daytona.html.]
When Joe is talking to Clem after he "dies", there is a pack of cigarettes behind Clem's head. An EMT wouldn't put cigarettes next to his head, and there's no point for them to be there. [Clem wasn't really dead, so he could have asked the EMT to grab his cigarettes and set them on the gurney for later.]
When Joe storms out of his parents' trailer, he yells "And I don't want to see you for another 25 years." as if it had been 25 years since they abandoned him. But the movie was made in 2001 and he was abandoned in 1982, meaning it had only been 19 years since they left him. [Joe Dirt isn't all that smart, so I doubt he is good enough at maths to get the years right. Even if he is, 25 years sound so much more impressive than 19 or even 20, and he could've said it deliberately to show he didn't want to see his parents for even longer than he had initially been abandoned for.]
In the scene where Joe finally finds his parents in California, watch behind his parents when they sit down in front of their clown collection. Behind Joe's dad you can see a crewmember keeping a stuffed clown in place. [I agree that it looks a bit strange, but that is Joe Dirt's Mom's arm that was originally behind the couch.]
At the end when Joe peels out in the Hemi, Robbie's windshield is fine. When you see Robbie again the Trans Am windshield is busted up. [The windshield was cracked because Joe's car kicked up gravel, rocks, etc., when he spun the tires while taking off. If you look carefully, they must have also punctured the radiator because there is smoke rising from the car.]
When the kid has the accident in the Chem. class, he says "This should make ice" and pours the stuff in, but it immediately vaporizes and he says "Oh, poison mustard gas." But how does he know what it is? He thought he was making ice. [This is just adding to the ridiculousness of the movie. For example, Joe's new wig at the end, or the whole Buffalo Bob scene. It's just for a cheap laugh.]
In the scene where Brandi comes to rescue Joe from jumping off the bridge, you can hear someone yell, "Hey, it's Brittany." Brittany Daniel is the woman who plays Brandi's character. This was pointed out in the DVD commentary. [I've heard the DVD commentary and there's nothing about this. Mistakes like this are made in many films. These mistakes are always pointed out, but this one isn't incorrect. Brittany and Brandi just sound alike.]
When Joe calls Brandi to tell her that he is returning, the phone rings and he is leaving the message in real time. You can see the number of messages on the answering machine change from 00 to 01 as he leaves the message. However, her fiancee manages to delete the message before Joe is done leaving it. [I had the same thought originally. However, the shot of Robby erasing the message could have been in the future. He could have been playing the messages back later and walked over to the answering machine and deleted the message, since it was fully recorded already but still delete-able.]
At the first part of the movie when driving the yellow Dodge through the security gate, the wing of the car breaks and also does the gate. The next scene you see the guard pampering the gate like it had never been touched. [Though it may look like the gate breaks, it actually just bends, without actually breaking.]



