Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian (2009)

 ●  English ● 1 hr 45 mins

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Security guard Larry Daley infiltrates the Smithsonian Institution in order to rescue Jedediah and Octavius, who have been shipped to the museum by mistake.
See Storyline (May Contain Spoilers)

Cast: Amy Adams, Ben Stiller, Owen Wilson

Crew: Shawn Levy (Director), John Schwartzman (Director of Photography), Alan Silvestri (Music Director)

Rating: U (India)

Genres: Action, Adventure, Comedy

Release Dates: 24 Jul 2009 (India)

Tagline: When the lights go off the battle is on.

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Did you know? Director Shawn Levy told a National Public Radio interviewer that once the Smithsonian Institution agreed to lend their name to the film, their curators were very helpful and willing to share information about the real-life characters represented in the movie, but Levy had more trouble with the intellectual property-holders for the fictional characters represented. For instance, in the Darth Vader cameo, a LucasFilm employee came on set to observe the scene and tell the filmmakers what Vader would or wouldn't do. Read More
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Direction

Director

Writers

Screenplay Writer

Camera and Electrical

Director of Photography

Music

Music Director

Sound

Sound Effects Editor
Sound Mixer
Boom Operator

Art

Production Designer
Set Decorator

Casting

Casting Director

Costume and Wardrobe

Costume Designer

Editorial

Makeup and Hair

Stunts

Stunt Coordinator
Film Type:
Feature
Language:
English
Colour Info:
Color
Sound Mix:
Dolby Digital, DTS
Frame Rate:
24 fps
Aspect Ratio:
2.39:1 (Scope)
Stereoscopy:
No
Taglines:
When the lights go off the battle is on.
Movie Connection(s):
Spoofed in: National Treasure (English)
Followed by: Night At the Museum: Secret of the Tomb (English)
Reference: The Last of the Mohicans (English)
Reference: Jurassic Park (English)
Reference: The Wizard of Oz (English)
Reference: Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (English)
Reference: Raiders of the Lost Ark (English)
Reference: Apollo 13 (English)
Goofs:
Continuity
When Larry first arrives at the Air & Space Museum he sees the twin seat, twin canopy Air Force jet with both aircrew in the cockpits looking at him. Shortly after the aircraft is shown facing the other direction (no aircrew are in the jet) and one is walking on the ground below the aircraft. Not enough time passed for the aircrew to get out of the plane nor for Larry to change his visual perspective of the jet.

Continuity
In the first scene that General Custer is announcing his attack plans and asks if there's any questions, he tries to pronounce Sacajawea's name the first time, he is clearly standing on a crate above everyone else. The second time he tries, he is at the same level of everyone else. On his final attempt to pronounce her name, he's back on top of the crate.

Continuity
In the scene where Custer is announcing his plan to attack when he yells "attack!" you can see Attila the Hun behind him in a corner of the crate. As he tried to pronounce Sacajewea's name, Attila is behind her. Then, as Custer sits back down, Attila is once again in the corner by Custer.

Continuity
When Sacajawea is placed in her crate during the opening credits, she is laying in curly straw, with no white Styrofoam surrounding her. The lid is then put on the crate, however when she bursts out of the crate white Styrofoam is seen exploding out as she lifts the lid.

Continuity
As Larry is walking towards the Smithsonian Castle, you see his cell phone on his belt. As he is walking by the Al Capone exhibit near the entrance, his cell phone is gone. Then, as he approaches the Kahmunrah gate, his cell phone is back on his belt.

Continuity
When Larry explains to Amelia why he left the job as a night guard he places the tablet on a pillar near Lincoln's statue. Short time later as he is trying to tell Lincoln that he and Amelia are not a couple, he does not have the tablet. As they leave, Larry is holding the tablet without ever picking up the tablet from the pillar.

Continuity
Throughout Kahmunrah's conversation with Oscar the Grouch and Darth Vader, a Russian soldier is standing behind Ivan the Terrible's shoulder. However, when the camera flicks back to Kahmunrah as he waves goodbye to Oscar the Grouch and Darth Vader, not only has the soldier disappeared, but visible in the background is Al Capone whose skin is clearly not black and white as it should be.

Continuity
During the final battle the tablet is shown as a mirror image (that is, the severed corner is on the right when it has always been on the left).

Continuity
Larry's black tie mysteriously disappears somewhere after he shakes hands with the space monkey and arrives at the desk to speak to the Albert Einstein bobbleheads.

Continuity
When Larry and Kahmunrah are arguing and Kahmunrah is trying to get the tablet from Larry, and Larry is trying to get the hour glass from Kahmunrah, there are points when no sand is pouring through the hour glass, where according to the position of the hour glass, there should be sand flowing through.

Errors in Geography
The quick cuts between scenes in the Air and Space museum, the White House, and the Abraham Lincoln Memorial imply that they are adjacent. However the White House is 1 mile away and the Lincoln Memorial is over 1.6 miles away.

Errors in Geography
Grant Wood's "American Gothic" and Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks" are at the Art Institute of Chicago. Auguste Rodin's "The Thinker" is at the Musée Rodin in Paris. "Venus Italica" is at the North Carolina Museum of Art. Edgar Degas's ballerina is at the Royal Academy in London. Jeff Koons's "Balloon Dog (Red)" is not part of any museum's collection.

Factual Mistake
The Smithsonian Institution does maintain storage for items not on display in the museums but they are located throughout the Washington D.C. suburbs, not in sub basements under the museums.

Factual Mistake
The Archives is not part of the Smithsonian Institution. It is also the National Archives, not the "Federal Archives."

Factual Mistake
Larry and Amelia Earhart take off in the original 1903 Wright Flyer. This Flyer is only capable of carrying one person. Although they fly it using a stick control, it was actually controlled using a mechanism attached to the pilot's hips whereby he could turn the aircraft by shifting his body from side to side. Also, it no longer hangs from the ceiling of the National Air and Space Museum, but is in a second floor exhibit hall sitting on the floor.

Factual Mistake
The light on top of the Capitol is first shown as on when Larry and Amelia Earhart race to the Air & Space Museum. In later shots it is off. The light is supposed to be lit only on the rare occasion when the House or Senate are in session at night.

Factual Mistake
When the giant octopus jumps into the reflecting pond in front of the Abraham Lincoln Memorial, it shows him jumping into a pool deep enough that he has to float up a bit to have most of his body above the surface. In fact, the pool is only 30 inches deep at the very center of the pool.

Factual Mistake
In the scene where Larry and Amelia are cornered near the painting American Gothic, Larry grabs the pitchfork from inside the picture, but he is shown using a four-pronged pitchfork. The pitchfork in the actual painting is a three-pronged one.

Factual Mistake
When the Wrightflyer (the Kitty Hawk) is shown in closeup (scene with Amelia Earheart and Larry flying the plane) you can see that the engine is mounted mirrored to the correct position. The intake and exhaust of the engine was on the pilot-side, not the crankshaft.

Factual Mistake
Brandon's security badge he has clipped on his belt has his picture on it but not his name.

Factual Mistake
The Wright Flyer and the motorcycle both start and run, showing that they have gasoline. All machines are drained of fuel and the tanks cleaned before they are put on display due to fire danger. Therefore, without fuel, no engine in the museum would run.

Factual Mistake
There is no lettering on the outside of the Smithsonian Air and Space Museum indicating the name of the museum.

Revealing Mistakes
The first Night at the Museum established that if the tiles aren't perfectly flat on the tablet the magic didn't work. When Larry throws the tablet to Amelia Earhart, the tiles are obviously not flat but the magic of the tablet remains.

Revealing Mistakes
Jedediah is very small, appearing to be no more than two inches tall. When he is in the hourglass the sand is the incorrect size. To be in proportion to him the sand grains should be almost as large as a basketball.

Revealing Mistakes
When the Wright Flyer is flying in the National Air and Space Museum, the timing chain is moving. While outside the chain has stopped moving, although the propellers are still turning. There is nothing in the plot to indicate that they ran out of gas.

Character Error
Napoléon Bonaparte speaks with a French accent. It is known that he never had one to speak of, always speaking French (a second language of his) with a Corsican accent, which sounds closer to an Italian accent.

Character Error
Custer is portrayed with a southern (perhaps Virginian) accent, but he was from the Ohio-Michigan region. He introduces himself as "General Custer of the 7th U.S. Cavalry," but he was a general only in the 3rd Cavalry, and a lieutenant colonel in the 7th. Finally, far more than "208" Federal soldiers died at the Battle of Little Big Horn.

Character Error
Larry calls Able and Dexter "proud Capuchins." Although Dexter is a Capuchin monkey, Able is a Rhesus monkey. (However, Larry is not a monkey expert.)

Character Error
Larry tells his son that the Smithsonian Institution is a collection of 19 museums, which is true. However, he also says that they are all located on the National Mall. Some are actually located in New York City, Chantilly in Virginia, and different parts of Washington, D.C. The National Zoo is also part of the Smithsonian group of museums. The National Gallery of Art, though located among the Smithsonian, is not part of the Institution, contrary to the implication in the film.

Character Error
Amelia Earhardt refers to the winged statues as "cupids." Cupid was the name of a specific character, a god in Greek mythology. The collective name for winged infantile characters is cherub.

Character Error
The WWII Tuskegee airmen are wearing modern USAF flight jackets with Velcro. Although Velcro was invented in 1941, it was not patented and in common use until the 1950s. The same jacket has a 50-star flag patch, but there were not 50 states until 1959, 14 years after WWII ended.

Character Error
Amelia Earhart addresses the Tuskegee airman as "Captain", but his captain's bars are not visible.

Character Error
In the movie, Wilbur Wright had a mustache while Orville did not. However, Orville Wright was the one that had the mustache, not Wilbur.
Trivia:
The dogfighting World War II era fighters are the Junkers Ju 87 Stuka and Supermarine Spitfire, two famous rival aircraft flown by the Germans and British, respectively.

The fighter jet featured on display is a Lockheed F-104 Starfighter with USAF markings. The real fighter at the museum is a F-104A with NASA markings.

The line that one of the people at the Air and Space Museum said was made up at the end of the last take of that scene,and it's in the movie.

The majority of the film takes place in one night, giving a further meaning to the title "Night at the Museum."

The smoke in the Air and Space Museum was created by crew members.

Director Shawn Levy told a National Public Radio interviewer that once the Smithsonian Institution agreed to lend their name to the film, their curators were very helpful and willing to share information about the real-life characters represented in the movie, but Levy had more trouble with the intellectual property-holders for the fictional characters represented. For instance, in the Darth Vader cameo, a LucasFilm employee came on set to observe the scene and tell the filmmakers what Vader would or wouldn't do.

Amelia says in the movie that she became a pilot for "the fun of it," the title of a 1932 autobiography by the real Amelia Earhart.

When first introduced to Napoleon and Al Capone, Ivan the Terrible says his title is mistranslated, and he calls himself Ivan the Awesome. Although obviously meant to be a comical line, it is not that far from the truth: Ivan's title is indeed a bad translation. A more accurate form of the original Russian term, Ivan Grozny, is "Ivan the Fearsome", "the Magnificent" or "The Admirable". It is important to emphasize that, in Russian, the word "grozny" does not have a bad connotation.

Hank Azaria filmed test scenes (some of which are on the DVD) of his character Kahmunrah with various accents including American Southerner (from Alabama) and English Cockney, before settling on an upper-class British accent marred by a humorous lisp.

Hank Azaria modeled his voice and the lisp after Boris Karloff from his performance in the original The Mummy (1932). Karloff had a small but noticeable lisp.

The first movie ever filmed in the Smithsonian Institution.

Amy Adams hated having to wear the skin tight pants that her character wore because it showed off her behind.

The original combination for Ahkmenrah's Tablet is 12351235657923.

The Smithsonian does host a giant squid exhibit, but this was forgone for a giant octopus in the film. For some reason, however, the film's marketing in Japan (where the difference between a squid and an octopus is common knowledge) consistently referred to the octopus as a "squid," even though it is never directly identified as either animal in the film.

Reese Witherspoon was originally set to play Amelia Earhart.

It's the ninth film with Ben Stiller and Owen Wilson after The Cable Guy (1996), Permanent Midnight (1998), Meet the Parents (2000), Zoolander (2001), The Royal Tenenbaums (2001), Starsky & Hutch (2004), Meet the Fockers (2004) and Night at the Museum (2006).

The motorcycle that Larry uses as a getaway vehicle is a rare 1942 Harley Davidson XA Military Side Valve 750cc Flat Twin with attached sidecar. This was Harley's copy of the German BMW/Zundapp military motorcycles.

Octavius's line, "Stay alive! I will find you!" before jumping off the windowsill is a reference to Daniel Day-Lewis line in The Last of the Mohicans (1992) where Lewis's character says the same thing before jumping off a cliff.

Hank Azaria and Ben Stiller had previously appeared together in Mystery Men (1999), Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story (2004) and Along Came Polly (2004).

The following actors appear in both this movie and The Office (2001) and/or The Office (2005): Ricky Gervais, Mindy Kaling, Amy Adams, Craig Robinson, and Ed Helms.

Jake Cherry and Jay Baruchel were both in The Sorcerer's Apprentice (2010) as the character "Dave" at different ages.