When Dunson is standing next to his horse after Matthew Garth takes the herd from him, he clearly has a belt full of cartridges, but later on Matthew confirms to Groot that he took all of Dunson's cartridges.
During the cattle stampede, Dunson, Matt and the other cowboys saddle up and try to turn the herd. Process shots of each cowboys are inserted in the scene. Every cowboy is riding the same dummy horse and saddle with a very large Mexican saddlehorn.
At the end of the film when Dunson finally confronts Matt and after knocking Matt down twice, Matt punches back knocking Dunson's hat off. The very next punch from Matt knocks Dunson's hat off again.
Inside the tent, during Tom and Tess's conversation, the lamp hanging between them changes positions and disappears between shots.
Near the end of the film, when Tom walks toward Matt, his shadow changes repeatedly from one shot to another.
When the Mexicans ride up and Dunson asks them the name of the river, they reply without hesitation, "Rio Grande." The river has always been called "Rio Bravo" in Mexico, which is what they would have answered.
The film gives 14 August 1865 as the completion of the first cattle drive on the Chisholm Trail. However, the first cattle drive on the Chisholm Trail started and finished in 1867, two years later.
In the fight scene at the end, the cross bar on the hitch rail is steel pipe, which was not found in the 1860's. The rail would have been made of local wood and would normally have been attached with dried rawhide strips.
The cattle drive takes place in 1865. The drive to Sedalia, Missouri would have been shortened by 100 miles by going to Baxter Springs, Kansas which had been established as a cow town in 1857.
Toward the end of the film when Dunson rotates to draw and shoot Cherry Valance, you can see Dunson's shot goes considerably right of Valance, but he still falls dead.
When Tom, Matt, and Nadine are met by the two Mexicans, it is claimed that the land was granted to Diego by the King of Spain. This is not a goof. The Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo that ended the Mexican-American War explicitly stated that all (former) Mexican citizen claims to land within the territory ceded to the United States would be respected.
When visualizing the ranch fifteen years into the future, some of the ranch buildings are shown with corrugated "iron" roofs. While almost never seen in western movies, the material was indeed used at the time.
Matthew Garth seems to beat Thomas Dunson to the draw in a mock contest orchestrated by Dunston and Groot Nadine. However, the gun is already in Garth's right hand in order to fool the audience, as evidenced by his empty holster as he walks away.
In long shot at 1:13:03 as the herd is driven across the river, Walter Brennan in the wagon distant from the camera is clutching the seat with the reins passing to the left of him to a concealed driver as the vehicle descends steeply into the water. In the close up with the camera behind Walter looking out ahead over the river, the driver is now gone and Walter is now holding the reins.
When Dunson's wagon rolls away after leaving the wagon train, there are four cows tied to it.
Just before young Matt appears, the back of the wagon is seen with two cows, one standing and one lying down on its side. Later, when young Matt ties his cow to the wagon, there are only the two cows that the new herd started with.
Tom Dunston is going to whip the sugar thief with a bull whip in his right hand, but Matt Garth shoots the sugar thief first. In the next scene, Tom has his six shooter in his right hand and not the whip.
The colorized version on Tubi in 2024 has the on screen script formatted so that words are truncated and flash by too quick to read.
When Matthew Garth requests his mark added to the Red River D brand he requests his first name Matthew added as an M. One would expect that a G be added for his last name Garth to match Dunson's D.
At approximately 1:13 into the film, when Groot's covered wagon is crossing the river, the lead horse on the right poops in the river.
When the drive is being organized, there is talk of a reliable cow hand from Alberta, which would not exist till 1882, when the "District of Alberta" was created as part of Canada's Northwest Territories.
Beginning with the earliest scenes, depicted as being in 1851, the men's trousers have belt loops. Belt loops weren't introduced on trousers until 1922, when they were added to jeans by Levi Strauss.
The film is set in 1851 - 1865, yet several Colt Model 1873 Single-Action Army Revolvers are seen which were not available until later.
Film set in 1851-1865, but using Model 1892 Winchesters to shoot Indians when they attack the wagon train.
(at around 40 mins) In the poker game scene, a man is playing the guitar and singing. The guitar he is playing is a carved-top, F-hole guitar. This type of instrument would not be introduced until about 1900, decades after the movie is supposed to take place.
Just before they begin the drive, Dunson rides up and asks Matt, "ready, Matthew?" Matt replies, "all ready." However, Matt simply nods and doesn't say anything.
An equipment shadow tracks across the wagon as the camera pans from Groot to Dunson during their first night on guard at Red River.
The "Red River" is flowing in the wrong direction. If the herd is crossing from south to north, the water should be flowing from west to east, or from the left side of the screen to the right.
The trail would not go near any mountains.
When Dunson and Groot leave the wagon train, they say they are headed south. When they get to the Red River, they look to their left -- which would be east -- and see the smoke from the attack on the wagon train. But the wagon train was headed west, which would have been to their right, not their left.
When Tom Dunson leaves the wagon train, he says he's heading south. But then he heads toward his shadow, which could be west, north, or east depending on time of day, but it could never be pointing south.
During the shoot out with the quitters, four shots are fired, at night, but it doesn't trigger a stampede as earlier in the film which was triggered by the noise of pots and pans.