Artistic License Military

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

A subtrope of Did Not Do the Research that pertains to depictions of the military in film and television. This ranges from minutiae (forgetting which branch of the military uses which ranks) to flat-out cases of They Just Didn't Care (having a character all but assault superior officers with no consequences).

The most common errors in depictions of the military:

  • Treating all militaries as if they're the U.S. military.
    • Treating all NATO militaries as if they're the U.S. military.
  • Failing to distinguish between different branches of the military in countries where there are different branches (e.g., using "army" to refer to any military unit).
  • Failing to understand the chain of command (e.g., having regular privates taking orders directly from the President in the field, or having a private appealing to directly the President to overrule his company commander's orders.)
  • Getting the ranks wrong, either in form of address, or in who outranks whom.
  • Getting saluting protocol wrong.
  • Getting patches, rank insignia, and uniforms wrong.
  • Using incorrect radio or communication protocol (e.g., nobody says "over and out" "Over" means "Done talking, awaiting response" while "out" means "Done talking, no response needed").
    • Along with that, it's the person who initiates the call that says, "Out," not the person who is called.
  • Incorrect use of service-specific jargon (e.g., army privates regularly saying “aye, aye” without being ironic.)
  • Tanks, But No Tanks
  • Handling weapons incorrectly or dangerously.
  • Getting promotion/demotion procedures wrong.
  • Making basic training either more extreme or much milder than it really is. It's not unrelenting torture, but it's not summer camp, either.
  • Having medals and ribbons inconsistent with the character's age and experiences.

There can be various reasons for this. Sometimes mistakes are made intentionally in order to facilitate the storytelling medium. Most often, though, writers simply don't know or care about the particulars of the military. It does make you wonder what those "military advisers" in the credits did all day, though.

Most current and former members of the military find this more funny than annoying, and military films that make countless errors are still more popular with members of the military than with the general public.

It should also be noted that since media portrayal tends to influence public perception, there are a few myths many people believe about the military thanks to movies.

Related to Hollywood Tactics and Mildly Military. Subtropes include The Squadette. Often averted by works that are Backed by the Pentagon.


Since military customs, rules, and traditions vary from country to country and in some cases, branch to branch within the same country, many times what is seen as "wrong" by an audience in one country is actually correct for the military force being shown. Because of this, please check that any examples are actually incorrect for the military service depicted before adding them to the page.

Also, please remember that entirely fictional armed forces are under no obligation to behave exactly like their real life counterparts.

Examples of Artistic License Military include:

Advertising

  • Cereal mascot Cap'n Crunch is technically not a Captain, but a Commander, due to the three bars on the sleeves of his uniform.

Anime and Manga

  • The official subtitled version of Strike Witches calls Mio a Major (an Army/Air Force rank) in the subtitles. It's the right grade, but as a naval officer she should technically be a Lieutenant Commander. They also call Shirley a Lieutenant in episode 5, but since she's an officer in her country's Army, she should technically be a Captain. The actual dialogue averts this, since the characters use the all-forces rank structure of the Imperial Japanese forces (shousa and taii referring to grades as opposed to the actual ranks).
    • Eagleland Osmosis strikes again. Japanese military ranks only broadly correspond to American ranks, often with entirely different terms for equivalent grades in different services, which are different from the systems in place during World War II, the equivalent to the time period in which Strike Witches is set. Thus, this is an example of an Averted Trope.

Comic Books

  • The French-language Belgian comic Les Tuniques Bleues (The Bluecoats), set during the US Civil War, occasionally shows American soldiers saluting French-style, or presenting arms in the French way.
  • In issue 325 of The Amazing Spider-Man (the last part of "The Assassin Nation Plot") Spidey, Silver Sable, and Captain America are speaking to an officer identified as a Colonel, whose uniform does have the proper eagle-shaped badge, but also has Sergeant stripes on the sleeves. Likely an error on the artist's part.

Film

  • At one point in the Stargate movie, Colonel O'Neil calls Kawalski, his second in command, "Lieutenant". Not only that, he's credited as "Lieutenant Kawalski" in the credits. The problem? He's wearing silver oak leaves throughout the entire movie, making him a Lieutenant Colonel. While the film's treatment of the military is far from accurate or flattering, that's actually a pretty easy mistake to make. After all, he's a "lieutenant colonel." It can be presumed that the Emmerich and Devlin were simply unaware that the appropriate abbreviation of the rank "lieutenant colonel" is not "lieutenant" but rather "colonel."
  • Many characters in Top Gun are wearing patches from just about every branch of the military except the Navy.
  • Basic, a 2003 film starring Samuel L. Jackson, Connie Nielsen and John Travolta, featured several errors, including:
    • A female soldier wearing a Ranger tab. There were no Ranger-qualified females (or female Rangers, for that matter) until 2015, twelve years after the film was released.
    • The rank of Samuel L. Jackson's character changed (up and down) depending on the scene.
  • Rolling Thunder:
    • When Major Rane puts his Air Force uniform on, his U.S. lapel insignia not only are in the wrong location, but are the insignia used by enlisted personnel, not officers. Similarly, despite the character supposedly being a Vietnam War veteran, his uniform lacks the Vietnam Campaign Medal (an award given out to every single Soldier who served in that war).
    • Similarly, in the same movie, Master Sergeant Vohden's uniform has a Fifth Army patch on the right sleeve. A patch on the right sleeve indicates that the wearer served with that unit in combat during a previous war or campaign. The Fifth Army last served in battle during World War II. Vohden, as a returning Vietnam War veteran in 1973, would have been only a year or two old during World War II, if he had been born at all.
    • The hair of most of the military personnel shown in the film, including that of Major Rane and Master Sergeant Vohden, is too long for military standards.
  • Iron Eagle II features rather rotund actor Maury Chaykin as a sarcastic, back-talking sergeant who wanders through the entire movie with his uniform unbuttoned, his hair uncombed (and too long for the military), and generally looking like a slob. However, the higher-ranking General who assembled the Ragtag Bunch of Misfits of which the sergeant was a member was handpicked them because he wanted their mission to fail.
  • Pearl Harbor:
    • Rafe wears an Eagle Squadron badge, as do the Spitfires. The squadron code 'RF' is for No. 303 Squadron, which was a Polish unit - a very famous one at that. The only Hurricane seen in the film has the correct codes for an Eagle Squadron, 'XR-T' for No. 71 Squadron.
    • Rafe is assigned to an RAF Eagle Squadron prior to American involvement by order of Jimmy Doolittle. In reality, active duty personnel could not be assigned to serve with a belligerent nation while the US was neutral. They would have to resign their USAAF commission, renounce their US citizenship, swear allegiance to the British Crown, and re-enlist into the RAF (usually via Canada)
    • Rafe volunteered and only claimed to be assigned; the problem is why Danny believed this excuse. Which opens another plot hole in trying to explain how Rafe got back into the US military in time for Pearl Harbor.
    • The Doolittle Raiders scene is pretty much "how not to be the military".
  • In The Hunt for Red October the main sonar technician wears the "crow" of a Petty Officer but is addressed as "Seaman Jones" more than once. The proper forms of address would be either "Petty Officer Jones" or "Petty Officer" by those unfamiliar with his rate, or "ST2" by junior sailors who know, and "Jones" by those familiar with him.
  • In An Officer and a Gentleman, officer candidates continually refer to Gunnery Sergeant Foley as "Sergeant." Navy OCS candidates refer to their Marine drill instructors as "Sergeant Instructor". In the same vein, calling a Gunnery Sergeant "Sergeant" is using a lower rank than the Gunnery Sergeant is due. "Gunny" may be acceptable under a select few circumstances, but calling a Gunnery Sergeant "Sergeant" may be considered insubordination.
  • The instant-promotion-to-captain at the end of the 2009 Star Trek movie makes anyone trying to take Starfleet seriously wince.
  • A Few Good Men: As he is leaving after questioning his client, Tom Cruise's Lt. Kaffee turns and says, "Whatever happened to saluting an officer when he leaves the room?" whereupon Dawson stands up and pointedly shoves his hands in his pockets. Great moment, great scene... except that neither the Navy nor the Marine Corps exchanges salutes while indoors. (In both services you only salute if 'under arms' or wearing your cover (hat), and you almost never are doing either while inside.)
  • Star Wars is not an example, since it isn't set on Earth. But if it did...
    • It often conflates Army, Navy, and Air Force rankings, particularly in the Expanded Universe. (For example, General Dodonna, the guy who gives the briefing in episode 4, had his rank despite there being almost no ground troops and very few capital ships available to the Rebellion at the time. Wedge Antilles, in the Expanded Universe, eventually becomes a general in starfighter command—only to end up in charge of a ship like the Executor and its attendant task force. Han Solo is a general in command of ground forces and Lando Calrissian of the fighter group in Return of the Jedi, but Solo leads fleet actions in the EU. Finally, Garm Bel Iblis is a general but is always in command of a full task force.)
    • Also, in modern Earth terminology, a cruiser is a bigger ship than a destroyer. In Star Wars, Star Destroyers are amongst the biggest class of ships out there in common use. Furthermore, there were Dreadnaught-class heavy cruisers that were less than half the size of the Star Destroyers, and then the Super Star Destroyers are star dreadnoughts. Eventually the Star Wars RPG Saga Edition Starships of the Galaxy book clarified things by stating that the term "Star Destroyer" is not a class of ship the way star cruiser and star dreadnought is, referring more to a construction philosophy of overwhelming firepower mounted in one direction, which allows them to destroy (or more accurately, depopulate) entire star systems. The Imperial-Class Star Destroyers we see in the film are stated to be star cruisers.
      • If Star Wars had actually been set in the future (instead of it all being a translation convention) that might be excusable though. Destroyers are the biggest ships in most fleets today and as such rapidly getting bigger. Cruisers have always been the smaller cousins of battleships, traditionally the biggest ships in the fleet, so it's not that far fetched to have destroyers and cruisers switch places in the future. Plus "destroyer" is just an awesome name.
      • In Storm Over Ryloth, the terms "battlecruisers", "cruisers", and "frigates" are used to describe the same ships.
    • It's often stated that, as the Rebellion, the Rebels basically used whatever rank worked best with individual officers, since they weren't anything like a formal military yet. Thus General Dodonna, who at the time was the only force commander they had (and probably earned his generalship in the Clone Wars, to boot). Others progress through the ranks more or less naturally (like Wedge) but are assigned whatever their mission needs—Wedge once held command over two squadrons and a corvette while still a Commander, for perfectly logical though informal reasons.
      • Dodonna was established as earning his rank in the Empire's service, doing so good a job the Emperor gave him a habitable moon as his retirement pension.
    • The general consensus for the writers, with a couple of exceptions, is that Admirals (a fleet rank) are usually in charge of large Cruisers, Star Destroyers, or task forces. The rank of General is used by ground forces, Starfighter Command and the Intelligence division. Han, Lando, and Luke were made "generals" during the rebellion when ranks were a lot more informal and Wedge is apparently continuously given Fleet Command assignments because General Cracken (head of intelligence) wants him to transfer to either the main fleet or intelligence.
    • Applying United States/Commonwealth ranks to a fictional civilization in a galaxy with no connection to Earth may be a bit flawed in its premise, but we can certainly argue that Translation Convention is in effect. On the other hand, if that's the case, translating terms directly in a way that does not correspond to real rank/class makes little sense.
      • This complaint assumes that there are no militaries on Earth other than those in the United States/Commonwealth, which is patently untrue.
  • Not that Hobgoblins was a bastion of reality in film, but Nick salutes his sergeant at Club Scum.
    • Nick has insanely long hair for a soldier fresh out of basic training.
  • Independence Day gives us a Marine fighter pilot who is living with a stripper out of wedlock. Now there is plenty of fornication in all branches of the military, including the Marines, but fornication is a crime under the Uniform Code of Military Justice, and there is no way the Marines would ignore such a blatant breach of military discipline as living with a stripper out of wedlock. Will Smith's character would have received a discharge under other-than-honorable conditions long before the alien invasion happened.
    • Handwaving slightly. From their argument before he returns to base and the fact that his mail goes back to base too.It could be interpreted that he only stays with her on the weekends/holidays and has managed to keep it quiet thus far. His best friend states to him his career will go nowhere if he marries her.
    • Simple fornication hasn't been considered a crime under the UCMJ since the 1950s. The only sex offenses that still you get in trouble are fraternization (having sex with other service members when you are both in the same chain of command) or adultery (no definition needed), and his behavior is of course neither. The movie is still correct in that it could affect his future promotion opportunities, because those are determined by what sort of Officer's Efficiency Report his CO will write for him at the conclusion of his assignment and his CO has extremely wide latitude to down-check him for any reasons or none, including being personally offended by his off-duty behavior. But he couldn't be brought up on formal charges unless he did something that reached the "open and notorious" level of "offending against good order and discipline", which would require bringing her on-base and having sex with her in the hangar or similar.
  • In Full Metal Jacket, the Marines saluted officers while in Vietnam. This is a big no-no. You do not salute officers in a war zone because it immediately identifies the officer to the enemy, making them a target. The movie Forrest Gump even explained this.

Literature

  • Tom Clancy botched the job completely in Clear and Present Danger with a conversation between an officer and a "Seaman First" in the United States Coast Guard. That rank does not exist in the Coast Guard. The correct term for that particular Coastie would have been "Fireman" (E3). Previously out of basic he would have been a "Fireman Apprentice" (E2). He was an engineer. This contrasts with deck force ranks, "Seaman Apprentice" and "Seaman" (E2 and E3 respectively).
  • Sidestepped in the Dune prequels by inventing a new ranking system and changing it two or three times throughout the series. For example, a general's rank in the pre-Butlerian Jihad times is Primero (with titles based on numbers). When the League Armada is renamed the Army of Humanity, the Primero becomes the Bashar (possibly a variation on the Turkish rank of "pasha"). Post-Jihad, the Bashar rank is downgraded to the Colonel level, while the new General rank is Caid. Given that this takes place tens of thousands of years in the future means the authors are free to create whatever ranks they wish. Of course, the idea of a starship commander leading ground troops is still completely ridiculous.

Live-Action TV

  • Doctor Who:
    • We'll start with New!Who‍'‍s "saluting while not wearing hats" (you can actually bow when wishing to show respect to a superior officer within most Commonwealth countries). Yes, it means that the Doctor can do his "no don't salute" bit, but would it cost them too much to borrow the hats?
    • In "The Day of the Moon" Rory, dressed in civilian clothes, salutes the NASA personnel in 1969 with the British-styled salute. The NASA personal are explicitly confused by his usage of the British salute, so this is certainly an in-universe example.
  • Mostly averted in Stargate SG-1, although there were some uniform oddities that popped up now and then, most notably an airman in the pilot wearing the insignia for both a Staff Sergeant and a Major. It was officially endorsed by the US Air Force, and had military advisers on board to avoid most flagrant mistakes.
  • Stargate Universe:
    • A character is consistently identified as a Sergeant despite wearing the rank insignia of a Senior Airman.
    • The 20-year old Master Sergeant Ronald Greer. Master Sergeant is a rank that requires at least 16 years prior experience, meaning Greer could not possibly have reached that rank at his age, unless we assume some kind of Applied Phlebotinum or time dilation plot went on behind the scenes.
  • Seven Periods With Mr Gormsby has a very minor one; Gormsby's medals are upside-down (making them appear in reverse order). But it's enough to make most watchers from a military background flinch.
  • In Bones:
    • A Ranger Colonel shows up to recruit Booth to train soldiers in Afghanistan. He immediately recognizes the Colonel as an army ranger, presumably due to the 75th Ranger patch on his right shoulder. Instead of a flag (argh!). Also, the Colonel is wearing a (deformed) black beret instead of the Ranger tan.
    • Agent Booth himself at the end of the same episode counts as well. Wearing a presumably new uniform that looks like it came from the "reject" pile of the local CIF. Would be an aversion except that Booth has been reinstated to the rank of Sergeant Major and would at least ensure his uniform was presentable.
  • In Star Trek: The Original Series, costumes often did not match stated ranks, and there would be some confusion over what rank a character held. The only character to receive a promotion during the run of the series is Spock, who starts out as a Lieutenant Commander and is promoted to full Commander at some indeterminate point in the first season. (Fanon cites the death of Kirk's original First Officer, Gary Mitchell, and Spock assuming his duties in addition to those of Science Officer, as the impetus for this.) However, he wears the two-braided shirt, denoting a full Commander, throughout. Many other characters described in dialogue as a Lieutenant Commander also wear the two braids of a full Commander. There is also no real distinction in costuming between junior officers and enlisted crewmen. Often, crewmen will wear jumpsuits and officers will wear shirts, but this is by no means a hard-and-fast rule.
  • Averted by Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, which manages to keep everyone's ranks straight, even the Army style ranks of the Bajoran military. The only gray area is Chief O'Brien, but even he is consistently recognized as a specialist officer (NCO/Warrant) rather than a commissioned Starfleet officer, allowing him to, among other things, avoid getting in dress uniform and going to formal occasions a few times.
    • Occasionally you see the Chief chew out an Ensign for screwing up an engineering task (he's still respectful about it), which some people complain about. If you were an Ensign Newbie and your commanding officer has placed you on work detail with a decorated CPO whose job designation is Chief Operations Officer, he's allowed to chew you out over your failures with the engineering.
    • One interesting problem with Chief O'Brien. For several years (including during his days as an engineer on the Enterprise in TNG) the writers and costumers apparently couldn't decide what rank he was (he wore an Ensign's insignia in his first appearance and went all over the chart from there). Memory Alpha has the full list. By '95 they finally decided he was a Senior Chief Petty Officer, where he stayed.
  • Star Trek: The Next Generation neatly sidesteps the issue by being a fictional and Mildly Military organization, and by making everybody on the main cast an officer, even the ship's counselor. There are very few NCOs in the series in general and none in the main cast. Even Wesley Crusher is made an acting ensign.
    • They still manage to fail in matters of rank. Troi, the ship's counselor, must take a command test to advance to the rank of commander; it is stated that Medical Officer Beverly Crusher had to do the same. In the U.S. Navy (whose rank structure Starfleet shares), commander is a rank, not necessarily a position. One can gain the rank of commander without being qualified (or authorized!) to command a ship; indeed, it's highly unlikely that a psychologist or a medical doctor would ever be placed in command of a ship of the line, regardless of rank.
      • Except she doesn't just want the rank, she wants to command. The conversation about it takes place while Beverly is in command of the bridge during third watch.
      • If she wants to command, in real life she would be required to transfer to a different specialization. Psychologists are staff officers, not line officers, and as such would not command a ship unless every line officer was dead or disabled (and maybe not then). Crusher might take command of a medical ship (as seen in the future of "All Good Things...."); she would not command on a ship of the line like the Enterprise.
      • Troi's passing the "command qualification exam" is analogous to a US Navy officer becoming qualified to stand Officer of the Deck (Underway) watches, which would make her qualified to conn the ship if necessary and thus to be placed in the operational chain of command. This would not require her to change her specialty if her commanding officer authorized it as necessary for 'the good of the service', which Picard would obviously be willing to do. Furthermore, as a fictional agency Starfleet doesn't necessarily operate strictly by US Navy regs anyway.
    • And yet, Crusher and Troi each end up in command on separate occasions—Crusher when the captain was alive, well, and (at the time she was placed in command) available. Oh yeah, and the ship was in Borg space.
      • Given that Starfleet is a completely fictional military, this is pretty easy to justify. And they aren't even principally a military; they are scientists, explorers and diplomats as much or even before they are carrying out military missions. So, it might be justified that they do things differently.
      • There is also that the writers often confuse "having the conn/being Command Duty Officer" with "commanding the ship". As it stands, so long as Captain Picard is medically able to fulfill his duties and has not been relieved of his post by Starfleet Command, he remains Commanding Officer of the Enterprise regardless of where he is or what he is doing, even if he isn't even on the ship. However, since he obviously cannot live on the bridge 24/7 (if nothing else, the man does need to sleep sometime), other officers are given the duty of standing bridge watch ("Command Duty Officer") as needed in rotation, and they act in Picard's stead and with his authority whenever he is not present or in communication. This can result in the situation of Ensign Newguy, absolute last in seniority out of any officer on board, still acting 'in command' of the Enterprise if he's the guy awake and on bridge watch while everybody else is asleep during the graveyard shift. Obviously his "command" will only last as long as it takes for someone senior to him to wake up and get to the bridge, and only so far as his orders are not contradicted by someone senior who is aware of the situation and in a position to act on it — but until after that happens both the absolute authority of a ship's commanding officer under way and all the responsibility that entails is stuck to Ensign Newguy, because he's the guy who has the conn right that minute. So, yes, Crusher, or Troi, or anyone else who has the basic qualifications to act as a bridge officer at all, can potentially be stuck with the 'command' hat at any given time — on an acting basis, and as needed, and if Picard concurs.
  • Arrested Development is a serious offender. Buster seems to be in and out of boot camp whenever it's plot convenient, and the uniforms (when not grossly inaccurate) were out of date by about seven years. Probably just an example of Rule of Funny, though.
  • Blackadder Goes Forth, whilst generally fairly accurate on many uniform and insignia aspects (excepting of course the fact they are dressed perfectly accurately for 1914, not 1917!), has an easily missed error in the form of Brigadier-General Sir Bernard Proudfoot-Smith. The rank title is in fact correct for the era (it's currently just Brigadier, without the hyphened General, in the British Army). His insignia is, however, incorrect: Brigadier-General during WWI wore a crossed baton and sword (similar to other generals, but without any crowns or stars above).
  • In The Wire, the second half of the fifth season has some plot points that revolve around whether or not a reporter is making up details in his stories. As part of his stories, he interviews a former Marine who served in Iraq. When the reporter first meets the Marine, the Marine talks about an "M niner niner eight," which (he explains) is a Humvee. He also calls a .50 caliber machine gun an M-50 (which is actually an M-2). Later, the Marine's credibility is called into question. Even a fellow Marine is questioned on the subject. In the second interview, the Marine correctly identifies the machine gun as a .50 caliber machine gun, but the audience is supposed to be left with the notion that the former Marine is a credible source of information, despite a few mistakes in his story.
  • Buffy the Vampire Slayer: The Initiative can't seem to figure out whether it's a special ops arm of a civilian agency or a unit in the military, and if so, it's not sure which agency or which branch. In one episode Riley refers to his colleagues as soldiers, in the next they are marines. Others use the terms interchangeably to refer to Riley. They answer to a civilian at first, but then are taken over by a general. Insignia seems to have been chosen by grabbing stuff at random and pinning it on wherever it would fit. Though strangely, they avert Mildly Military by being very well disciplined with a clear chain of command.
  • In the Disney Channel Original Movie Cadet Kelly, Hillary Duff and Christy Carlson Romano should have been discharged for what they did to each other.
  • An episode of Destroyed in Seconds had footage from a helicopter crash during a Russian airshow. The helicopters were Mi-2's, but the narrator continuously refers to them as "M1-2's". The narrator then calls them "state-of-the-art". They aren't, having been introduced in 1965 and phased out of front-line service in most armies which field them, including Russia's.
  • Sherlock contains several mistakes regarding Watson's backstory in the British Army. He states on several occasions that he is from the "5th Northumberland Fusiliers". The unit name is a carryover from the original Doyle stories. Watson served with the 5th (Northumberland Fusiliers) Regiment of Foot at the Battle of Maiwand in 1880. The regiment was renamed simply the Northumberland Fusiliers in 1881, but was frequently referred to as the 5th Northumberland for decades thereafter. The regiment became part of the Royal Regiment of Fusiliers in 1968, before the current John Watson was born. He's a doctor as well, so he should really saying he's from the Royal Army Medical Corps.
    • Sherlock‍'‍s version of the "The Hound of the Baskervilles" also features an officer with a full beard, which is not allowed by British Army regulations. The extras are also clearly too old and do not wear uniforms correctly.
    • However, these could be references to the ACD canon, rather than mistakes; the beard-wearing officer is definitely a reference, as every single other incarnation of his character has worn a full beard, as well.
  • In JAG the research and accuracy became better through the years the show was running, though inaccuracies could always be found. Having a Marine Corps veteran as its creator, executive producer, and show runner probably helped. Being Backed by the Pentagon probably helped a great deal too.
  • The West Wing:
    • The White House received weather forecasts from a Coast Guard 1st Lieutenant. The Coast Guard equivalent to this Army/Air Force/Marine Corps rank is Lieutenant (Junior Grade).
    • The Army Chief of Staff is portrayed as a three-star general. The job is always held by someone with a least four-star rank.
  • In the Power Rangers Wild Force episode "The Bear Necessities", the guard at the Air Force base is clearly not following proper proceedure by letting Taylor in at her word - while she was indeed permitted to be there (though not on active duty, she holds the rank of Lieutenant), she was wearing civilian clothing, so he should have at least asked to see her ID.

Video Games

  • In Halo: Combat Evolved, Captain Keyes is seen with two silver bars on his uniform, which is not only the wrong rank but the wrong insignia for his branch. The silver bars denote an Army Captain or Navy Lieutenant, both of which are several pay grades below the Navy rank of Captain, which is equivalent to an Army Colonel and both have an eagle as the insignia.
    • They do it again in the Cole Protocol book. A Marine Commander is said to be outranked by a Navy Lieutenant. Several centuries difference, yeah, but the USMC has no commander (and the UNSC Marines seem to be based on the USMC) and even if they did, they would outrank a Lieutenant in every possible way.
      • For those who may not be aware - Lieutenants are often considered to be an entry-level position as an officer.
    • According to The Fall of Reach, the UNSC Navy has the ranks of First Lieutenant, Second Lieutenant, Lieutenant Junior Grade, and Lieutenant.
  • In Prototype, the Marine Base Commanders wear the scarlet and gold shoulder chevrons of a First Sergeant (on the utility uniform, no less), are always saluted and addressed as "sir", and, when they are given names, have varying officer ranks.
    • There are also errors in the equipment used by the Marines. They use UH-60 Blackhawks, M2 Bradley APC's and AH-64 helicopter gunships. These should be UH-1 Venoms, LAV-25's or AAV-7's and the AH-1 Super Cobra respectively. Even though one could handwave this by saying they are U.S Army attachments, they are all specifically stated to be Marine vehicles, including by the Marines themselves.
  • Madou Souhei Kleinhasa is an Eroge set in a fictional military, so the usual "no fraternization between officers and enlisted" rule get ignored in some scenes. Roze and Llun also have ridiculously long hair, even by the standards of this page: Llun's hair extends to the small of her back, while Roze's hair almost goes to her knees.
  • Just about every Modern Warfare features people of ranks far too high to be in command of an infantry squad, even Special Operations Forces. A glaring example is in Call of Duty 4, where a Marine Lt. Vasquez is shown leading a USMC Recon squad. Even if he was recon (and not prior enlisted) he should still be in command of a whole platoon or as a Company XO. Even in the SAS, an O-3 Captain Price would not be leading tiny reconnaissance elements.
    • Lt. Vazquez is commanding an entire platoon. Its just the camera is only following around First Squad, which the Lt. has attached himself to, while the rest of the platoon is busy off on your flanks and usually out of view. (Note that in the level where you're doing the night assault on the building, you can see at least half your platoon firing in support from a distance while your squad goes in to do room clearing.)
    • As for Captain Price's team, they are generally doing the sort of black ops where all normal procedures go right out the window. The one time they're not, "No Fighting In The War Room", your unit is indeed taking part in a company-sized assault.
    • Kinda sorta justified through Fridge Brilliance in that your tiny fireteam or squad is fighting company- or battalion-sized forces which would have high ranking officers in charge.
  • Given the Narm Charm, it's hard not to expect this of Command & Conquer: Red Alert 2. Prominent general Carville is wearing insignia from an ROTC Cadet uniform (badges worn by student soldiers before they graduate college).
    • Given every female character in all of the Red Alert games is intended to be a Ms. Fanservice, the nature of their uniforms should obviously be considered less-than-accurate. In the opening cutscene for the Allied portion of the Uprising Expansion, a female officer clearly has to modify the way she walks just to avoid flashing the camera.
  • StarCraft appears to lack any sort of distinction between military branches. The Alpha Squadron, for example, is commanded by a general... who is in command of a starship. While this could be explained by having the Space Navy use army ranks instead of navy, we then have the UED show up with an Admiral in charge, with the Vice Admiral running around in a Ghost uniform (i.e. a psychic assassin).
    • Easily resolved! The Confederacy of Man and Terran Dominion (Alpha Squadron defected from the former to the latter) simply use a different rank structure for the Space Navy than the United Earth Directorate. The Confederacy and Dominion use army-derived ranks (probably Air Force), and the UED uses Navy ranks. As for Vadm. Stukov wearing a Ghost uniform, there's nothing saying only Ghosts wear it; the Ghost outfit is probably a modified version of a standard covert ops uniform.
  • The original Escape Velocity had a major become an admiral. That's not even trying.
    • EV Nova may have an example with General Smart, a Federation officer who defected to the Rebels and is now in charge of their Space Navy. The Federation Navy appears to use US Navy ranks (the two named Federation officers, Krane and Raczak, are a commander and an admiral respectively), so the only way to resolve it is by having the Rebels use Army or Air Force ranks. Given that the Rebels are of Federation extraction, this seems unlikely.
  • Mortal Kombat X and Mortal Kombat 11; obviously, in any real-life militia, Cassie would never be placed in the unit where her own mother was the CO, it would cause way to many legal issues regarding Nepotism.

Western Animation

  • A "wrong rank" version happens in an episode of Hey Arnold!. The ex-military substitute teacher gives his rank as "Lieutenant Major." No such rank exists.
  • G.I. Joe: Renegades has people calling Duke "sir", when he's a Sergeant. Further, this version of Scarlett is called a "Lieutenant" in the credits and dialogue, but no such rank exists in the US Army. No, not even Army Intelligence, where Scarlett came from. There are 2nd and 1st Lieutenants, but simply "Lieutenant" with no modifier is a Navy rank.
    • Although, given the aforementioned pronunciation errors, and the informal structure of their group, it was never mentioned if she was first or second lieutenant.
    • Not to mention that both 2nd and 1st Lieutenants are both typically called "Lieutenant" when talking.
    • Not to mention Flint is listed as Warrant Officer in the opening credit sequence but is a Lieutenant in the show. His original rank in RAH was Warrant, so probably a production snafu. Speaking of RAH...
  • The original G.I. Joe cartoon can go from surprisingly realistic military procedure to outright tomfoolery. Duke or Flint in the first season seem to be almost always in charge, despite being 1st Sergeants and Warrants, respectively, with many members of the team outranking them. And Duke is explicitly stated to be higher in the food chain than Flint in Season 2 (at least by then they had a General leading them). Not even getting into how every member of the Joe team can expertly pilot the F-14 expy, among other things.
  • While almost likely an intentional goof, the South Park miniseries "Imaginationland" had the two Army soldiers in charge of the Stargate spoof simultaneously wearing senior Sergeant patches and General stars. Sergerals?
  • An almost certainly deliberate example occurred in Rocky and Bullwinkle. Boris Badenov showed up at an American military compound and tried to seize control based on his seniority, claiming that he was a six star general. When the general in charge showed that he, too, had six stars, Boris responded with "Yes, but yours don't light up". The rest of the base accepted this without question.

Real Life

  • Flags - specifically the American one where its display is formally codified - facing the wrong way on sleeves and vehicles. Flags worn on the left sleeves (or the left side of the vehicle) are always "backwards" compared to the normal display. The Union (the blue bit with the stars) is always forward so it never appears that the wearer is retreating.
    • Which itself invokes Reality Is Unrealistic: Whenever a flag is displayed hung and unfurled, i.e. in the backdrop of a stage, the Union is in the Upper-left corner from the audience's POV. Under the above rule, that would be the proper orientation of a flag patch on the left shoulder, with the Union to the fore. Except that the American flag is properly placed on the right shoulder, putting the Union to the upper right. (Not necessarily... on Air Force Flight Duty Uniforms, the flag, if worn, properly goes on the wearer's left shoulder and thus has Union in "normal" position.) Which means that either the costume department is using non-standard patches in a non-standard position because that's the orientation a civilian audience is familiar with, or, if the above example is true, is guilty of a Double-Failure using standard patches in a non-standard position.
    • Prior to 2004 the flag was only used on uniforms and vehicles during multi-national operations. Although the "union to the fore" rule is much older, it wasn't much known until the 1991 Gulf War, which was the first time in many years the backwards flag patches were seen.
  • The Brits get a lot of "flag incorrectness." The Union flag is often referred to as the Union jack (in fact, it is only this when flown at sea). It is also often pictured upside down (so much so that, when David Cameron recently visited the USA, the USMC got it wrong). For the record, the thicker white stripe should be in the top left.
  • There actually a story behind the whole "Getting patches, medals, rank insignia, and uniforms wrong." It was believed for a long time that movies and television were doing this deliberately to avoid getting in trouble for impersonating an officer (they believed similar things applied to police officers, by the way.) However, the only law that was even close to doing anything similar to that was shot down in 1970. If they still do it wrong, it's not because they have to be "out of uniform," but whether it's out of respect, habit (if the costumer got their start before the '70s, or was an apprentice of same), or just goofing up, usually depends on the movie in question. It's explained on the "Goofs" page of the Charlie's Angels movie.
    • Actually, one of the USMC regulations explicitly states that wearing the uniform in a film or theater type production is authorized by non-marines as long as they are not disrespecting the uniform or claiming the title in real life.
  • Salutes, even in supposedly formal settings, are beat to a pulp, sodomized, then hung out to dry. Virtually every show and movie screws up either the salute itself, or the procedure. For starters, in the US Navy, US Marines, and all branches of the British military, salutes are only given while wearing a cover (hat, helmet, etc.) and saluting indoors is only done when someone is covered and under arms or under very formal circumstances. Superior officers saluting lower-ranked officers (as opposed to returning a salute) is only regularly done during promotion ceremonies, when receiving honors, or in a case where the lower-ranking officer is highly decorated (think Medal of Honor recipients), and even this is situational.
    • There is at least one Real Life exception, though one that has yet to show up on film: Anyone in any branch of the Mexican Armed Forces must salute anyone serving in the French Foreign Legion, rank be damned.
    • In another Real Life exception rarely seen in fiction, under US custom, anyone wearing the Congressional Medal of Honor is to be saluted, regardless of their rank, whether they're in uniform or not, or even if they're still in the service or not, regardless of the rank of the person greeting the CMoH bearer. This is in acknowledgment, basically, that anyone who has the award has proven themselves in combat to be a definitive Badass deserving of the utmost respect. Technically the salute is directed at the Medal, not the person.
      • The saluting protocol for the Medal of Honor appeared in Heartbreak Ridge - Gunny Highway was awarded the CMoH in Korea, and gets salutes from top brass as a Gunnery Sergeant, with another character even providing helpful exposition about them seeing the medal when he's at a formal ball and saluting him because of it.
        • Ironically, they somehow got the Saluting protocol right while missing the much more obvious fact that there were no Marines at Heartbreak Ridge. That little oversight had to be sloppily papered over with a post-production retcon.
          • Tom Highway was in the Army and later enlisted into the Marines later on. Hence the medal is the Army and not the Navy M.O.H. as well as explaining his membership in the 2nd infantry division.
      • Also done correctly in an episode of NCIS.
      • Also shown in Gardens of Stone, but no explanation given. The film just assumes that audiences know the rule.
      • A flashback scene from We Were Soldiers has some of the soldiers telling a story about a Badass sergeant who was part of a platoon being inspected by a brand-new 2nd Lieutenant. The LT wanted to get an idea of the kind of guys he was leading, so he had them change into their working uniforms with ribbons to check out their awards. The sergeant at first comes back wearing no ribbons and is stoically chewed out by the LT to go back and put on his awards. He comes back a few minutes later wearing his boots, two Medals of Honor (!!) and nothing else. The LT stares in shock for a long moment before snapping off a salute, wise enough at this point not to try chewing the Sarge out for being out of uniform twice.
        • "So that was Plumley?" "No, that was McDune." "So what was the point of that story?" "Well, Plumley was McDune's boss. And McDune was scared shitless of him."
      • Also per regulation the only civilians that are supposed to be rendered a salute are members of the High Command (President, Secretary of Defense, etc.). In Top Gun, for all its failings, this is not only gotten right but referenced in dialogue; Jester informs the trainees that Charlie is a civilian, so "you do not salute her — but you better listen to her".
    • Another Real Life exception are the Brazilian armed forces. Whenever any soldier or officer sees someone of higher rank, whether or not they are on duty or even wearing a uniform, they must render a salute, even if they are driving, riding a horse or a bicycle. In fact, regulations say they must halt, salute the officer, and then ask permission to continue. Of course that means that Brazilian fiction with correct saluting protocol is impossible to find.
  • A general example that tends to crop up when British personnel feature in US media. In the UK, the rank of Lieutenant is pronounced "leff-tenant," not "loo-tenant." It can also happen with Canadian personnel, with Canadians pronouncing it the same way as the British.
    • So would that make a British OF-2/Upper OF-1 a righ-tenant?
      • Historically, it was pronounced differently in the Royal Navy to both the British Army and US Forces, being rendered "letenant" or "l'tenant"; this pronunciation is in desuetude nowadays, but is often ballsed up in WWII films (even in the era; In Which We Serve springs to mind).
      • One tradition in the Canadian Forces was that a Lieutenant (Naval) would be referred to as "leftenant" while a Lieutenant in the air force or army would use the "loo-tenant" pronunciation. It served some practicality as a Lieutenant in the navy is the equivalent rank to a Captain in the air force or army, so one could differentiate between them while speaking: Loo-tenant Smith has to salute Lef-tenant Degrasse.
    • Additionally, there seems to be some confusion over the names of the British armed forces. There's a Royal Air Force and a Royal Navy, but the Royal Army hasn't existed since the Civil War. The eldest surviving regiments can trace themselves back that far, but the oldest was actually founded under Cromwell and the Protectorate.
      • There was however once a Crown army. This was British units assigned to India. It did not include the Indian Army nor did it include ethnically British soldiers who happened to be serving in the Indian Army (I.E. officers, artillerymen, and a sprinkling of rankers). It did include British regiments who were raised in Britain and accounted their history as part of British history. The term Crown was to make the distinction.