When Beverly is drying her daughter off near the tub, the child switches between being toweled down, wrapped snugly in the towel, and back again in a matter of seconds.
When Gerald enters the bedroom of the sleeping housekeeper Olivia, he leaves her door wide open when he approaches her bed, yet moments later, once she awakens, her door is closed shut.
In the bathroom sequence, Beverly tells her son he is not due for a bath until tomorrow, but that night says she had to bathe her daughter because the two kids had been in a mud fight.
The morning after the rain storm floods the pool with suds, a shot of the house next door to the Boyers' is mistakenly used to establish the new day and scene.
Mrs. Fraleigh (Arlene Francis) was three months away from her 56th birthday, clearly past child bearing age. Gardiner Fraleigh (Edward Andrews) was three months away from his 49th birthday.
The drama series is seen in color on several Zenith 23" black-and-white TV sets in various locations, including Dr. Boyer's den (before he buys a color set). His black-and-white TV has a label reading "COLOR TV" in red letters, added for the film.
When the Boyers are being driven to the Fraleighs' home, the limo driver looks at them in the rear view mirror, but the image is not reversed. Mrs. Boyer is still on the right of Dr. Boyer.
The police put the Rolls on the FDR uptown, which is on the other side of Manhattan. They end up stopped on the East River Drive later.