What Hollywood Gets Wrong About Driving

Posted on by Defensive Driving | in Defensive Driving Tips

Once you see it, you can’t unsee it! When you’re watching a TV show or movie, there’s all sorts of little driving habits that break real-world rules and laws. Here are a few things you’ll see on screen that you shouldn’t be seeing in the real world.

Seatbelts and Headrests

Did you ever notice how in TV and movies, the actors never buckle up or lean back against headrests? They remove the car’s headrests for clear camera shots, but in reality, seatbelts and headrests save lives.

stuntman driving car split-frame with a normal man buckling his seatbelt

Eye Contact During Conversations

You will see a lot of eye contact between characters while going highway speeds. In real life, taking your eyes off the road for even a second spikes accident risk, much less giving a whole monologue while looking at your passenger. Keep your gaze forward, not locked on your co star.

Frequent Steering Wheel Movement

Actors really overperform turning the steering wheel. Watch an actor make a turn in a movie. They’ll spin the steering wheel around like it’s one of the wheels on a kid’s shopping carts at HEB. In the real world, you’d probably only partially spin the wheel. Real defensive driving means smooth, deliberate steering, not showboating for the camera.

Ignoring Mirrors and Blind Spots

On screen, characters veer or merge without a glance in the mirror. Unlike you, these characters have plot armor. They don’t need to look where they are going, because it’s all scripted. Offscreen, driving requires constant mirror checks and blind spot sweeps before every lane change.

Exaggerated Engine and Tire Sounds

This is one that seems to occur accidentally sometimes. It seems like sound is too often an afterthought, and someone tries to add in a car sound that doesn’t fit. The characters will be driving a hybrid, but the sound effect sounds like they’re driving a classic V-8 hotrod. They’ll drive away normally in a Prius, but it’ll sound like they’re peeling out.

Spotting these tricks changes how you watch every action scene—and it reminds you why real defensive driving matters. Buckle up, focus ahead, steer smoothly, check your mirrors, and ignore the movie magic—your safety depends on it.

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