When Stottlemeyer calls to summon Monk, he tells him he is in room 3473 at his casino but, when he opens the door for Monk, it is clearly room 4825.
When the Captain gets his pants back, he unfolds a paper and looks at it.
When the camera angle changes, he unfolds the paper again.
When the camera angle changes, he unfolds the paper again.
When Monk gets strangled by the scarf, he grabs it with both hands. In the next shot he is not touching it and grabs it again.
When Stotlemeyer answers the door for Monk, he slides over a pizza. When Monk and Natalie come in, the pizza is gone.
In the casino bar, the barman is telling the captain what he did last night. When the camera pans from behind the bar, a middle-aged lady is sitting at the bar, and there is glass of wine and an empty brandy glass on it. A split second later, the camera pans from in front of the bar, and the brandy glass has become a beer glass and an attractive blonde in a red top is sitting there.
Obviously, San Francisco police officers would have no jurisdiction in Las Vegas.
When Natalie approaches the desk where Lewis is working at approximately 18 minutes in, he is seen to be reading a book written by Daniel Thorn titled "Richer Than God." He lays the book face down on top of a newspaper. At other camera angles, it can be seen as face up during their conversation. When Natalie looks over at the book later in their conversation in the close-up of the book, it is again face up and the title is clearly visible, as she makes reference to what he had been reading.
The book is face up throughout the scene, including when the clerk puts the book down.
The book is face up throughout the scene, including when the clerk puts the book down.
When Stottlemeyer hands Natalie Randy's winnings, you can see that the flip side of the prop dollars are blank.
When Monk is forced to leave the blackjack table, Captain Stottlemeyer and Lieutenant Disher stay behind to collect the chips. After picking most of them up, Stottlemeyer throws a chip to the dealer and says "That's for you." The dealer takes the chip and places it in his left shirt pocket, under his vest. In casinos, all tips are collected into a community pot, and split equally among the table dealers, croupiers, etc. Also, a dealer who puts a chip in his pocket at the table would immediately be removed from play and terminated. It is instant grounds for dismissal for a floor worker to take any chips off the gaming floor. That is why the dealers must "Clear their hands," that is, show their hands flat palms up and down for the cameras when they are relieved, when they cough, or at any time their hands aren't in plain sight.