When two kids bring a donkey to pull Santa's sleigh out of the sand, Santa is wearing a dark pair of sunglasses. They disappear in the close-up, then reappear in the next shot.
In a close-up, the doll-making elf hugs and kisses the Raggedy Ann doll she has just made. In every other shot, she works on an entirely different toy.
One girl on the beach has long brown ponytails in hair ties with red beads. In one early scene, the beads are clear.
The sleigh is only a few centimeters deep in the sand, making it look like it can easily be pulled.
When the fire truck drives through the amusement park several puddles are present. Directly in front of the fire truck are the wet tire tracks of the camera truck filming the shot. When the shot changes to a wide angle, the tire tracks are gone.
The Ice Cream Bunny has nothing to do with ice cream.
The person pushing the antique fire truck is clearly visible.
The Mississippi River is over 100 miles from the nearest Florida beach.
If the sleigh could be teleported back to the North Pole, why wasn't it teleported earlier in the film, instead of trying to pull it out of the sand?
If Santa didn't like the kid's idea of going back to the North Pole by plane, then why did he agree to go back to the North Pole on the Ice Cream Bunny's fire engine?