Shared with you
Continuity
During their fight at the forty thieves' lair, Aladdin's arm is slashed by Sa'Luk's knuckleduster, and he is shown clutching it with blood being barely visible behind his hand. Throughout the rest of the scene, his sleeve is perfectly intact with no visible injury.
During the "In or Out" song, Saluk's claws disappear several times.
The location of the Japanese thief when Saluk is entering the hideout after having been thought to be dead.
During the fight interrupting the wedding, the triplet thieves make a tower out of themselves while holding bags, at first the top one is holding red bags and the middle holding blue and the bottom holding purple. When Aladdin swings the staff at them the last time the top one is holding the blue ones and the middle one is holding the red.
The elephant's cover when interrupting Aladdin and his father during the wedding is first dark blue, then dark red, then light red, then purple, then finally dark blue again.
When the Cassim meets the Sultan, the Sultan's clothes are off-white with a blue feather. It then changes to gold with a maroon feather when Cassim hugs him, then goes back to off-white with a blue feather when Cassim puts him down.
When the Hand of Midas falls into Saluk's hand, it takes a good ten seconds before he turns to gold. Yet, when the Hand touched other things (eg. Cassim's cloak, the boat) they become gold instantly.
In the first Aladdin (1992), Aladdin set the Genie free and his arm bands were removed. In this film, however, the genie still has his arm bands. In the TV series, the Genie explains that the only thing he's a slave to is fashion, suggesting that this is a style choice.
During the climax of the movie, Sa'Luk told Cassim that he'll kill Aladdin if he doesn't give him the Hand Of Midas. Despite this, he was still planning to kill Aladdin when Cassim gave him the Hand Of Midas.
Throughout the movie, Iago had a dislike of Aladdin and Jasmine's love for each other. But in the TV series, he fell in love with a bird named Thundra.
When guests are arriving for the wedding, the Genie looks at the crowd and says, "Oh, look, there's Osiris. Oh, Osiris! Osiris, can we get a word with you?" The character that turns around is not Osiris - it is Horus, Osiris's son in Egyptian mythology.