The house at the center of the action was supposedly foreclosed on by a bank, but if its original owners, the Bradfords, had done enough estate planning to set up a trust for their daughter and heir, they would have made sure the trust covered the house payments, property taxes and maintenance expenses.
Photographer Ralph Savage tells realtor Meg Atkins he never takes portraits, but there's a full set-up in his studio for doing portraits, including two big lights, a backdrop and a posing stool.
Near the end, when Meg purposely dislocated her shoulder to get out of the ropes in the basement, it was her right shoulder that she dislocated, but when the cops entered the house later and told everyone to put their hands up, she raised her right hand and let her left arm hang limply as if the dislocated shoulder was in that arm. She should have raised her left hand and let her right arm hang limply to be consistent with the one she had dislocated in the basement.
Also, she would not have been able to use her right hand and arm so easily and painlessly in the fight with Lynette, if at all, after dislocating that shoulder.