"The Incredibles" features a lot of futuristic-looking tech, computers, and GPS.

It doesn't take place in the present or even the future.

The Pixar movie takes place in 1962. The beginning of the film takes place over a decade earlier.

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It may be hard to believe, but "The Incredibles" turns 15 this year. The first movie debuted in November 2004.

If you haven't watched the movie in a while, you may think the Pixar classic takes place in the early 2000s, when it came out. After all, Mr. Incredible works on a computer and there are some high-tech gadgets used in the film.

This looks like something you would see now or in the future. Guess again! Pixar

But as Buzzfeed pointed out, that's not the case at all.

One small moment early on in the movie will tell you the movie actually takes place in the '60s. Early in the movie as the Parr family attempts to eat dinner, Bob/Mr. Incredible sneaks off to read the news.

Take a good look at that newspaper. It reads May 16, 1962.

Take a close look at that newspaper. Pixar

Now, if you want to go even further down the rabbit hole, the beginning of the movie takes place around 1947.

Where we're getting that year from

A few scenes earlier in the movie, the movie tells us it skips ahead 15 years while Mr. Incredible is sitting at a regular desk job.

Now that we know the majority of "The Incredibles" takes place in 1962, it's pretty easy to figure out when the movie begins. Pixar

There are also a few clues early on in the movie that should have given you a clue the movie took place in a different time period.

Old-timey looking cars open the movie.

This cop car immediately should have alerted you this movie didn't take place in the present day. Pixar

Superhero costumes worn to the Parr wedding look like nods to older comic characters.

Tell us these costumes don't remind you of Adam West's Batman from the late '60s.

Adam West would fit right in with these superheroes. Pixar/20th Century Fox

The news cameras look like they're from the late '40s and early '50s.

No camera phones here. Pixar

Those are just a few examples. Director Brad Bird has said that the comic books and spy movies he grew up with in the '60s inspired the film, so it would make sense for him to pay tribute to the past while bringing it into the present.