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A plot hole is a gap or inconsistency in a storyline that goes against the flow of logic established by the story's plot. While many stories have unanswered questions, unlikely events or chance occurrences, a plot hole is one that is essential to the story's outcome. Plot holes are usually seen as weaknesses or flaws in a story, and writers usually try to avoid them to make their stories seem as realistic as possible. Logic (from Classical Greek λÏÎ³Î¿Ï logos; meaning word, thought, idea, argument, account, reason, or principle) is the study of the principles and criteria of valid inference and demonstration. ...
Look up plot in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Writers can deal with plot holes in different ways, from completely rewriting the story, to having characters acknowledge illogical or unintelligent actions, to having characters make vague statements that could be used to deflect accusations of plot holes (e.g. "I've tried everything I can think of...") to keep critics from asking why a particular action was not taken. The nature of the plot hole and the developmental stage at which it is noticed usually determine the best course of action to take. For example, a motion picture that has already wrapped production would much more likely receive an added line of dialogue rather than an entire script rewrite. The viewing or reading audience notes a plot hole when something happens during the story that seems highly unlikely, or would be impossible to imitate in real life. It is usually seen as a mark of good writing or directing when a storyteller presents a story in such a way that the audience does not notice plot holes, or willingly chooses to overlook them in favor of enjoying the story.
Examples - Miami Vice (the original TV series, not the 2006 film): One of the two lead characters, undercover Miami police detective Sonny Crockett, is portrayed as a former football star at the University of Florida, who turned a screen pass into a 95-yard touchdown that won the Gator Bowl for the Gators. It would seem very unlikely that a star player for Florida, especially one who played a key role in a Gator Bowl (a game held annually in Jacksonville), would go unnoticed for over a decade while working as an undercover cop in the same state.
- Terminator 2: Judgment Day: In The Terminator, it is stated that only objects with living tissue can pass through the time displacement field; however in Terminator 2, the T-1000 managed to go back in time despite being made entirely of liquid metal. Many fans have attempted to explain this plot hole away, the most popular being based on the mimicking abilities of said liquid metal, and in the novelization an organic transport casing was described. However this raises a further problem as soldier Kyle Rees could also have used this method to bring back advanced future weaponry to combat the T-800 and better protect Sarah Connor (we know this is possible as the T-X was able to bring back and array of weapons integrated into its body). No official confirmation has been given.
- The Terminator franchise, as with many other films that use time travel as a plot device, fail to address the inherent problems with this premise. For example, the TX from Terminator 3: Rise of the Machines is the most advanced of the Terminator units. There is no reason that it should not have been sent to Terminate Sarah Connor in the first movie as one would assume it would stand a better chance. Many wonder why Skynet did not send Terminator units even further back in time to assassinate John Connor's ancestors. It is explained in the first film that Skynet only knew Sarah Connor's name and location (which is why the T-800 kills several women with her name), and had no knowledge of her personal history or lineage.
- In the 1996 film Star Trek: First Contact, the Borg travel to Earth, and then, facing destruction by the Federation fleet, travel back in time to successfully conquer Earth in the 21st century. However it was pointless to risk Federation intervention because they could have time traveled while still in deep space and then made their way to ancient Earth and enslaved primitive humans. One possible explanation for this is that Borg time travel technology limited them to how far they could go back, or they could only go back to periods where certain conditions were present. There is also the fact that the Borg were after human technology as much as they were after human Borg.
- Even more importantly, at the end of the movie, after their efforts have been thwarted, there is no reason for the Borg not to try again using this approach. A possible explanation for this could be that the Borg had just enough time and resources to attempt this time travel approach only once, or the fact that the Borg do not attempt the same plan twice if it fails the first time.
- 28 Days Later: It becomes apparent quite early in the film that the infected are not zombies in the traditional sense (basically walking, decaying corpses) but are normal humans consumed by a virus that makes them act in a hyper psychotic fashion and causes them to forgo things such as sustenance. As they are normal humans it is surmised by one of the characters that they can simply wait for the infected to starve to death. Following this logic it is never explained why they have not already died of dehydration which kills in days where starvation can take weeks. In essence the majority of the infected should have been dead long before Jim came out of his 28 day coma.
- Also, in 28 Days Later (as well as many other zombie films), it is not explained why the zombies only attack uninfected humans and never each other. However the Graphic Novel 28 days later: The Aftermath proves they discriminate from infected and human through their sense of smell.
- Spider-Man 3. After being attacked and disfigured by a Venom-crazed Peter Parker, Harry Osborn's butler informs him that he has known all along that Norman Osborn died from self-inflicted wounds and Spider-Man was not to blame. Harry declines to ask why he didn't share this information sooner. Other plot holes include: a pumpkin bomb blows up mere inches from Harry Osborn's face which leaves him disfigured but quite alive, yet Spider-Man uses one of these same bombs to completely vaporise Venom and Eddie Brock. A possible explanation is presented when Mary Jane notes that Harry has no scar from the accident that caused his memory loss, indicating that the goblin formula may have made his tissue highly regenerative. Also, no explanation is given why Harry is able to so easily shake off the psychotic side effects of the Goblin formula when he has his change of heart and decides to help Peter. However, it must be noted that Norman Osborn mentioned in the first film that only one test out of the many they conducted caused this psychosis in the rodents they were testing on. Therefore, it is possible that Harry did not suffer the side effects and his aggression was caused by his want for revenge, something that was stayed when Bernard informs Harry how his father really died.
- Die Hard 2: Die Harder - It becomes apparent that the planes circling the airport (including one carrying John McClanes wife) cannot land as the terrorists have disabled the landing lights. This problem is solved toward the end of the movie when McClane blows up the terrorist plane, causing a huge fireball on the runway which the other planes use as a landing light. However, earlier in the film the terrorists deliberately crash a British Airways jet to show they mean business which causes a huge fireball on the runway. No explanation is given as to why the planes could not have used this as a landing beacon.
- The 2000 film Battlefield Earth is notorious for containing an alarming number of plot holes. For instance, primitive cave-dwellers with no working knowledge of electronics or science learn to operate AV-8B Harrier jets more effectively than most extensively-trained military pilots in less than a week's time, without any explanation as to how or why. Additionally, these jets were still active and fully-fueled after being in storage for over 1000 years (jet fuel has a shelf-life of four years) on an Earth that had been completely plundered of all resources by an alien race.
- In Freddy vs Jason, Freddy Kruger fights Jason Voorhees in the dream realm. It has been etablished in ths film and the Nightmare on Elm Street films that whatever damage Freddy inflicts in the dream world happens in the real world yet Jason showed no sign of the damage he got from Freddy in the dream realm when he woke up.
- The plot of Ocean's Eleven (2001) depends on the transport of a series of duffel bags supposedly stuffed with money, but actually filled with advertising flyers. The movie does not explain how the flyers were placed in the vault, and director Steven Soderbergh admits the error in his DVD commentary.
- In the video game Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty, a somewhat large plot hole lies right before the final scene, where the player confronts the last boss. In a cut scene, a giant submersible fortress, in which the player is trapped, was supposed to displace the Statue of Liberty and crash through half the island of Manhattan right before the final scene. The scene was removed, due to potential issues with the 9/11 incidents. Instead, the player wakes up on the roof of the Federal Hall, in front of the final boss.
- In the movie Signs, the aliens are defeated after the humans learn of their allergy to water. However, it is unusual that beings allergic to water would invade a planet that has 70% of its body covered by oceans. Also, an advanced alien species capable of intergalactic travel would likely realize their entire invasion plan could be thwarted by a simple thunderstorm.
- Akira Toriyama's famous manga/anime series Dragon Ball, and its sequel Dragonball Z, contain several plot holes, most having to do with the fact that Toriyama continued the series, at the pressure of fans, after he intended to finish it, and others having to do with Toriyama admittedly forgetting previous established facts. An example of such would be the fact that, later on in the series, the public has no knowledge of previously widely known, and heavily publicized, events and special abilities that happened earlier within the storyline.
- "Miniryu no Densetsu" (ミニリュウのでんせつ, Miniryū no Densetsu?, lit. "The Legend of Dratini") was the second episode of Pokémon to be banned by 4Kids Entertainment; this was the 35th episode of the original Japanese series. The removal of this episode leads to multiple plot inconsistencies, as Ash captured 30 Tauros in this episode. The Tauros appear in later episodes, even being used in Pokémon Tournaments by Ash; only one episode very briefly mentions where they came from. Another plot hole caused by 4Kids in Pokémon was in episode 5, "Showdown in Pewter City". In this episode, Flint tells Ash that Brock's mom has passed away. However, in subsequent episodes, she shows up, creating a plot hole, where as in the original she merely left.
- Another example of inconsistencies in the plot was created by 4Kids' edits of One Piece. 4Kids removed the Little Garden arc, which was originally when the Straw Hat Pirates had first encountered Mr. 3, who was sent by Crocodile to deal with them. However, in the dub, during a meeting with Crocodile, he mentions that he had sent him to deal with the Straw Hat Pirates and Vivi when they left Roguetown, but not only did Baroque Works not know about them at that point, but they had also not met Vivi yet. As well, if 4Kids had continued dubbing, other inconsistencies would be created due to the removal of the Little Garden (Oimo and Karsee would have no reason to assist Usopp during the raid on Enies Lobby, since the Straw Hat Pirates would not have met Dorry and Broggy, the captains of Oimo and Karsee) and Laboon (Brook was a former crewmate of the whale that the Straw Hat Pirates met at the start of the Grand Line, so if they didn't meet Laboon, Brook's backstory would not have the effect that it did on the crew) arcs, which were skipped over for unknown reasons.
- In Superman II, after returning to his Fortress of Solitude, a powerless Superman finds a glowing crystal. The scene then shifts to General Zod attacking the Daily Planet, where Superman flies in, with no explanation as to how his powers were returned, and begins to battle. This was, however, fixed in the Richard Donner Cut.
- In Orson Welles' Citizen Kane, a group of reporters is trying to discover the meaning of Kane's dying words: "Rosebud." However, Kane died alone. When Welles was informed of this, he reportedly stared for a long time before saying, "Don't you ever tell anyone of this."[citation needed]
- Howard Hawks' The Big Sleep, a Film Noir classic known for its overly convoluted plot, is noted for a major plot hole that has baffled both audiences and the makers and even the writer of the source novel, Raymond Chandler. In the film, a chauffeur is found dead in his limousine which is fished out of the docks. In a later scene, a character admits to knocking the driver unconscious; this does not explain how the driver and limousine wound up in the ocean. This inconsistency of plot was present in the source novel as well; when he was asked who killed the driver, Chandler's reply was, "Damn! I don't know either."
- Powell and Pressburger's The Red Shoes features a deliberate plot hole which was pointed out in the script stages by Emeric Pressburger, but retained for overall effect. In the final scene, Vicky Page, the protagonist who stars in a ballet for the Red Shoes suddenly runs out of the theatre and onto the railway tracks near the theatre, killing herself. However the ballet had not started yet and her character within the ballet only acquires her shoes during the beginning of the performance. There was no logical reason for Vicky to wear the red shoes before the performance begins.
- Although the ending in the 2005 film of War of the Worlds is based on the ending in the 1898-written book, it is hard to believe that aliens with "intelligences greater than our own" would have spent so much time, energy and resources into studying and invading a planet which is inhospitable for them. A simple biology class on bacterias, viruses and micro-organisms would have thwarted the plan. But given how this race had likely conquered disease eons ago, it's possible that as a culture, knowledge on long extinct harmful microbes were not considered practical knowledge.
For the 2006 movie, see Miami Vice (film). ...
For the 1980s TV series, see Miami Vice. ...
Miami-Dade County (formerly known as Dade County and many times referred to as simply Miami) is a county located in the southeastern part of the state of Florida. ...
James Sonny Crockett is a fictional rough-edged undercover police detective in the action drama Miami Vice. ...
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The University of Florida (Florida, UFL, or UF) is a public land-grant, research university located in Gainesville, Florida. ...
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Terminator 2: Judgment Day (commonly abbreviated T2) is a 1991 movie directed by James Cameron and starring Arnold Schwarzenegger, Linda Hamilton, and Robert Patrick. ...
This article is about the first film in the series. ...
Look up terminator in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
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This article or section does not adequately cite its references or sources. ...
Time travel is a concept that has long fascinated humanity—whether it is Merlin experiencing time backwards, or religious traditions like Mohammeds trip to Jerusalem and ascent to heaven, returning before a glass knocked over had spilt its contents. ...
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Steven Andrew Soderbergh (born January 14, 1963 in Atlanta, Georgia) is an American film producer, screenwriter, cinematographer, editor, and Oscar-winning director. ...
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A sequential look at United Flight 175 crashing into the south tower of the World Trade Center The September 11, 2001 attacks (often referred to as 9/11âpronounced nine eleven or nine one one) consisted of a series of coordinated terrorist[1] suicide attacks upon the United States, predominantly...
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Son Goku Dragon Ball (ãã©ã´ã³ãã¼ã«) is a Japanese manga by Akira Toriyama serialized in the weekly anthology magazine, Weekly Shonen Jump, from 1984 to 1995 and originally collected into 42 individual books called Tankôbon. ...
Dragon Ball Z logo (English manga). ...
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Ash Ketchum, known as Satoshi ) in Japan, is the protagonist of the anime Pokémon. ...
Tauros , Kentauros) are one of the 386 fictional species of Pokémon creatures from the multi-billion-dollar[1] Pokémon media franchiseâa collection of video games, anime, manga, books, trading cards, and other media created by Satoshi Tajiri. ...
Serialized in Weekly Shonen Jump Shonen Jump Original run August 4, 1996 â (ongoing) Volumes 47 volumes with 479 chapters TV anime Director Konosuke Uda Munehisa Sakai Studio Toei Animation Network Fuji TV GMA 7 Original run October 20, 1999 â (ongoing) Episodes Japanese: 332 of 334 (current) English: 112 of 113...
Usopp ) is a fictional character from the anime and manga One Piece. ...
The Straw Hat Pirates ), sometimes referred to as the Luffy Pirates ) or the Straw Hat Crew ), are the main focus and protagonists of the anime and manga series One Piece, by Eiichiro Oda. ...
The Straw Hat Pirates ), sometimes referred to as the Luffy Pirates ) or the Straw Hat Crew ), are the main focus and protagonists of the anime and manga series One Piece, by Eiichiro Oda. ...
Superman II is the 1980 sequel to the 1978 superhero film Superman. ...
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Citizen Kane is a 1941 mystery/drama film released by RKO Pictures and directed by Orson Welles, his first feature film. ...
Howard Winchester Hawks (May 30, 1896 â December 26, 1977) was an American film director, producer and writer of the classic Hollywood era. ...
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For other persons named Raymond Chandler, see Raymond Chandler (disambiguation). ...
Powell and Pressburger were a British film-making partnership of Michael Powell and Emeric Pressburger, also known as The Archers. ...
Helpmann, Shearer and Massine in The Red Shoes. ...
Emeric Pressburger in Paris. ...
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Examples of plot holes used for comic effect - In The Emperor's New Groove, Yzma and Kronk are struck by lightning and fall to the bottom of a chasm. A matter of moments later, they appear waiting for the protagonists inside a palace. When asked how they accomplished this feat, they openly acknowledge that it makes no sense. The story then proceeds unabated.
- In Tiny Toon Adventures: How I Spent My Vacation, a plot hole (portrayed as a physical hole) is used to transport Babs, Buster and Byron back to Acme University. Babs makes the comment "A plot hole. I wondered how the hack writers would get out of this one."
- Another term for a plot hole came up in The Simpsons episode "Treehouse of Horror X" in the "Desperately Xeeking Xena" short. Professor Frink was asking Lucy Lawless about some inconsistencies in episode plots of Xena: Warrior Princess, to which she replies each time, "A wizard did it." From then on, people have used "A wizard did it!" to explain plot holes. In another Simpsons episode, "Pygmoelian", Moe says, "When the set fell on my head, why did I go back to my old face? Why didn't I grow some third face? It don't make no s..." and then the show ends. This is a reference to how earlier in the episode, Homer and Moe exposed the plot of the soap opera, It Never Ends, and the woman cut him off at one point that she designated with "Cut him off... nnnnnnow." In another episode, “Burns, Baby Burns,” Journey’s “Any Way You Want It” starts playing at the end. Marge demands to know where it's coming from. However, Homer tells her that "It's a party! It doesn't have to make sense!" As if to prove his point, a flower necklace drapes itself over his shoulders and an unseen character hands him a piña colada. He then cheers.
- As an example of the above, in 8-Bit Theater, there is a character called Sarda (the self-proclaimed "The Wizard That Did It") who is an omnipotent sage who frequently interferes with others' lives for his own amusement (once accidentally doing it to himself) or making major changes for trivial reasons like erasing several months of history so he wouldn't have to wait to eat dinner.
- A number of cliché plot devices, including several plot holes, are used in the Stargate SG-1 episode 200. One of the inconsistencies featured is how the SG-1 team manage to escape from being chased by the Replicators and trapped from the Stargate by an army of Jaffa, with only seconds before they will be trapped on the planet forever. The scene cuts to the team walking down the ramp from the gate back at base with Cameron commenting on how difficult that was.
- Plot Holes are a running gag in the webcomic Bob and George. Typically at the end or changing point of a storyline, two characters not involved talk about the plot holes. They comment on how these impossible situations can be resolved. This is immediately followed by a large noise, which one character comments that it's the sound of the plot holes being forced shut.
- In the Pokémon episode "The Crystal Onix", Team Rocket gets caught in a trap they set for Ash and friends. They somehow get out, and Misty asks, "How did you escape?" and James answers with "That's a secret you'll never know!" Jessie remarks that, "The writers can't even figure it out!" In another episode, "Hypno's Naptime", Team Rocket uses a rather weak plan to try to get Pikachu, but later in the episode, they come up with a stronger one, and James asks, "I don't get it, why didn't we do this from the beginning?" then Jessie says, "We had to fill a half-hour!" These are also examples of breaking the fourth wall.
- In an episode of Futurama entitled "The Day The Earth Stood Stupid", Fry tricks the evil giant brain by writing a story "full of plot holes and spelling errors" that the brain thinks is real. He ends up saving the day when, as in Fry's story, the brain decides to leave Earth "for no raisin".
- In the anime Excel Saga, conspicuous plot holes are constantly used as a recurring gag in the series; in fact, the character entitled "The Great Will of the Macrocosm" is personally responsible for resetting the show's timeline whenever some irreversible catastrophe (such as the death of a major character) occurs.
- In the TV series Invader Zim episode "The Most Horrible Xmas Ever" the main character Zim explains away a hole in the story line in which he has a new sidekick known as Minimoose. He states "oh, that's my sidekick, Minimoose. Yep, been here the whole time." The episode was originally to have featured a series of scenes from previous episodes with Minimoose (deliberately) badly edited into them. The hole happened as a result of Nickelodeon canceling the show, resulting in only select episodes being produced. The episode entitled "Nubs of Doom" would have explained Minimoose. Another episode features Dib and Gaz attempting to escape from a high-rise building built on a jagged coastline with intense security precautions. The scene changes to show them wearing beaver disguises and driving a beaten-down old car.
- The popular online game Kingdom of Loathing references a plot hole as a combat weapon.
- In the video game The Misadventures of Tron Bonne there is a scene near the end of the game where the main characters are fighting a battle deep underground. After the battle the ceiling begins to cave in and their escape seems impossible. In the next scene they are already home. Teisel comments that their escape was very close, and he couldn't quite remember how they escaped. Tron replies: "I guess miracles do happen."
- Plot holes were the subject of a Real Life storyline: in it, they took the form of small extra-dimensional portals and were created as the result of a storyline written 5 years prior (in which the characters traveled 5 years in the future): since the future described in the time-travel storyline didn't match up with the "present" the plot holes were created. Later, when the plot hole was explained, it disappeared (the explanation being that, as was explained in the time-travel storyline, the "time machine" in question actually sends the users to a parallel universe in the future, rather than our universe's future).
The Emperors New Groove is an Academy Award-nominated animated feature film produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation and released by Walt Disney Pictures through Buena Vista Distribution on December 15, 2000. ...
Simpsons redirects here. ...
Treehouse of Horror X is the fourth episode of The Simpsons eleventh season, as well as the tenth Halloween episode. ...
Lucy Lawless (born Lucille Frances Ryan on March 29, 1968 in Mount Albert) is a New Zealand actress and singer best known for her role as Xena on the television series Xena: Warrior Princess from 1995 to 2001. ...
Xena. ...
Pygmoelian is the sixteenth episode of the eleventh season of The Simpsons. ...
Burns, Baby Burns is the fourth episode of The Simpsons eighth season, first aired by the Fox network on November 17, 1996. ...
Look up journey in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Any Way You Want It is a popular song sung by Journey released on the album Departure, and as a single in 1979. ...
8-Bit Theater (also spelled 8-Bit Theatre) is a popular[1] sprite comic created and launched by Brian Clevinger in March 2001 that won the Web Cartoonists Choice Awards for best fantasy comic in 2002[2]. In its feature on gaming webcomics, 1UP.com described 8-Bit Theater...
Stargate SG-1 (often abbreviated as SG-1) is a science fiction television series, part of the Stargate franchise. ...
Episode chronology 200 is an episode from Season 10 of the science fiction television series Stargate SG-1. ...
Bob and George was a sprite-based webcomic which parodies the fictional universe of Mega Man. ...
Original run Original Series: April 1, 1997 â November 14, 2002 September 8, 1998 â October 25, 2003 Advanced Generation: November 21, 2002 â September 14, 2006 November 1, 2003 â March 3, 2007 Diamond & Pearl: September 28, 2006 â June 4, 2007 â Episodes 509 (currently aired) (Episode list) Original Series: 276 Advanced Generation: 192...
The fourth wall is the imaginary invisible wall at the front of the stage in a proscenium theater, through which the audience sees the action in the world of the play. ...
This article is about the television series. ...
The Day the Earth Stood Stupid is the seventh episode in season three of Futurama. ...
Serialized in Young King OURs Original run April 1997 â Present Volumes 18 (Ongoing) TV anime Director Shinichi Watanabe Studio J.C. Staff Licensor ADV Films Network TV Tokyo Original run 7 October 1999 â 30 March 2000 Episodes 26 (total) Excel Saga ) is a comedy manga series by Koushi Rikudou,[1...
Invader Zim is an award-winning American animated television series created by alternative cartoonist Jhonen Vasquez that was aired on and produced by Nickelodeon. ...
This article is about the TV channel. ...
For other uses, see Beaver (disambiguation). ...
Kingdom of Loathing (KoL) is a humorous, browser-based, multiplayer role playing game designed and operated by Asymmetric Publications, including creator Zack Jick Johnson and writer Josh Mr. ...
The Misadventures of Tron Bonne, known in Japan as Tron ni Kobun , lit. ...
Real Life is a webcomic drawn and authored by Greg Dean. ...
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