Plot devices that ruin any movie

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TheKillerCliche

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Jun 28, 2010
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MasterMongoose0 said:
The sentence, "This changes everything." Or, "It's only just begun."

Either of those two lines can instantly kill a movie, show, game, anything to me.
So I take it you don't like any Mortal Kombat, anything?
 

emeraldrafael

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When you get the standard war movie and you can point and pick who will live and who will die and in what way. Yes, its war, and yes, people die, but could you have it mixed up, or at least have most of your company live?
 

Terramax

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monstersquad said:
Terramax said:
Jumping-out-of-the-closet scares.

I watched The Wolfman the other day and their constant, dumb attempts to make you jump completely ruined that movie.
You want to see a movie that does that to a disgusting extreme? Watch The Haunting of Conneticut(or don't watch it if you respect yourself). I swear that entire movie is just one big jump-scare shot.
Cool, thanks, I'll spare myself the time.
 

AyaReiko

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Starring Nicolas Cage
or
Starring Will Ferrell

Why do these two still star in movies escapes me.
 
Apr 29, 2010
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Not sure if this counts, but it feels like the bad guy is terrible at hiring henchmen that can actually aim. Instead we get cannon fodder who waste thousands of bullets hitting nothing but air, yet the good guy kills everyone with a machine gun that seems to have a bottomless supply of bullets. For example, the lobby scene in the Matrix. So many SWAT, and none of them could aim worth shit.
 

Unia

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ultimateownage said:
Unia said:
Time travel. Okay, it doesn't ruin a movie but it does guarantee plot holes that are hard to plug even in the context of the movie. Take Terminator, for instance. Without the whole time travel ordeal John Connor wouldn't even exist!
Then there's the paradox of time travel: if you go back in time to fix something and succeed, you no longer have a motivation for going back in time and thus never did.
Ah, I'm just being too serious with this one.
Well with the terminator I think the idea was that he was sent back to stop Arnold, who was also sent back, from killing his mum. So that one didn't really have any plot holes. He didn't go back to fix it, he went back to stop it from being broken.

O.T. Any movie with two or more large or common cliché's ruin it for me. Just look at most rom coms. It also ruined Madagascar 2.
Remember who is John Connor's daddy?
 

ultimateownage

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Unia said:
ultimateownage said:
Unia said:
Time travel. Okay, it doesn't ruin a movie but it does guarantee plot holes that are hard to plug even in the context of the movie. Take Terminator, for instance. Without the whole time travel ordeal John Connor wouldn't even exist!
Then there's the paradox of time travel: if you go back in time to fix something and succeed, you no longer have a motivation for going back in time and thus never did.
Ah, I'm just being too serious with this one.
Well with the terminator I think the idea was that he was sent back to stop Arnold, who was also sent back, from killing his mum. So that one didn't really have any plot holes. He didn't go back to fix it, he went back to stop it from being broken.

O.T. Any movie with two or more large or common cliché's ruin it for me. Just look at most rom coms. It also ruined Madagascar 2.
Remember who is John Connor's daddy?
Yes, and like I just explained he was going to be sent back no matter what, and therefore would have bonked her no matter what. So that still would have happened.
 

Unia

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ultimateownage said:
Unia said:
ultimateownage said:
Unia said:
Time travel. Okay, it doesn't ruin a movie but it does guarantee plot holes that are hard to plug even in the context of the movie. Take Terminator, for instance. Without the whole time travel ordeal John Connor wouldn't even exist!
Then there's the paradox of time travel: if you go back in time to fix something and succeed, you no longer have a motivation for going back in time and thus never did.
Ah, I'm just being too serious with this one.
Well with the terminator I think the idea was that he was sent back to stop Arnold, who was also sent back, from killing his mum. So that one didn't really have any plot holes. He didn't go back to fix it, he went back to stop it from being broken.

O.T. Any movie with two or more large or common cliché's ruin it for me. Just look at most rom coms. It also ruined Madagascar 2.
Remember who is John Connor's daddy?
Yes, and like I just explained he was going to be sent back no matter what, and therefore would have bonked her no matter what. So that still would have happened.
If John Connor was never born why on earth would that guy have been sent to save Sarah? Won't argue about this paradox further, I see a loop coming.
 

The DSM

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And it was all a dream!

No movie, no!

You cant pull that kind of bullshit with me, you cant just dismiss events like that!
 

Archer147

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Hubilub said:
Archer147 said:
Hubilub said:
Starring Ben Affleck

Uuuugh...

Seriously, I've yet to see a film where I haven't gotten annoyed the instant his face shows
dogma, mallrats, chasing amy...

religion. i know, i know, but i loved "knowing"... up until the end
Besides Clerks and maybe Clerks 2, I don't care much for Kevin Smith's films.
ok... and your thoughts on the actual topic are...?
 

T8B95

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Jul 8, 2010
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Deux ex machina. This takes the cake. The term is Latin for "God from the machine". It means a problem in a story being solved without any contribution on the part of the protagonist or important supporting actors. Here's an example: your hero has fought through the entire movie, killing hundreds of bad guys, just to fight the final boss. Suddenly the boss disarms our hero. He's out of tricks, out of time, and out of luck. Suddenly Al Pacino appears and Scarface's the baddie with a massive machine gun.

And unnecessary romance subplots (Pearl Harbour, I'm looking right at you).
 

T8B95

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superbatranger said:
Not sure if this counts, but it feels like the bad guy is terrible at hiring henchmen that can actually aim. Instead we get cannon fodder who waste thousands of bullets hitting nothing but air, yet the good guy kills everyone with a machine gun that seems to have a bottomless supply of bullets. For example, the lobby scene in the Matrix. So many SWAT, and none of them could aim worth shit.
No, no, this one has a legitimate reason. It's the infamous "Marksmanship Test". If you pass the test you get to be a good guy, and if you fail then you're one of hundreds of the cannon fodder enemies. Voila!
 

Toaster Hunter

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Jun 10, 2009
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Hollywood tactics. You have access to the most advanced military technology available, far exceeding our own, yet your only strategy is to run towards the enemy in human waves that have been outdated since the Civil War (Starship Troopers, the Star Wars prequels are the worst offenders).

Also, please try aiming, most firearms have a sight on the top of it. It works best at eye level so shooting from the hip is a waste of time and ammo. Thanks
 

Jaythulhu

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It was the trees!!!!!! /disgust

"Unobtanium". How many f'ing movies do they have to use this bloody macguffin in?

Any movie that includes any of the following words/terms on the poster "Zany", "Mischief", "Thrill-ride", "Ben Stiller", "Best this year", "Romantic", "HorsefaceSarah Jessica Parker", "Comedy" or "Instant Classic".

Hmmm..... /rant
 

TheLaofKazi

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Almost anything involving some devious foreign nation plotting to destroy the world or something like that. I mean, sure it's a perfectly fine plot device if done well, but it's been overused so many times. Especially with video games. How many war games about how Russia wants to kill everybody are there?
 

Char-Nobyl

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Kermi said:
I'm trying to think up bad movies I've seen lately and all I can think of are M. Night Shyamalan movies, so I'm going to say "plot twists you see coming from about the first ten minutes in but dismiss because they're too stupid, only then it turns out you were right all along and you realise you just wasted 90 minutes of your life". For references, see The Village and The Happening.
I dunno. I more perceived those twists as "so unbelievably stupid that no one without a railroad spike through their brains would see them coming."

Imagine if 'The Hurt Locker' had ended with the deathwish EOD soldier discovering that he is really an alien squid creature. Yes, it's a twist...no, it's not a GOOD twist, because it is neither logical, nor does relate in any way to subtle hints dropped throughout the movie. There wasn't a scene where he mentions being good at multitasking because of his additional arms, or accidentally spews ink onto the Humvee seat.

Kermi said:
Sixth Sense and Unbreakable get a pass because most people didn't see Sixth Sense coming and Unbreakable was enjoyable to watch with a genuinely interesting idea behind it.
Sixth Sense's twist made sense, and it was mind-blowing. That's why it worked. And it certainly helped that it had good actors behind it.

With Unbreakable, you can't help but feel like the movie itself should have been the first half of the actual movie. It could have easily gone into Bruce Willis trying to use his newfound powers for good, actually TRYING to be the superhero he's discovered that he is. But regardless, it was an excellent movie, and it was a decent twist, even if you can't help but wonder

SPOILER ALERT

how a glass-boned comic book regalia salesman was able to orchestrate mass murder on a semi-regular basis.
 

Sinclair Solutions

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Reqviemus said:
Well, the number one must be
"And it was all a dream!"
This one is actually pretty accurate. I think amnesia and failed military projects make a movie much less appealing to me. Or that stupid "I'm actually a bad guy" twist. It worked in Bioshock and that's it. Every where else, it's a big stack of stupid.
 

Char-Nobyl

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Oh, right, and a lame plot device: murder mysteries that "fool" the audience by cheap-ass means.

Look at Saw. We're practically beaten over the head with every scene where the director is clearly boring into us "THIS IS THE SCENE WHEN (INSERT CHARACTER) IS BEING ESTABLISHED AS THE POTENTIAL KILLER." Not only was it stupid because it made characters who in all likelihood were NOT the killer look like they were, and was done to death so quickly that the audience knew that 9 out of the 10 must be red herrings.

And the "twist" ending? It was the corpse the whole time! Of course! It was...the corpse? Who was also an irrelevant background character at one point? That's like taking a Sherlock Holmes story and saying that the perpetrator the whole time was Unnamed Police Officer #3 at the second murder scene. Except it's even more stupid because that police officer was DEAD.

That leads into another subgenre of stupid plot devices: supposed "masterminds" who function apparently by omniscience. They know all the minor, completely coincidental things that will happen before they happen, all of which will ultimately contribute to the plot. They know when certain pieces of evidence will be found and who will find them, they know who will be at certain places, how they will react, when they will be facing the rising sun, and whether they had Wheaties or Cheerios for breakfast that morning.