Kyrian007 said:
Wow, some people can't suspend disbelief enough to let something like that go? Does that person understand the concept of fiction? You know... isn't actually real.
Well, uh, yes, that is indeed the definition of fiction. And, uh, I'm pretty sure you're one of the few people who would let something like that go.
I mean, we're not complaining that it's unreal. We all love ourselves some good fantasy and superheroes and other impossible shit. We're complaining that the author insists on fucking their own rules in the butt: that's what plot holes are.
Take, say, Harry Potter. Now, I can't think of any plot holes off the top of my head, since I haven't seen/read them in a long time, but I'll make up an example: in Prisoner of Azkaban, the Whomping Willow plays a fairly large part in the plot, especially in the climax. Specifically, the second and third books
emphasize the fact that the Whomping Willow, well, whomps everything that it encounters.
So we have the fact that the Whomping Willow smashes things. It is an established, in-universe, fact. Then, in the climax, when Ron is being dragged through the passage below the Whomping Willow and Harry and Hermione give chase, the Whomping Willow
does nothing to stop them.
Now, disclaimer, this is
false (the Willow actually does cause a problem for Harry and Hermione). But what I'm asking is,
what if it was like that? The Willow's tendency to whomp things was important throughout the second and third books, and all of a sudden, during the climax, it just doesn't move, just for the convenience of our heroes? That is to say, it goes against
something that the author made a huge deal about previously.
That's the kind of plot hole that really gets on the nerves, especially if it goes unresolved. If maybe the author said "oh there's a spell that can freeze the Willow", that's fine...although
why the fuck wasn't this spell used in the last novel?. If, in the gravity example above, "oh, biological substances weigh equally as much as they do on Earth", that's...a bit of an asspull, but it's not a plot hole. The issue I have is when these are completely unexplained, when big plot points are created or averted for no reason whatsoever. It's like me making a big deal about having to walk to school everyday, lamenting my existence, except I have a car. But screw that! The fact that I have to endure the hardship of walking to school is much too important, so we'll just forget the other, equally true fact that I have a car.
Oh, I want to show Superman's capacity for self-sacrifice: have him jump in front of a gun to take a bullet meant for his love interest or something. Then show a very tearful hospital scene and we will have all this sweet drama and stuff. Feels all around. Except, wait a minute, Superman is invincible against bullets. Why the hell is he not now? Bonus plot-hole points if, like the above poster's example, Superman was actually shown deflecting bullets with his abs just before getting wounded by one.