Sentences with phrase «plot holes so»

Although filmed in the Netherlands by a Finnish director, there are so many watches and clocks showcased, you'd swear this was made in Switzerland, especially with plot holes so prevalent that the script might rightfully have been written on Swiss cheese.
It all ties together with a series of twists and turns that leave plot holes so big that an eighteen wheeler could be driven through them.
There's also at least one plot hole so big that you'll probably come out of the cinema saying: «Hang on a minute, why didn't they try..?»

Not exact matches

the Substitution was a work from Day one... He was never expected in Saudi Arabia... this is him blowing smoke up the internet's ass so no one will claim it's a loose end or plot hole
I liked that Rey was a nobody, but this is a plot hole to me because it doesn't explain how she was so easily able to do all of this stuff the Skywalkers can do.
We get on WWE about plot holes all the time, and even when they attempt to close one, we crap on them, so it's kinda damned if you do, damned if you don't.
Specifically, the horizon is obtained by plotting null geodesic lines on the so - called Schwarzschild metric, the solution to the field equations posed by Einstein for describing the gravitation field of a black hole.
As gas falls toward the central black hole, before it disappears from the universe forever, it becomes so hot thatit emits X rays, which astronomers can collect and plot on a spectrum.
For example, you find out that Butler's character was some kind of operative agent, but this seems to be putty in a plot hole to explain why he is so good at what he is doing.
And though less common than most Bay pictures, the plot holes still crop up, topped by one scene where the villain inexplicably leaves the safety of his office so he can have a final showdown with the hero.
There may be logic flaws and plot holes, but it all flows so perfectly and entertains so well, that you don't really notice until later viewings.
Solidly told by German writer - director Fatih Akin («Head - On», «The Cut»), it displays decent if unexceptional TV - movie chops until a pile - up of plot holes and wild story twists take it somewhere so crude that you'd be forgiven for finding it offensive.
A disastrous film that wants to be more complex than it should be, coming up with more and more unnecessary details at the expense of simple concision, and so the obvious, predictable narrative gets lost amid contrivances, implausible scenes and plot holes the size of Africa.
Nerve is exciting, topical and potentially prescient, but it scores no points for character development, and the plot holes are so big that you could, well, drive a speeding motorcycle through them.
The whole operation doubles as a lesson in (and commentary of) contemporary storytelling, complete with a suspicious F.B.I. investigator (Hilary Swank) so devoted to poking holes in the plot that she takes up residence in Boone County, hoping one of these amateurs will eventually slip and show their cards.
The plot is filled with holes and seems like he had great ideas that didn't really link so he just put bits and pieces together to try and make it flow but it was truly just all over the place and unequivocally bland.
Not that anyone could ever really buy what screenwriters Peter Dowling and Billy Ray (Suspect Zero, Shattered Glass) offer up as the reason behind the young girl's supposed disappearance, as there are so many holes in the plot that it is a wonder the plane didn't depressurize.
It may not be very clever, and the plot may be full of holes, but this sequel's clammy atmosphere is so unnerving that it manages to keep us squirming in our seats.
There are some clever scenes, showing how Gardner tries to accustom himself to Earth, learning about its customs with wide - eyed innocence, but there are so many holes in the plot that what starts promising turns into an awkwardly scripted resolution.
Sure, it offers up another massive plot hole in how the follower is even in the city, but the sequence is so effective that I was forced to forgive it.
The other plot holes are so numerous I have no room to elaborate but I continue to be bewildered at how many people were so dazzled by the special effects and novelty of a new Jurassic Park film that they not only dismissed the absurdity happening in front of them but praised a film that pretty much spits on its source material.
Often dubbed — not without cause — the best superhero film yet, this is so brimming with great characters — oh, and Maggie Gyllenhaal's boring Rachel Dawes — that you can almost overlook the plot holes (like why exactly does Gordon fake his own death?).
And the plot, such as it is, is so full of holes it makes the sloppily constructed, acted and filmed Last Crusade look like a Kubrick film.
There might be plot holes, but Trek VI is so great on so many levels that maybe it really is the best Trek movie!
A highly entertaining remake of The Life of Jimmy Dolan (1933), that is made competently enough and solidly acted so that one might forgive all the plot holes, its predictability, unconvincing romance and outdated cornball antics.
Plagued with pacing issues and plot holes, Dawn of Justice feels as if so much was left on the cutting room floor.
Horribly written with so many plot holes you could drive a truck through them, «The Host» is the latest work of «Twilight» author Stephenie Meyer.
Selznick has a lot of narrative to cram in, and he does so awkwardly, leaving more than a few plot holes gaping wide open, narrative strings frustratingly untied.
A great deal of this thriller from actor / writer / director Joel Edgerton works, sometimes impeccably so, but a combination of plot holes and a slight aimlessness do weigh it down.
The plot isn't so convoluted (though not without a few plot holes) that it's hard to follow, but the pleasure of this momentous occasion won't be felt as strongly if this is someone's first Marvel movie.
I found it best not to overthink the story line, as I began to envision a number of plot holes, but because the film is so involving, the viewer isn't given the opportunity to second guess any of the elements involved here.
Any plot holes, a sagging middle, all the stuff that's so hard for the author to spot in his own work.
As an author, I know how easy it is to miss plot holes or character inconsistencies or those pesky typos and punctuation errors when you've worked closely with a manuscript for months, reading it over and over so many times you can't even see it anymore.
When an author submits their first draft for editing, the publisher is looking not so much for line edits but rather big picture editing needs: plot holes, inconsistencies, unnecessary diversions, etc..
She has both the science background and a eye for detail, so she acts as a litmus test for plot holes, scientific plausibility, and consistency.
I don't know who penned the storyline, but they clearly failed to think even the most basic things through, resulting in a plot so full of holes it could be used as a sieve.
The problem is that if you want it to be judged as a story it should be rated even worse than as a game, because heavy rain had so many plot - holes and continuity - errors that every movie in that style would have been torn apart by reviewers.
The time - traveling story is both awesome and ridiculous, but the art, sound and battle system is so much fun that I'll happily ignore any plot holes the game may have.
From Batman somehow being a time traveler in Batman: Arkham Origins to Jack Marston becoming the greatest fighter of his generation in Red Dead Redemption, there are even game changing plot holes in the triple A games we get so excited for each year.
Silent Hill is so numbingly scary that you forgive Konami spine - crushingly stupid plot holes.
Also I'm not so keen on having to watch Youtube videos to get the full story and even then have plot holes, sorry I meant segments you interpenetrate or fill in yourself.
Silent Hill 2 is completely separate to 1, so there is no attempt at continuity, no Zelda forced timelines, no PLOT - HOLE APLENTY Resident Evil connections between games.
Monsters are not only few and far between but they are, lots of plot holes, so many eye - rolling moments one after another.
just so its clear, the intention was to better understand the legal properties of DAOs not to critique the plot holes in the narrative, but point taken.
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