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.
Not exact matches
As the
plot turns brutal, the psychopaths
turn greedy — especially Ansel's wife and partner - in - crime, Sharla (Ms. Gershon, shedding more than just her underwear and baring all)-- lying, ruthlessly cheating each other and facing the ultimate consequences, in a curdled, rampaging splatterfest finale that sprays blood all over the walls and
leaves almost the entire cast on the floor with their guts hanging out.
Atomic Blonde's
plot has multiple timelines, double crossing, and general twists and
turns left some audiences confused.
Director: Colm McCarthy Cast: Sennia Nanua, Gemma Arterton, Paddy Considine, Glenn Close
Plot: The world is
left savaged by a fungal disease,
turning humanity into flesh craving zombies.
There is a whole world involving the supporting players Lucy, Ida, Wally and Bert who all play significant roles in the film that we haven't gotten to and we've
left out pretty much all the major
plot turns and twists of the story.
There's a moment when one - third of the plan comes together through the trio's indirect and clumsy influence that
turns the entire
plot on its head,
leaving them scrambling to clear themselves of involvement in something they didn't do.
The meta - level layering and critical dialogue about horror movies in this sequence (characters with little to no development, predictable scare setups, and shocking
turns that don't make much sense) are calls for variation that Kevin Williamson's script
leave largely unanswered once the
plot proper kicks into gear.
Compound that with a fairly ridiculous
plot and a final shot that somehow
leaves the impression that an adequate ending was never quite able to be conveyed, and Simon's film
turns from a sure crowd - pleaser to one that can irk if you aren't in the mindset to accept it as just a piece of fluff entertainment and nothing more.
The
plot centers on a good guy who's also a bad guy — special forces op
turned mercenary Wade Wilson, played by Ryan Reynolds, who undergoes a rogue medical procedure that gives him superfast healing powers but also
leaves him looking — in one of the kinder phrases best - bud T.J. Miller offers — «like a testicle with teeth.»
The outcomes and
left turns his screenplays take are cleverly contrived and smartly
plotted, but they are never easy to predict.
But two games in, it's just gotten irksome, especially as this game halfheartedly makes some overtures toward the origin of this whole zombie mess before taking a hard
left turn into a completely ridiculous, unearned
plot twist, and then just... ending.
Truth be told, Joe was not much use to himself or anyone else on the outside, but now that he has time to reflect, he
turns over a new
leaf, pouring the booze down the drain, working out to the suggestive fitness programs on television, and
plotting his escape, one scrape at a time.
Having
turned the volume up to 11, however, that
leaves more than 100 minutes to be filled with something, and so Robert Rodriguez and company have elected to do more of the same, stringing together bite - sized exploitation stand - bys — beheadings, gushing blood, machine - gun brassieres, beheadings, martial arts performed by clones, a ticking bomb sewn to a human heart, beheadings, angry prostitutes, an undercover beauty queen, beheadings, Mexican jokes, Charlie Sheen as the U.S. President, Mel Gibson as a brilliant tech villain who claims he can see the future, and more beheadings — and pretending that the
plot matters one iota.
The shaggy
plot is wafer thin at best, relying too heavily on familiarity (a character going wild after taking too many drugs has now become an unavoidable staple of the contemporary comedy) and as charming as Madden is, we're never quite sold on him being the impetus for such a major
left -
turn.
The film's
plot takes more than one
left turn, and its beautiful cinematography and haunting score make it worth a rewatch or four.
What we weren't expecting is a Hitchcockian and Chabrolian thriller of guilt and suspense about a trio of eco-terrorists
plotting to blow up a dam, but it's a
left -
turn that Reichardt makes with aplomb.
Some convenient
turns of the
plot later, Violet (now nicknamed «Jersey») finds herself behind and on top of the counter at the insanely popular saloon under the watchful eye of tough - as - nails owner Lil (Maria Bello, who must now be kicking herself for
leaving ER)-- and the amorous watch of Kevin O'Donnell (Adam Garcia), a fry cook desperately smitten with Violet.
Now, it's summer time, and people's attention starts
turning to more enjoyable subjects,
leaving the ASD ample opportunity to
plot their fall shenanigans.
The characters are engaging and the strange goings - on will
leave readers rapidly
turning pages in search of fresh clues... [Coben] writes with wit and a shrewd sense of
plotting.»
Portraying an ultimate duel of minds and packing visceral emotion and pure page -
turning power, Derailed will
leave readers breathless with every twist of its heart - pounding, suspenseful
plot.
-- Specialized training for aspiring romance novelists: How to create romance fiction novels with compelling characters, page -
turning plots, exotic settings and a touchingly satisfying «happily ever after» that will
leave your readers enchanted and begging for more.
What seems like a straight forward
plot is filled with twists and
turns and surprises that
left my mouth agape.
But any further speculation in this vein would risk giving away one of the novel's many
plot turns, and so we
leave the rest of the mapping to you!
- Kirkus «With spunky characters full of grace and grit... The swift pacing and emotional twists and
turns of the
plot will
leave readers guessing up to the final pages.
The
plot has many twists and
turns leaving the reader wondering.
Geralt therefore goes from place to place with the incredibly overused
plot device of having to do jobs for numerous people in return for information about Ciri's whereabouts, which in
turn has the nasty side - effect of making the player feel like a
leaf simply being blown about by the whims of whomever you meet.
A thermosalinogtraph is in a large scale piping system its temp sensors are spaced far apart and is often not monitored well on various different boats as it is
turned on and
left to run in the background with often only a digital read out instead of a relevant comparative
plot readily displayed