Saquist
Commodore
I did post sources for plot hole. You just weren't around for it. Anyone could do the research and dare to discover for themselves. That's why I hold my position until someone over turns that research.You didn't post any source material to back up your claims.So until then it's stating an opinion as fact. .
Huh?What must be true for you must be true for everybody else and if not then must be made to be true
That's not my concern though.Not everybody has the same standards.
People don't chose standards for the best reasons so the presence of multiple standards does not in itself justify why I should entertain them all or seriously down play my own standards that I have gone through alot of trouble to learn from other sources.
That's too general. Any discrepancy or lacking can have an effect on the story. The reason it's called a plot hole and not a "story" hole is because the plot OF the story has been affected by the lack of information.No it isn't. It's only a plot hole if it has an effect on the story. That's what is cut n dry.
I don't want to create a film.Then do it and let people enjoy the movie how they want to and let writers write the movie they want to, not how you think they should write. Writing is not an easy thing.
I've already written good scripts. I've done just about every form of artistic expression. And my criticizing their work is par for the course. It's not my problem if you don't like the criticisms being leveled.
Oh that's not true.Nitpicking never accomplishes anything because there is always something that can be nit picked.
Nitpicking (as much as you don't like it.) is the act of striving for perfection or a lack of errors at the most and at the least the making aware of those errors and take away fro the final work.
I definitely nitpick.And that's why it's highly subjective. And of course there is also such a thing as being argumentive for the sake of being argumentive, which is what nitpicking is really all about. People can always make excuses why they're "not" nitpicking, of course, and hide behind them, but in the end it all boils down to one thing:
It's my field to nitpick. And I do it to practically everything because I enjoy finding errors that others ignore. That includes my own.
For me it's about being informed and not being ignorant. Some people prefer the ignorance which is why they say it's bliss.
Then don't let it bother you.As for me, sure, I can see minor errors in some things and can muse about them, but for me unless it is something that will drastically alter the story I'm not going to let it bother me and make all kinds of excuses
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What is plausible to one person is not plausible to another.
But you were trying to make a case on something the facts, and your analogy was in error. Because if Nero could rationalized as irrational without any direction from the film then so could Hal. Your thinking wasn't fair on all points.
Then don't worry about the plot holes. Enjoy the film. I enjoyed Jurassic Park despite the fact that the cliff appears out of no where when the SUV is pushed over by the T-Rex.Movies are supposed to be escapist entertainment, and are always highly subjective. And always will be. The best thing to do is to just lay back and enjoy the movie.
Now, here's the big plothole that could alter the entire story.
If HAL took over the first pod, there was nothing to prevent him from taking over the pod Bowman was in, and shoving him out into space. If that would've happened, the ship would have no astronauts in it and there would've been no Bowman to merge with the monolith and no Starchild.
This assumes there was no manual override or computer lockout on the pods. Perhaps when the pods were outside the ship, the control that HAL had over them was more limited than when they were still in the pod bay. We only have the one data point of a pod being controlled by HAL, and Frank was not aboard the pod when it happened.
Grant you, what you point out is a weakness in the story. The main thrust of the point is that everything is so very automated.
But with so little explicit description of the nature of the technology in the film, and with explanations so ready that are capable of repairing the weakness, it can't really rise to the level of being a hole. The main thrust of the counterpoint is that Dave seems to be directly in control of his pod, making a great many manual adjustments while picking up Frank's body. Perhaps Dave preferred to manually control picking up Frank's body, on instinct, perhaps even driven subconsciously by the concerns he and Frank had recently expressed.
Nice observation, though.
But it's the job of the story teller to properly explain this.
Writers go through a lot of trouble in movies to exemplify events for the final scenes.
In Dark Knight they display the ability of the cell phone for the final use to save the day.
In Star Trek 2009 they display what red matter can do by destroying vulcan.
In Independence Day the danger of a hovering Saucer and it's weapon over the central point in a city is displayed before our heroes face the same danger at the end.
In these cases of major event development it serves the writers goal of suspense. The very same practice is neglected elsewhere when it interferes in the stories resolution. So the fact that HAL could control the pods is treated as incidental. He had control of the pods...now he does not...and a plot hole arises because the negative is unexplained.
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