Zachary Amaranth said:
MiracleOfSound said:
and thus began the rising of hoboman.
Oh, you mean
OT: eeeehh, I'm bad at noticing plotholes and remembering them, or I just have avoided watching movies with plot holes. The term is often misused and I think people point more to illogic or bad writing when talking about them. Evangelion had barrels of illogicalitie. To name a few: we are never shown how the parts of NERV HQ are located, so all the halls and spaces could exist entirely in their own pocket dimensions. No one ever congratulates Shinji, despite him saving the human race on multiple occasions. In one episode they direct all the electricity of Japan into a single use in a matter of mere hours, how the fuck do they do that? Throughout the series you can clearly see the size of the evas changing. And many more on channel 4.
Evangelion has two huge legitimate plotholes: in one episode they fight against a Leviathan-esque aquatic angel in the sea. The goal of the angels was to get into Terminal Dogma and get into contact with Lilith. The NERV HQ was located far inland and below the ground. How was a giant fish going to get there? The other one is in the episode where they fight the angel which splits into two separate copies of itself. It then lies dormant for six days. Instead of taking the logical route and bombing the shit out of the aliens that stand around doing nothing or sending THE THIRD EVA THEY HAD to beat it, they have the two main characters learn dancing coreography that somehow miraculously is in exact synch with the movements of the copies, despite them having absolutely no idea what they were going to do once they had awakened.
I've seen some people point to Inception in the fact that at the beginning of the movie when DiCaprio and the asian guy played by Ken Watanabe are in limbo, the asian guy looks like a 120-year old while DiCaprio remains young as a plot hole. It's not hard to think that because Watanabe's character fell into limbo as a result of dying in the dream, he no longer could tell he was in a dream when in Limbo, so he perceived his image aging. DiCaprio's character on the other hand went there voluntarily, so he knew he was still in a dream and so didn't age.
I would love to rant about the barrels of illogicalities in Prometheus, but that's a story for another thread.