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Plot Hole (2007) is a short movie created by Below Average Entertainment.

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  • Plot Hole
  • Plot Hole
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  • Plot Hole (2007) is a short movie created by Below Average Entertainment.
  • Plot Holes are portions of a Plot that are missing and leave a break in consistence. For example: let's say that in a movie, everyone in the United States was bombed and immediately died. Now if later in the movie, the hero goes to the United States and it is a bustling utopia of ignorant pricks, gayness, and chronic masturbators, without telling how it got like that (Which actually happened to the United States, unbeknownst to the U.N.), it would be a Plot Hole. Plot holes will destroy us. Plot holes sucks.
  • Plot Holes are those annoying gaps in a story where things happen without a logical reason. When a Plot Hole involves something essential to a story's outcome, it can hurt the believability severely for those who are bothered by it. Hitting a Plot Hole at high speed can damage your Willing Suspension of Disbelief. Even unrealistic, fantastical stories can suffer when plot holes arise, as audiences are willing to suspend disbelief as long as the story makes sense within its own rules and consistency.
  • After the Nostalgia Critic and the reviewers journeyed to the Plot Hole and defeated the Executor as well as his allies, the Nostalgia Critic drove in the Plot Hole and landed in the real world, where he was tested by Ma-Ti and his real life counterpart, Doug Walker. After this Ma-Ti left, thus destabilizing the Plot Hole and since it couldn't be stopped, the critics enlarged it by feeding it more Plot Holes and inconsistencies in media, so that it could become the new universe.
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  • After the Nostalgia Critic and the reviewers journeyed to the Plot Hole and defeated the Executor as well as his allies, the Nostalgia Critic drove in the Plot Hole and landed in the real world, where he was tested by Ma-Ti and his real life counterpart, Doug Walker. He had the choice to leave his role and make a new life for himself, thus unfortunately destroying the world he created, or to remain as the Nostalgia Critic and accept his fate and purpose. In the end, much to Ma-Ti's shock, the Nostalgia Critic chose to remain and apologized for his actions, thus finally satisfying Ma-Ti's resentment and feelings. After this Ma-Ti left, thus destabilizing the Plot Hole and since it couldn't be stopped, the critics enlarged it by feeding it more Plot Holes and inconsistencies in media, so that it could become the new universe. However, to prevent the Plot Hole from destabilizing again, the Nostalgia Critic sacrificed himself by merging with it. Him being unable to grasp the concept of performing such a selfless act, the plot hole forced the Critic into a purgatory that became known as "Demo Reel", though the plot hole's inconsistent nature allowed the Critic to cameo in other reviewers' videos at the same time. After a few months, the Plot Hole decided that the Critic "needs to go back", deconstructing the "Demo Reel" world and placing the Nostalgia Critic back in the Awesomeverse. As of January 2013, Douchey McNitpick stabilizes the Plot Hole.
  • Plot Hole (2007) is a short movie created by Below Average Entertainment.
  • Plot Holes are those annoying gaps in a story where things happen without a logical reason. When a Plot Hole involves something essential to a story's outcome, it can hurt the believability severely for those who are bothered by it. Hitting a Plot Hole at high speed can damage your Willing Suspension of Disbelief. * Characters suddenly having knowledge that was never passed to them, or vice versa; characters not knowing something they knew last week, or something that anyone in their position must know. * Characters acting completely Out of Character. * An event does not logically follow from what has gone before. * Characters ignoring or avoiding obvious solutions to their problems, provided those solutions are obvious to the characters, and not just the viewers. * An event occurring that, given other details present in the work, is not possible. * The author really wants to write a certain scene, even if the scene makes no sense. Rather than toss the scene out, the author goes right ahead and writes it anyway. * The author forgets what was written earlier, and unknowingly creates a scene that goes completely against something that happened earlier. Can happen rather easily with really long stories, or ones that take a long time to write. * In a multi-author Continuity, one writer forgets (or ignores, or rejects) what another wrote. * The scene that would have filled the plot hole was cut due to time constraints or other reasons. * While adapting a story to a new medium, the adaption team made a wrong assumption about a future Plot Point, and added a detail which was later contradicted by the creator of the source material (Compare Overtook the Manga). Another one is removal of the explanation for a plot element without which the Plot element doesn't make sense. * A change is made during the localization of a work without also changing other elements that rely on it. * In comedies, the plot hole may be deliberately induced as the basis for a joke, usually consisting of Lampshade Hanging. Even unrealistic, fantastical stories can suffer when plot holes arise, as audiences are willing to suspend disbelief as long as the story makes sense within its own rules and consistency. Plot holes are sometimes plugged up or ignored with a Hand Wave, or occasionally dealt with by a Lampshade Hanging, and some writers think Plot Holes that only become apparent well after the story is over aren't worth sweating. Note that a Plot Hole is inherently a contradiction. A Plot element that is merely left unexplained is not a Plot Hole unless its occurrence is impossible according to the setting's rules. Of course, some stories contain plot holes as part of their basic nature. This includes many ludicrously comical works, and everything involving a Timey-Wimey Ball. Can overlap with Retcon and Continuity Snarl. A Cliffhanger Copout can create a Plot Hole if a Hand Wave is handled poorly. An attempt to resolve or remove a Plot Hole, that introduces another Plot Hole is a Voodoo Shark. Contrast What Happened to The Mouse? for potential plots that get dropped...and picked up. Also see Fridge Logic for cases where a Plot Hole isn't immediately obvious and only becomes visible in hindsight.
  • Plot Holes are portions of a Plot that are missing and leave a break in consistence. For example: let's say that in a movie, everyone in the United States was bombed and immediately died. Now if later in the movie, the hero goes to the United States and it is a bustling utopia of ignorant pricks, gayness, and chronic masturbators, without telling how it got like that (Which actually happened to the United States, unbeknownst to the U.N.), it would be a Plot Hole. Plot holes will destroy us. Plot holes sucks. The Demented Poopy-Saturated Llama went to the U.S. to eat cheese. He destroyed all the cheese in the world when he ate it all. THEN PEOPLE ATE CHEESE HA HA HA IT'S A CHEAP JOKE HA HA HA!!! Usually Plot Holes happen when a main character [<--Backspace] [<--Backspace] [<--Backspace] ... no more, that was factual! I deleted it all! Then how is it still here? All you did was put tags on it. That's a plot hole in itself. It would have been easier to actually delete them instead of just typing [<--Backspace]
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