storyteller
Veteran
Yep, that's the one actual plot hole. Alex was surprised to see the cop and crackhead in the house, but they shoulda been there before he left for school in the morning since the cop yolked up the crackhead in the middle of the night.The only real plothole to me was the copcar being there for so long before Alex or the cops themselves noticed.
The other stuff y'all talking about is improbable, but not impossible.
Also horror = fantasy. Not that it excuses everything, but something like keeping the parents and kids alive on soup (and whether they need to go to the bathroom or not) is about as believable as a witch controlling them to begin with. That's a weird thing to get upset about once you buy into voodoo powers![]()
You hit the nail on the head with "horror = fantasy." Dudes want to use "defies the laws of science" as a plothole, which would mean the entire plot is a plothole because the main instigating forces go beyond the realms of science. Kids are Naruto Running out their homes...no science to it.
There's a magic tree, a witch who begins aging backwards, people are turned into puppets....there's no science behind it. It's magic.
That's why I made a joke about these goofies just being Karens. There's a basement full of hypnotized children, with a magic witch who attacks a grown man and manages to overpower him and turn him into a puppet...if someone leans in to ask me where the piss bucket is during that scene, I'm rolling my eyes and telling them to shut up and watch the movie.
To put it another way, a plot hole should actually be relevant to the story. Not just to someone's random whims. We don't need to see everything that happens in the story or have our hands held and everything explained in detail. "Why did the kids run from their homes at 2:17? Magic." and "How did the kids survive off soup alone for a month and how did no one smell the house? Probably the same damned magic."
That's why I made a joke about these goofies just being Karens. There's a basement full of hypnotized children, with a magic witch who attacks a grown man and manages to overpower him and turn him into a puppet...if someone leans in to ask me where the piss bucket is during that scene, I'm rolling my eyes and telling them to shut up and watch the movie.
To put it another way, a plot hole should actually be relevant to the story. Not just to someone's random whims. We don't need to see everything that happens in the story or have our hands held and everything explained in detail. "Why did the kids run from their homes at 2:17? Magic." and "How did the kids survive off soup alone for a month and how did no one smell the house? Probably the same damned magic."
Dudes are reaching for reasons to complain. There are valid issues with the movie. Tonal shifts can throw it off; the laughs disrupt the scares. Some of the POV characters play fairly minor roles in the main plotline, so their chapters coulda been cut to show us more of the key figures. The ending is definitely abrupt and I'd like to have seen some of the fallout. But damn...dudes really worried about bowel movements and nutrition? That's just reaching.


This was the wildest shyt in the movie to me…
