Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • today
From time-traveling paradoxes to questionable villain motivations, Hollywood has some explaining to do! Join us as we examine the most baffling inconsistencies that somehow made it to the big screen. These moments will make you scratch your head and wonder how filmmakers missed such obvious logical flaws in their storytelling.
Transcript
00:00Welcome to WatchMojo. And today, we're counting down our picks for the most confusing details in
00:16movies that just don't add up. We'll be getting into spoilers, so consider this your warning.
00:21You don't need to be helped any longer. You've always had the power to go back to Kansas.
00:26Number 30. What's up with the Glass Slippers? Cinderella.
00:31Señorita! Just a moment!
00:35This is an all-time classic fairy tale, but not everything about Disney's animated adaptation
00:41holds up. The Glass Slippers are a good example of this. In the movie, the slippers are part of
00:48Cinderella's magical glow-up. However, her fairy godmother warns her that her new wardrobe will
00:59only last until midnight. Sure enough, once the clock hits 12 and her dress turns back into her
01:12normal clothes, but her slippers actually stay. Shouldn't they have been swapped out at the end
01:17too? It's clearly part of her ensemble, and the horse-drawn carriage she had disappeared too.
01:23Sure, the slippers were important to the plot later, but by the movie's rules,
01:28they should have disappeared. The only logical conclusion is that the fairy godmother's magic
01:33is super wonky.
01:34But you see, I have the other slippers.
01:36Number 29. Why doesn't Darth Vader recognize C-3PO, the Star Wars franchise?
01:48I don't believe we have been introduced.
01:52R2-D2, a pleasure to meet you. I am C-3PO, human-cyborg relations.
01:58The original trilogy immortalized Darth Vader as one of the greatest villains in pop culture history.
02:03However, the prequel trilogy had the unfortunate consequence of making Anakin Skywalker, well,
02:09kind of dumb.
02:10Just screw any dough pots, sleemo.
02:12Seriously, why doesn't Vader notice that the shiny gold android from the Rebel Alliance
02:18is actually his own creation? The lava on Mustafar melted most of his body,
02:23and it seems like it also melted some of Darth Vader's brain too.
02:27C-3PO wasn't just some random school project he made as a kid. He was a key part of Anakin's life.
02:33He was even at his super-secret wedding, for crying out loud. And yet, in the original trilogy,
02:48Vader doesn't pay him any attention. Darth Vader and being a deadbeat dad. Name a better duo.
02:54Search your feelings, you know it to be true.
02:59No!
03:01Number 28. Why didn't Glinda immediately tell Dorothy that her shoes could take her home?
03:07Give them back. Keep tight inside of them. Their magic must be very powerful,
03:12or she wouldn't want them so badly.
03:13Old cinema classics sure had a thing for shoes. In The Wizard of Oz, Dorothy's ruby slippers are revealed
03:20to be the tool to get her back home all along. Considering how important getting home was to
03:26Dorothy, it's kind of weird that Glinda wouldn't tell her the truth immediately.
03:30I'll be home in time for supper.
03:32Instead, she sends Dorothy on a dangerous journey across Oz that's essentially pointless.
03:43We needed the journey for there to be a movie, sure, but Dorothy didn't actually need to go through
03:49with it. Glinda argued that it was a necessary trip for her to discover her inner strength.
03:54But that's weak sauce. Sorry. It feels like Glinda was a manipulator who wanted to mess around and
04:00waste time.
04:01Then why didn't you tell her before?
04:03Because she wouldn't have believed me.
04:05Jeez. And she's supposed to be the good witch.
04:08Now those magic slippers will take you home in two seconds.
04:11Number 27. Do the curses actually work?
04:15Pirates and magic don't normally mix. And maybe that's a good thing, because when magic was
04:23introduced to this franchise, it was wildly inconsistent. In the first movie, Captain
04:30Barbossa and his men are cursed to live forever as undead creatures no longer capable of feeling
04:36anything.
04:37We are cursed men, Mr. Hunter.
04:40But the thing is, we actually see them experiencing quite a lot of pain.
04:43And in a later movie, the trident of Poseidon is used to break all magical curses. It's
05:01a big deal, except a post-credits scene teases Davy Jones' return. And the glimpse we get
05:07suggests he's still cursed. Safe to say that these magical ailments aren't as they seem.
05:13Number 26. How are Mike and Soli childhood friends if they didn't meet until college?
05:23Monsters, Inc. and Monsters, University. When we were introduced to Mike and Soli in Monsters,
05:29Inc., we discovered that these two have been best friends ever since they were just tiny,
05:33creepy crawlies.
05:34Ha ha ha ha ha! You've been jealous of Mike and Soli since the fourth grade, pal.
05:39And while there was no reason to ever doubt that, a certain prequel came out that finally
05:43put their friendship into question. In Monsters, University, Mike and Soli meet each other for
05:48the first time in college.
05:50What am I doing? James B. Sullivan.
05:53Mike Wazowski.
05:55College can definitely be an important time in a young monster's life. However, calling it a part of
06:00childhood is a stretch. So, with that in mind, Mike and Soli couldn't have known each other
06:05since elementary school, as the timeline just doesn't add up. Maybe the most scary thing about
06:11this franchise isn't the monsters. It's the lack of cohesion.
06:15Wee-ah!
06:15Wee-ah!
06:16Wee-ah!
06:16Wee-ah!
06:17Wee-ah!
06:17Wee-ah!
06:18Wee-ah!
06:18Wee-ah!
06:19Ah!
06:19Number 25. When did Michael Myers learn how to drive? Halloween.
06:24Wee-ah!
06:25Michael is one of the most demented serial killers in cinema. A character who is nothing
06:41but pure evil. We can wrap our brains around that pretty easily, but what we can't understand
06:47is how Michael knows how to drive. In the first Halloween, his murdering spree starts with
06:54him breaking out of Smith's Grove's sanitarium and driving into his old town. But Michael
06:59was locked up in that mental institution as a kid after murdering his sister. So, how could
07:05he have gotten the time to learn how to drive cars? Did the sanitarium operate right beside
07:11him to DMV or something?
07:12I think he's cute.
07:13Hey, jerk! Speed kills!
07:21Did they give out learner's permits to inmates for good behavior? Imagine the poor instructor
07:27having to ride with young Michael Myers in Driver's Ed.
07:37Number 24. Couldn't Superman just turn back time to stop every problem? Superman. Even
07:43if you love the Man of Steel, you can't deny that sometimes he can be pretty overpowered.
07:49For example, in Superman the movie, he solves his problems by flying around the Earth and
07:58reversing its orbit, effectively traveling back in time.
08:01It is Torben for you to interfere with human history. It is Torben. It is Torben. It is Torben.
08:08It is Torben.
08:09When the Flash messes with time, everything screws up. But when Superman does it here, everything
08:15is fine. So, considering he pulled this off, why doesn't he just do the same for every
08:21problem?
08:22Obviously, we know that if he did, then there wouldn't be any other Superman movies. But
08:27introducing this power was going to raise questions like this anyway. It's just harder
08:32to get invested when you're wondering if Superman's going to time travel his way out of issues.
08:37Sorry about that, Lois. But I've been kind of busy for a while.
08:40Number 23. Why does Buzz freeze if he thinks he's real?
08:45In the first Toy Story, Buzz Lightyear makes it very clear that he thinks he's the real
09:05Buzz. Part of his journey, then, is discovering and coming to terms with the reality that he's
09:10actually a toy.
09:11Buzz Lightyear mission logs start at 4072. My ship has run off course on route to Sector
09:1612. I've crash landed on a strange planet.
09:20While that's great, it's confusing how Buzz starts acting like a toy even before he discovers
09:26the truth. When he's in the presence of the humans, he immediately freezes up like all the
09:32other toys do. Isn't that an odd behavior for someone who thinks they're a real person?
09:37You actually think you're the Buzz Lightyear? Oh, all this time I thought it was an act.
09:44If he really believed he was a space ranger, wouldn't he talk to Andy to find a way to get
09:49things back on track? Yeah, there's definitely something sketchy going on with Buzz.
10:08Number 22. Shouldn't the family live near waterfalls? A quiet place. In a world where even the slightest
10:16sounds a person can make will get them killed by horrible monsters, it takes a lot of resourcefulness
10:23in order to survive. But even though people can barely afford to speak,
10:28there are some ways of getting around this. The waterfall that our main family visits is a great
10:42example of one of these loopholes. Since the sound of the water masks their voices, they can speak
10:49normally. Considering how much of an advantage this is, why wouldn't they just relocate near the
10:55waterfall? There's no guarantee they'll be safe forever, sure, but the waterfall is a pretty clear
11:01game-changer. If it can give them the slightest sense of normalcy and safety, shouldn't they move
11:15there more permanently? Number 21. Could an alien civilization really be defeated by a computer
11:29virus? Independence Day. I'm sorry, I don't understand. Just how exactly do we infect the
11:34mothership with this virus? When a wave of technologically advanced aliens called harvesters
11:40invade our world, the threat looms large. Considering how dangerous these invaders are,
11:46the way to beat them must be something incredibly epic, right? Well, not really. The harvesters are
11:53ultimately toppled by a computer virus. Which will disable it, and that'll disorient the smaller
11:58ships below, and that could buy it, I think, at least some time to, uh, to take them, take them out,
12:06take them down, do your, do your stuff. This is ridiculous. That's right. Something that could
12:13infect your average PC is capable of eradicating an entire extraterrestrial armada. But how can a
12:20human-made virus affect alien technology? You really think I can fly that thing?
12:26You really think you can do all that bull**** you just said? It's even weirder, considering the virus
12:32is deployed by hooking up an Apple PowerBook to an alien spaceship. We can't even charge smartphones
12:42without making sure we have a compatible charger, so how can hooking up the computer work? We're not
12:48computer scientists, but we can confidently say that this doesn't make any sense.
12:5320. Electro doesn't know Peter is Spider-Man. Spider-Man No Way Home
13:05The storytelling of the MCU got increasingly complex as it progressed, eventually incorporating
13:12the likes of time travel and multiverses. Unfortunately, as is often the case with time
13:18hoppy stories, this opened up a slew of questions and potential plot holes. No Way Home has great
13:24fun with its manipulation of dimensions, but it also has a wicked plot hole concerning Jamie Foxx's
13:30Doctor Strange informs us that only the villains who know Spider-Man's identity were pulled through
13:44the multiverse. But Electro never knew that Peter Parker was Spider-Man, and he says as much during
13:50the climax. So why is he here? Probably just so we could see Jamie Foxx again. We can't be too mad
14:08about that. 19. The Unrecognizable Teenager. 17 Again. As the title suggests, this movie sees a
14:17fully grown man named Mike O'Donnell turning back into his 17-year-old self with the help of some magic.
14:30It's established at the beginning of the film that Mike and his high school sweetheart, Scarlett,
14:35eventually wed and had kids. Yet when Scarlett meets the younger version of Mike, she barely reacts.
14:41Yes, she notices there's a similarity between the two, but she kind of shrugs it off. We know it's
14:48been two decades, but surely she would have instantly recognized the teenage version of her
14:53own husband. She was even dating him at the time that he looked exactly like this. Heck, one look at
14:59the yearbook would prove that it's more than just a strong resemblance.
15:03How are you doing? Hello, how are you? Good, how are you? Good. Wow, it's gonna take some getting
15:12used to. 18. Whistler's Resurrection. Blade 2. This might be an example of a sequel bringing back a
15:20fan-favorite character, even if it doesn't make a lick of sense within the context of the story.
15:25In the first Blade, Abraham Whistler is infected and takes his own life with a special vampire
15:33killing bullet. We even see Whistler's hand dropping, indicating that he's dead. Yet Blade 2
15:40opens with a titular hero saving his mentor from confinement in Prague. Apparently Whistler was
15:46too late with the gunshot, as he had already started transforming. But that doesn't add up,
15:51because the bullets in that gun are explicitly designed to kill vampires and turn them into ash.
15:57Why was Whistler immune to it? And why was he still intact?
16:0717. Time-Proof Jets. Battlefield Earth. This is not a film to be taken very seriously,
16:15despite what filmmakers' intentions might have been. It's widely considered one of the worst
16:20movies ever made, and the story is riddled with plot holes. The most glaring has to be the issue
16:33with Jets. The movie takes place in the year 3000, with humans subservient to a gold-mining race of
16:40aliens. Johnny Goodboy Tyler starts a revolution against the oppressors and steals some Harrier
16:45jets. Not only do the revolutionaries become expert jet flyers after just one week of simulation
16:51training, but the Jets also retain their ability to function after a thousand years of stagnation.
16:57We're not jet experts or anything, but we don't think Harriers would still operate after sitting
17:03underground for a millennium. 16. The Facehugger. Alien 3. It's never a good sign when a director
17:19disowns their movie. David Fincher is not a fan of Alien 3, and some fans consider the opening sequence
17:26a travesty of the canon. The story begins in somber fashion, with Newt and Hicks dying in a pod crash.
17:39The escape pod was jettisoned from the Sulaco owing to the presence of a facehugger, which emerged from
17:45an egg that the Alien Queen had somehow planted in the previous movie. But did she? She didn't bring
17:52any eggs from the nest, and even if she did, she didn't appear to have any time to emerge from the
17:57dropship and plant one aboard the Sulaco. There's simply no logical way that the egg ended up on the
18:04spaceship. 15. Cypher plugs himself in. The Matrix. This movie is about as close to sci-fi perfection as
18:19you can get, but alas, there appears to be a glaring issue. Cypher meets with Agent Smith inside what's
18:26presumably The Matrix to discuss his betrayal of Morpheus and Zion.
18:40However, Cypher would have theoretically needed someone to plug him and take him back out again.
18:46Therefore, his betrayal would have been revealed to whoever's monitoring him.
18:51Cypher's usually in charge of operating, so maybe he constructed some kind of function,
18:56allowing him to enter and exit without help, which is why he's so startled when Neo interrupts him?
19:02But that's pure speculation, and isn't made clear. And what about getting to broadcast depth
19:07without a captain's order or knowledge? Maybe he was actually in a construct and working with the
19:13machines and the agents? Who knows?
19:2114. The Prince's Age. Beauty and the Beast.
19:26Even Disney's masterpiece isn't without mistakes. It's made clear in the prologue that the Beast had
19:32left until his 21st year to find true love as the petals of an enchanted rose would begin to fall
19:38once he turned that age. The rose she had offered was truly an enchanted rose which would bloom until
19:46his 21st year. Later, Lumiere mentions that they have been stuck inside the castle without guests
19:52for a decade, seemingly placing the Beast around 10 or 11 when the curse was set. There appears to be a
19:59few problems with this, though. One, what is with that enchantress putting a curse on a preteen?
20:05Rebelliousness is normal at that age and certainly not worth a wicked curse. Admittedly, social norms
20:11towards kids were different back in the 18th century, but still. And two, the Beast rips apart a
20:17portrait of himself, and the portrait shows a man much older than 10 or 11. Yeah, people seem to age
20:24faster back in the 1700s, but not that fast.
20:3313. What Happened to the Crew? The Lost World Jurassic Park.
20:38While this sequel fails to measure up to its iconic predecessor, it nevertheless contains a riveting
20:44climax. A T-Rex is brought back to the mainland and wreaks havoc through the streets of San Diego.
20:50That's not the problem. The problem is how it got there.
20:54Look, that's their transponder signal venture, 5888. They're headed into port, but I can't raise them.
20:59When the ship arrives at port, the entire crew is dead. There's no damage to the ship, and the T-Rex
21:05is still confined in the hold. So, just what the heck happened to everybody? The answer reportedly lies
21:12in a deleted scene. The idea was to have velociraptors infiltrate the ship and kill everyone,
21:18but this scene was abandoned. However, other sources claim this is incorrect, and that the
21:23storyboards sent to auction demonstrate instead that the T-Rex somehow got loose and unleashed the
21:29destruction. Neither scenario is shown or referenced, though, meaning that the inclusion of the aftermath
21:34of a removed attack resulted in a plot hole. Number 12. The Issue With Time
21:45Gremlins. Time can be a pain in the neck, what with the different zones and daylight savings and whatnot,
21:53but does it bother the mogwai? These little creatures come with three important rules,
21:57one of which is to never feed them after midnight. Okay, that's fine in theory, but what exactly
22:09constitutes midnight? What happens when daylight savings begins and the clocks go forward an hour?
22:15Does the mogwai's conception of midnight become the new 12 o'clock, or does it stay the old 11 o'clock?
22:21Furthermore, what happens if someone enters a new time zone with their mogwai? Does the rule take on
22:27the boundaries of the new time zone? Does midnight suddenly become 5 a.m. in England? The questions
22:32are endless. 11. The Conservation Of Mass. Ant-Man. The problem with superhero movies is that they often
22:47fly in the face of logic. We don't typically mind, but Ant-Man falls into a lot of traps when it comes
22:54to physics. The biggest offender is that the movie seemingly ignores its own rules about the
23:00conservation of mass. Despite having the weight of a fully grown man, Scott in his Ant-Man suit is
23:13able to ride ants and jump on guns without causing the wielder to buckle. Heck, he even carries a
23:19shrunken tank as a keychain, even though it should weigh thousands of pounds. Ant-Man is a fun movie
23:25and a technical marvel, but there's tons of holes when it comes to the abilities of its central
23:30character. 10. Nothing About The Plan Makes Sense. Batman Begins. The big plan of Batman Begins is to
23:47spike the city's water with a hallucinogen and vaporize it with a microwave. The water will go
23:52airborne, people will breathe in vapor LSD, and sheer madness will ensue.
24:07Only, this horrible plan is riddled with holes. The water inside the metal supply lines probably
24:13wouldn't be vaporized. What about the citizens presumably taking showers and boiling water,
24:19thereby inhaling the vapor, then going crazy too early, and completely foiling the plan.
24:25Furthermore, wouldn't all the humans in the immediate vicinity just sort of blow up once the
24:30microwave was activated? Then again, this film series is seemingly full of magic, as it appears
24:36that Batman teleports from the prison to Gotham in The Dark Knight Rises.
24:409. Minerva McGonagall's Lifespan. The Fantastic Beasts Franchise.
24:54Plot holes aren't new to the Harry Potter franchise. For example, the very concept of time-turners opens up a
25:01slew of problems that aren't really addressed. But what bugs us the most is the inclusion of
25:07McGonagall in the Fantastic Beasts series. The timeline just doesn't add up at all.
25:21McGonagall's age is never explicitly mentioned in the movies, but Maggie Smith was almost 67 when the
25:26first movie was released. So we can assume McGonagall is around that. Yet, in The Crimes of Grindelwald,
25:33she's teaching at Hogwarts in 1927, and she's already in her 30s. That means she was born in the
25:39late 1800s, which would make her much older than 67 by the time Harry Potter strolled into Hogwarts.
25:45That was bloody brilliant. Thank you for that assessment, Mr. Weasley.
25:51Perhaps it would be more useful if I were to transfigure Mr. Potter and yourself into a pocket watch.
25:558. Doc Tries to Kill Peter. Spider-Man 2.
26:00Sometimes logic is sacrificed for a cool visual. Spider-Man 2 is pretty darned perfect, but it contains a baffling decision on the part of Doc Ock.
26:108. Octavius meets with Harry, who agrees to give him tritium in exchange for Spider-Man.
26:16Kill Spider-Man. I'll give you all the tritium you need. On second thought, bring him to me. Alive.
26:24Harry tells him to seek out Peter, owing to his association with Spider-Man, and he very clearly tells Octavius not to hurt him.
26:32Yet, the next time we see Octavius, he's throwing an entire car directly at Peter and Mary Jane.
26:37This makes for a fun scene, as we know that Peter is Spider-Man, and that he'd be able to dodge the car.
26:43But Octavius doesn't know that, so why did he throw a car at someone he wanted to interrogate?
26:48I don't know where he is. Find him.
26:55Or I'll peel the flesh off her bones.
26:587. Leia Remembers Her Mother. The Star Wars Franchise.
27:03The Harry Potter canon isn't the only one that was negatively impacted by prequels.
27:08Long before the Fantastic Beasts series, the Star Wars prequels opened up some major plot holes in regards to the original storyline.
27:17In The Return of the Jedi, Leia tells Luke that she remembers a little bit about her mother.
27:22Specifically, images and feelings.
27:24Do you remember your mother? Your real mother?
27:28Just a little bit.
27:30She died when I was very young.
27:32She gets a bit more specific, explicitly mentioning her mother's beauty and personality.
27:37Yet in Revenge of the Sith, Padme clearly dies right after childbirth.
27:42Newborn Leia couldn't remember anything about her mother, let alone that she was beautiful and sad.
27:47We mean, she's right. Padme was those things.
27:50But there's simply no way Leia knows that.
27:53It's a gun.
27:586. Different Body Types Face-Off
28:02This futuristic John Woo action flick has an engrossing premise.
28:07Sean Archer and Caster Troy, respectively played by John Travolta and Nicolas Cage, change faces.
28:13Literally.
28:14It's like looking in a mirror, only not.
28:17Through a highly advanced procedure, Sean and Caster swap both faces and voices, successfully allowing them to imitate each other.
28:24But the face transplants in this movie don't alter things like body type, height, or muscle mass.
28:30The differences in body type are sort of brushed off by Dr. Walsh, who explains that they'll be handled very briefly and minimally, if at all.
28:39We'll use laser shears for the hairline, micro plugs for body hair.
28:44We'll do an abdominoplasty, take care of those love handles.
28:47But what does that mean exactly, and is that really enough?
28:52And not to get too graphic, but wouldn't Sean's wife notice something different about her husband?
28:575. Evan's Hands
29:00The Butterfly Effect
29:02Evan Traborn uses his journal to time travel and change various things about the past.
29:07But once Evan alters the past, the new timeline will be the only one that people remember.
29:17For example, if Evan A goes back and changes something as Evan B, no one will know Evan A.
29:24That's all thrown out the window with his prison cellmate.
29:27Evan proves that he can time travel by impaling his palms as a child, thereby giving himself scars.
29:34In the new timeline that he created with the impalement, Evan would have already had the scars and maybe wouldn't even be in prison.
29:41Yet the same cellmate from before reacts with complete shock when he sees Evan's hands.
29:47He has knowledge of both Evan A and Evan B, which, according to the way time travel works in this film, is impossible.
30:024. Face Shot
30:03The Karate Kid
30:04In this iconic climax to the classic movie, Daniel LaRusso stands on one leg and delivers a winning kick to Johnny's face.
30:12Finish him!
30:22But to this day, no one can agree on the legality of this move.
30:27Many people agree that the kick was legal, but many also argue that it shouldn't have counted.
30:31While it's only in the third film of the series that it's explicitly established that the head is forbidden, even Ralph Macchio, the actor who plays Daniel, agrees that the finishing move shouldn't have counted.
30:42If the Karate Kid himself thinks it was illegal, then that's good enough for us.
30:47This famous crane kick is referenced numerous times in the sequel series, Cobra Kai.
30:52Maybe this is a clever bit of meta-commentary, with the show referencing the never-ending debate.
30:58Since St. Lawrence told me about how you beat him with an illegal kick.
31:00Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey.
31:01The rules state anything above the waist is legal.
31:03Besides, you used that same kick in last year's tournament, right?
31:063. The Infinity Gauntlet
31:08The Marvel Cinematic Universe
31:10The MCU is known for their post-credits sequences that introduce exciting new elements to the overarching story.
31:17Unfortunately, one of these sequences came back to bite them.
31:21At the end of Age of Ultron, Thanos is clearly seen taking the Infinity Gauntlet out of a vault.
31:27Fine. I'll do it myself.
31:31However, within the timeline of the MCU, this would have occurred years before Thanos actually acquired the gauntlet from Eitri.
31:38The writers of Infinity War, Christopher Marcus and Stephen McFeely, jokingly answered that the one seen in Age of Ultron was a practice gauntlet.
31:48It's a funny response, but it really doesn't do much to close the gaping plot hole.
31:53What did it cost?
31:58Everything.
31:592. The Poster
32:01The Shawshank Redemption
32:03One of the most famous escapes in movie history sees Andy Dufresne tunneling through his cell wall, traversing the sewage pipe and emerging in a culvert outside the prison, where he basks in the rain.
32:15It's a wonderful sequence, but it's marred by one major problem.
32:19When the guards examine Andy's cell the next morning, they find the Raquel Welch poster hiding the hole in the wall.
32:25How on earth did Andy manage to reattach the poster to the wall from the inside?
32:32Even if it was taped at the top, the bottom would have loudly flapped in the draft and make noise.
32:37Furthermore, a guard would almost certainly have lifted that poster during a routine cell check to look for contraband, thereby finding the hole.
32:46Or at least they should have, if they were doing their jobs properly.
32:50What do you mean he just wasn't here?
32:53Don't say that to me, hey?
32:55Don't say that to me again.
32:56But sir, he wasn't.
32:57I can see that, hey!
32:59Think I'm blind?
33:01Before we continue, be sure to subscribe to our channel and ring the bell to get notified about our latest videos.
33:07You have the option to be notified for occasional videos, or all of them.
33:10If you're on your phone, make sure you go into your settings and switch on notifications.
33:161. Water
33:18Water everywhere
33:19Signs
33:21A good 90% of Signs works exceptionally well.
33:25It's just too bad that everything falls apart with the ending.
33:28Swing away, Meryl.
33:33Meryl.
33:35Swing away.
33:36In a twist that no one would consider one of Shyamalan's best, it's revealed that the aliens are weak to water.
33:42And it's not like a small allergic reaction.
33:46No, the water seems to act like acid and melts them to death.
33:49So why, pray tell, did these aliens invade a planet that is over 70% water?
33:56They could certainly tell that from space.
33:58What with the enormous expanses of blue and all.
34:01Sure, maybe they didn't know what water was or that it hurt them.
34:05But still, maybe next time, do a little preliminary research on the planet you're about to take over?
34:12What's the matter?
34:14There's a monster outside my room.
34:16Can I have a glass of water?
34:17Are there any other puzzling plot holes we missed?
34:21Let us know in the comments.
34:22Just wish we could see Peter.
34:29Whoa.
34:29Salamakiru.
34:31Oh, you're right.
34:32I am magic.

Recommended