Plot holes, by Elizabeth Kay
Like so many people, I’ve been watching a lot of TV recently. There are a number of very good series available at the moment, The Great being my current favourite. The script is first rate, and very funny, despite having its darker moments. Two of the other series I have been watching are The Drowning, and Finding Alice. But there are enormous plot-holes in both of these, and I can only imagine that they have been left in the expectation of another series, although nothing has been said about this. Don’t read the rest of this if you still intend to watch them, as there will be spoilers. I have no issue with the acting or direction in either of these; excellent all round. It’s just the storyline! Where’s that script editor when you need her/him?
So: Why is Daniel’s scar never explained? Why is mum never
charged with two counts of forgery, GBH on Daniel’s real dad, and the theft of
two vehicles? Why was Tom’s body never recovered, when the lake was thoroughly
searched by police divers? What happened to the brother’s body, which seems
never to have been recovered either?
The premise is that Alice’s husband, Harry, is an architect
and builds the family a smart home. But he’s not actually her husband, as they
never got married. The same evening that they move in Harry falls down the
stairs, and dies. Alice is understandably devastated. (Note similarities with
previous plot) There is an unknown figure recorded on the CCTV, who turns out
to be an adult son from a very short-lived relationship before he met
Alice. Harry’s business was in trouble, and there is a lot of intrigue
surrounding his female partner who has two children and a wife. Harry had left
the house to his parents and they want to sell it to pay off the inheritance
tax. Alice has Harry buried in the garden so that they can’t sell it.
Eventually everything unravels, as Harry’s last words are revealed to be that
he had too many children and doesn’t want any more. There is a lot of
aggravation round some frozen sperm, which Alice is considering using; everyone
hates everyone and then make up and a way out is found to keep the house via
another building project.
So: Are his business partner’s children really Harry’s, as
she hints? Too many children seems an odd remark when he only had two. Why did
Harry and Alice never get married? This is completely ignored, and seems really
rather important.
The first plot hole I ever encountered was in The Silver
Chair, by C.S.Lewis. In the previous book, The Voyage of the Dawn
Treader, Eustace sailed in Prince Caspian’s boat until they reach an island
called The World’s End, where Caspian met the Star’s daughter, the girl he marries.
Caspian wasn’t much older than Eustace, so we must assume he was maybe eighteen
or nineteen. In The Silver Chair, Eustace returns to Narnia with Jill, a
school-friend; it’s her first visit. They are both given the task of finding
the king’s son, Rilian, who has disappeared. Caspian is Rilian’s father, and is
setting sail one last time to look for the lost prince. When Jill and Eustace
do eventually find him, he is about twenty-five years old. This, however, is
Lewis’s description of Caspian:
Comments
Wonderful post, thank you. And Sutherland's books are huge fun!
I can forgive some small, unexplained plot points, but gaping plot holes are annoying.
eden