Solo4114
Master Member
- All cops know how to drive like racecar drivers, thereby enabling them to engage in high-speed pursuits through city streets.
- High speed pursuits through city streets NEVER involve any pedestrian casualties. Everyone jumps out of the way at the last second.
- Cars that take high jumps (IE: going over hills in San Francisco) are (A) controllable upon landing, and (B) have axles and undercarriages that remain undamaged, thereby allowing them to drive with no discernible damage.
- Michael Bay 7: Michael Bay Strikes Back
- Secretaries are always smarter and more accomplished than their bosses, and will be promoted to executive positions upon revealing their bosses' nefarious schemes to take control of the company.
- Nobody ever gets any dust in their eye for no reason when it's windy out. They will only get dust in their eye if it is something that will be commented on by other characters.
- Villains AND heroes alike will allow time to either make or listen to a speech prior to shooting the other guy. No one would think of cutting the conversation short to actually shoot the other guy.
- In hand-to-hand combat, both combatants can take an inordinate number of strikes to the head and body without becoming disoriented.
- Jack Bauer has only 24 hours to stop a terrorist plot. And it will take him exactly 24 hours to do it. He never solves it early and then goes home to veg on the couch.
- Horses whinny ALL the time.
- All horses are short enough and compliant enough that you can leap onto them from behind, jump onto them from a rooftop, or instantly hop into the saddle without exerting any effort whatsoever.
- When shooting an arrow at someone, it is critical to aim DIRECTLY towards them, no matter how far away you are. Movie arrows fired by individual archers are unaffected by gravity.
- A single arrow will almost always kill a nameless enemy. Heroes and named villains, however, can take multiple arrows and live.
- The rookie cop that you just met five minutes ago (when already 50 min into the film) is going to die in the next shootout.
- The veteran cop's old partner will be killed fifteen to twenty minutes into the film. This timeframe shortens to ten minutes if he's close to retirement.
- Any cop whose partner was killed will be permitted to work the murder of their partner.
- In buddy-cop movies, bad guys never go to trial. They are always killed. Probably to avenge the death of the partner who died 10-20 min into the film.
- High speed pursuits through city streets NEVER involve any pedestrian casualties. Everyone jumps out of the way at the last second.
- Cars that take high jumps (IE: going over hills in San Francisco) are (A) controllable upon landing, and (B) have axles and undercarriages that remain undamaged, thereby allowing them to drive with no discernible damage.
- Michael Bay 7: Michael Bay Strikes Back
- Secretaries are always smarter and more accomplished than their bosses, and will be promoted to executive positions upon revealing their bosses' nefarious schemes to take control of the company.
- Nobody ever gets any dust in their eye for no reason when it's windy out. They will only get dust in their eye if it is something that will be commented on by other characters.
- Villains AND heroes alike will allow time to either make or listen to a speech prior to shooting the other guy. No one would think of cutting the conversation short to actually shoot the other guy.
- In hand-to-hand combat, both combatants can take an inordinate number of strikes to the head and body without becoming disoriented.
- Jack Bauer has only 24 hours to stop a terrorist plot. And it will take him exactly 24 hours to do it. He never solves it early and then goes home to veg on the couch.
- Horses whinny ALL the time.
- All horses are short enough and compliant enough that you can leap onto them from behind, jump onto them from a rooftop, or instantly hop into the saddle without exerting any effort whatsoever.
- When shooting an arrow at someone, it is critical to aim DIRECTLY towards them, no matter how far away you are. Movie arrows fired by individual archers are unaffected by gravity.
- A single arrow will almost always kill a nameless enemy. Heroes and named villains, however, can take multiple arrows and live.
- The rookie cop that you just met five minutes ago (when already 50 min into the film) is going to die in the next shootout.
- The veteran cop's old partner will be killed fifteen to twenty minutes into the film. This timeframe shortens to ten minutes if he's close to retirement.
- Any cop whose partner was killed will be permitted to work the murder of their partner.
- In buddy-cop movies, bad guys never go to trial. They are always killed. Probably to avenge the death of the partner who died 10-20 min into the film.