Topic: Plot holes
*Spoiler alert for those who haven't seen or read Gone Girl.*
While I was thinking about the plot holes in my own novels I wondered if I was the only one to see them and if I were should I correct them even if none of the reviewers caught them.
Then I thought about Gone Girl and while it was a great read the whole plot hinged on how brilliant Amy was, but as it is with all criminals they are not near as brilliant at fooling police as they think they are, and were this not a work of fiction there is no way Amy could have gotten away with murder. The reason? She was seen, albeit disguised, dark short hair, heavier, meeting her supposed kidnapper, in a public place. Also she was recognized before that by two people in the cabin park she stayed while Nick, her husband, was being accused of her murder.
Amy might be banking on those two people not wanting to come forward because they stole her money at gun point, but when it comes to murder...if they were ever arrested they would flip on her for a lighter sentence...or, and this is not likely, come forward out of a sense of justice.
Amy might also think that she had a really good disguise, IMO she did NOT, but her face was all over the media for weeks, so much so that you'd have to be on the moon not to know she was missing. Also, while she was in disguise the guy she killed was not. Someone in that crowd could have come forward while she was still missing with a reported sighting.
And then there's the mother of the man she killed. For the author, Gillian Flynn, to take for granted everyone would dismiss her because she's a 'mental case', a grieving mother defending her son, the kidnapper, is idealistic.
As for Nick staying with her because her story was air tight and she would be believed and not him is unrealistic, because as I've shown, there were big plot holes that a first year police detective could see.
So...why did such a flimsy plot become a best seller and a hit movie? Because the author's writing caused the reader to suspend their disbelief and go along for the ride. Alfred Hitchcock called the moment when you realize the book you've just read or the movie you just saw couldn't have happened the way it was portrayed 'refrigerator' moments. He said that the average movie goer will go home after a film, open the refrigerator door, reach for that midnight snack and then the plot hole occurs to them...like how did the plane find Cary Grant in North By Northwest?
So...my question is this: If you find a plot hole in your story and no one else does, do you fix it? Or hope your writing is good enough to suspend the reader's disbelief?