Capt.Failure's Edumacation Corner: What is a plot?

Welcome to Capt.Failure's Edumacation corner. I'm writing this in response to an old complaint about Michael Bay films, the Bayverse, specifically RotF:
"The film didn't have a plot!"
To that I give you the following:
Plot: noun - The main events of a play, novel, movie, or similar work, devised and presented by the writer as an interrelated sequence
So what can we gather from this, students? It's simple really. Revenge of the Fallen had a plot, whether you chose to see it or not. Accusations of "no plot" are a common tactic against films people don't like and are at best uneducated about what a plot actually is. If a film truely had no plot then it would be something more akin to an episode of Montey Python or Robot Chicken, where one scene has no storyline connection to another. It's especially worrying when supposedly educated critics use this accusation, since if anyone should know what a plot is it's them.
While it is true that plots can be simple or complex, simplicity does not indicate lack of plot. Simple plots are usually reserved for works that are primarly visual experiences or installments of a larger story. Complex plots can be the result of said installments coming together or a single work trying to keep the viewer guessing and thinking. There are of course more variations, but my ability to think is fueled by caffiene and I haven't had my coffee yet.
So in closing: any criticism that a novel or film didn't have a plot is either uneducated or a troll.
"The film didn't have a plot!"
To that I give you the following:
Plot: noun - The main events of a play, novel, movie, or similar work, devised and presented by the writer as an interrelated sequence
So what can we gather from this, students? It's simple really. Revenge of the Fallen had a plot, whether you chose to see it or not. Accusations of "no plot" are a common tactic against films people don't like and are at best uneducated about what a plot actually is. If a film truely had no plot then it would be something more akin to an episode of Montey Python or Robot Chicken, where one scene has no storyline connection to another. It's especially worrying when supposedly educated critics use this accusation, since if anyone should know what a plot is it's them.
While it is true that plots can be simple or complex, simplicity does not indicate lack of plot. Simple plots are usually reserved for works that are primarly visual experiences or installments of a larger story. Complex plots can be the result of said installments coming together or a single work trying to keep the viewer guessing and thinking. There are of course more variations, but my ability to think is fueled by caffiene and I haven't had my coffee yet.
So in closing: any criticism that a novel or film didn't have a plot is either uneducated or a troll.