pinball1970 said:
Or 'unobtainium?' (The Core)
I believe that was also the substance that was being mined in "Avatar". I won't say that in itself ruined the movie for me. I did find it irritating, but that was only one of several things that irritated me. I still mostly liked the film.
I can't think of anything that fits the premise of this discussion. I'm willing to suspend a lot of disbelief for a good story, especially a good character-driven story.
I absolutely hate the trope, seen in the most recent "Time Machine" film but other places as well, that H. G. Wells was himself a time traveler. And there is some truly ridiculous "science" in that film involving accidentally blowing up the moon by mining it.
I was extremely irritated by the premise of "Gravity", which involves one satellite blowing up and somehow sending debris carefully aimed to hit every single satellite in every orbit. That one angered me to the point of being embarrassingly vocal in the theater and I really had to talk myself down. "Can't they spend a couple bucks on a science advisor?" I muttered.
I think it's that attitude by filmmakers toward scientific accuracy that bugs me, rather than the errors themselves. It didn't even occur to anyone on the team to run some of this stuff past, say, a high-school physics teacher over a couple of beers.
Nevertheless, despite glaring errors like that, I thoroughly enjoyed both films. So no, I can't say that learning physics ruined any films or TV shows for me.
Edit: I'll add that there is stuff in the Star Wars films that kind of spoiled my enjoyment of them. But that stuff bugged me right from the first viewing. And I know I'm going to make enemies, but I didn't do my usual thing of forgiving bad science for a good story, because I thought the story lines and characters were kind of idiotic and cliched.