Analyzing music, movies, and trailers has been a favorite field to go through. Many movies have been analyzed in terms of their discourse analysis or ideological analysis that the researcher decides based on his interest, time limit, and many other relevant factors. This study dealt with the movie “Gone Girl” regarding its discourse analysis and ideological analysis. This movie has been one of the most popular instances of the Rashomon Effect which is about various conflicting opinions toward one single event. The Rashomon Effect started in 1950 with the movie “Rashomon”. The researcher tried to understand how the Rashomon Effect occurred in the movie by the characters who aimed to state what they have witnessed concerning their accusing Nick, the husband of the gone girl. Moreover, elaborating upon women’s representation in America was another domain that the researcher did deal with and finally, a final aspect was the wording power and the facial expression of the main role, Amy. The data collection procedure and tools were the movie itself, the full script of the movie, and many popular reviews of the movie during all these years from the time it was released. The research indicated that each character did make a story and then a justification to relate some factors to the husband and finally accuse him. The other point was that women were presented/assigned in various simultaneous roles since the context could be a leading factor to accepting one or refusing another like being a gossip girl or being a game-changer. One other relevant noticeable result is the respect of America toward pregnancy in this movie and other media. And finally, it showed how one character can convince others including their in-law’s family, her own family, the media, detectives, or even her husband by her wording and facial expression.