Water Dog wrote:cinepro wrote:That's not really what happened. Other rebel pilots made it to the exhaust port, and it was a group attack. If Luke had just flown in by himself and blown it up then you might have a point*. But he had a lot of support. Plus, he was already a really good pilot. The Force only kicked in at the last moment for the final targeting of the port. He very well might have blown it up without the Force helping him; it just gave him a little nudge and guidance at the very end.
This. Plus Vader, being his dad, didn't want him dead. He was always playing a game of letting him get close.
I'm not sure what the debate is here.
On the one hand, it's clear that ALL of the characters in TFA are over-the-top, more capable versions of their 'A New Hope' counterparts. Po is practically god-level at flying, Rey can beat a Sith at lightsaber force grabbing when Luke struggled to get one to move on Hoth in his second movie use of the force. The soccer ball is more R2 than R2. Luke is so Obi Wan zen master cool he doesn't even talk in the film, just emotes.
But then, why is Rey's gender part of this? That's stupid to be concerned that the central hero's gender matters. She's the hero in a movie where everyone is over the top good at what they do. Hell, even Chewie's crossbow is pointed out to be a secret mega-weapon that Han failed to recognize in a multi-decade smuggling and armed resistance career.
Personally, I think it has more of a problem with the culture of today than with any kind of secret liberal feminist message. Just imagine all the characters as being millennials portraying how they see themselves and it makes all kinds of sense. It doesn't take time and effort to get good at stuff. There's an app for that. Expertise doesn't matter anymore because we can Google everything we need to know. Everyone's a Jedi now. Why not?