Diamondeye wrote:
Kaffis Mark V wrote:
Because 50's car culture was totally safe, y'all, and not at all the domain of reckless hooligans and invincible teenagers.
Yes, clearly when people saw space fighters maneuvering in close quarters and shooting laser cannons at each other in the fashion of WWII fighter planes , they were supposed to think 1950s car culture, not WWII air combat. I can definitely tell you which of tjose has more broad cultural awarenes - and which was the real model for starfighter combat - and it didn't involve cars.
If you look at the trench run it resembles a WWII torpedo bomber attack, like at Midway or that sank
Prince of Wales and
Repulse. Needle, ball, and airspeed.
But please, tell us more about how Rey is totally a Mary Sue and Luke isnt because 1950s car racing.
Look, DE. I never said that the Battle of Yavin wasn't clearly a dogfight that involved deadly weaponry, yadda yadda.
I said that the notion that Luke had an old buddy vouching for his piloting experience based on his years of hotrodding back home is meant to echo tropes that you see in stories about car culture, which Lucas was very much a fan of. Reference American Graffiti, the movie that got Lucas noticed and a seat at the table to make Star Wars in the first place. You can see more modern examples of it in The Fast and the Furious movies.
So, to repeat two points: that the Battle of Yavin is a clear translation of WWII air combat is not mutually exclusive to suggesting that Luke's recruitment can be taken as an homage to car culture tropes, and I honestly don't care if I convince you because I'm not super invested in this argument the way you seem to be.