16 hours ago, Absol197 said:While you're 100% correct (and hilarious!) I suspect that Luke got special treatment because he helped save Leia, and she vouched for him. Besides, he shot down just as many TIE fighters as the space-hardened smuggler, so he's decent enough. And they need all hands on deck here, right?
14 hours ago, Daeglan said:Also Red Squadron had a bunch of vacancies. And in the Novelization they tested him in a simulator and Biggs ALSO Vouched for him as being a good pilot.
14 hours ago, Daeglan said:1. He didnt fly a T-16 a time or two. He did it all the time. He also Learned from Biggs before he who went to the Academy. and Biggs vouched for him.
2. It isnt like he just driving a car. He flew down canyons shooting wamp rats. Which is very much like doing ground attack runs and required more skill. And this is all stuff established in the movie to show he is not a noob. He is a skilled bush pilot. He wanted power converters to fix his T-16. Which you can see in the garage when he is working on C3P0 and R2
First off, I was joking. Secondly, you (Daeglan) were really focused on the T16 controls as if it was really a factor. Being shortstaffed, being roughly familiar with controls, or even having another pilot vouch for you are not good reasons for what happened either. I don't care how good of a bush pilot some Australian cattle rancher is, or if a fighter pilot says he can pick off kangaroo while flying through a canyon, you wouldn't give an untrained, unbattle tested child an F22 Raptor and have him join the battle.
I'm confident more happened off screen per the novel. I'm sure saving Leia gave him some respect. And they probably talked to Han too. It's just the reasons given in the movie are total BS and make absolutely no sense. He'd be a bigger liability to the rebels than a threat to the Empire. ****, the reason the T16 was in the garage and not used by Luke was that he had just recently damaged it flying like an idiot. "He's a great pilot, he has a T16 he flies around and shoots rats with. I mean, he did almost crash the thing and damaged it in a reckless stunt, but I'm sure he's be a great help against a gigantic space station and dozens of tie fighters."
You may want to rewatch the scene however. You seem to think Biggs vouched for him...but if you pay attention, that makes no sense. Luke and crew deliver the plans, they have the briefing, next we know Luke is suited up in the hanger, and that is when Luke and Biggs run into each other. They are both incredibly surprised to even be seeing each other. You see, Biggs vouching for him occurs literally seconds before they enter the cockpits to start the attack. A commanding officer questions the validity of Luke joining the mission, another pilot (that just joined the rebellion in the last couple days) says Luke is a good pilot because he flies in canyons and shoots rats (references the commanding officer most likely doesn't understand), and the commanding officer just goes with it.
This, this is ultimately the biggest issue I have with the prequels. They were so bad, so loaded with nonsensical junk that they make me now look more critical at the original trilogy and start seeing these flaws that I overlooked for 30+ years.