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- 4 Aug 2014
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You see nit-picking, I see illogical scenes which I know were only written that way so that a really fantastic stunt could be performed when there are more logical ways to get to the same point i.e. his gun jams or is damaged by enemy - maybe some extra dialogue on looking inside the plane "they already have the hostage, I'll have to be careful and take them out hand to hand" etc, thats just a few logical ways to get to the same Wing Suit stunt end-game. Again with the C-130, just a single line of dialogue when he's in the Cafe could explain it away "great job with the rescue Falcon, the recovery team are nearly done at the C-130 crash site" etc. Again it;'s not hard to get to the same point but far more logically.
Not wanting to use guns in a plane is an EXTREMELY common trope, especially with a hostage situation. We saw what happened the moment the bullets started flying as the pilot gets hit. Why do you need this literally called out to you?
Oh and a TV series not bothering to mention an extremely trivial piece of information that could have been discussed and handled off camera doesn’t make it illogical. That’s not what the word means.
Do you need them to tell you that Falcon brushed his teeth in the morning, that’s why his smile was so white?