Aber es könnte auch so gewesen sein, wie ich es interpretiere.
@Luther Voss
Wieso war Finn nicht bereit sich zu opfern? Ich fand, dass er endlich diesen Punkt erreicht hatte, Selbstlosigkeit. Er war endlich angekommen, sah sich als Rebell und von daher und hätte imo sogar perfekt gepasst: er opfert sich für die, die er liebt und schützt sie dadurch. Was dann ja Luke erledigen musste.
Er wollte sich aus Wut opfern er wollte unbedingt etwas beweisen und das wäre eben genau der falsche Weg gewesen.
„When Finn decides to push on, he has some catching up to do with the other protagonists. He is ready to fight for the cause, but hasn't let go of his hate yet. So Rose saving Finn is the last lesson he needed to get on the same page as Poe and Rey.“
Zudem kann ich zusätzlich auch noch hier vorbehaltlos zustimmen, Poe hat den Angriff nicht umsonst schon abgebrochen ( etwas das er während TLJ auf die harte Tour lernen musste und sich somit seinen Anführer Status verdiente ), und Rose konnte nach dem Verlust ihrerer Schwester nicht schon wieder jemanden wichtigen verlieren.
„I’ve seen a lot of folks around the Internet asking this question with the apparent assumption that Finn’s suicide run would have worked. I’m … not sure what to think about that. Poe (you know, the guy who’s actually an experienced pilot) says it’s too late, we spend several shots on Finn’s speeder disintegrating, the whole theme of the movie, militarily, is that grandly heroic improbable gestures don’t actually work, every time a pilot in Star Wars says, “I can make it!” or words to that effect, they’re wrong, and yet when Finn insists, “I can make it!” these fans seem to … believe him. I feel like this says uncomplimentary things about their ability to understand what they see in movies.
So that’s the first answer: Rose saves Finn because his plan wasn’t going to work, and everybody but him could see it. She didn’t screw up his noble destruction of the battering ram cannon. She saved him from disintegrating uselessly in its beam.
If you’re asking why Rose wouldn’t be comfortable
letting him die uselessly, you missed one of the important things the Canto Bight fathier sequence does. Rose gets her wish to put a fist through the town, but it doesn’t bring her any satisfaction (obvious parallel to Rey in the cave is obvious). The thing that is
satisfying is freeing the fathier. That’s a character change moment for her. This is the payoff of that change.
If you’re asking why someone who has just gone through the emotional trauma of losing a beloved sister and then gone through a harrowing high-stakes mission full of adrenaline and more mortal peril than she’s probably ever directly experienced in her life could find herself running high on emotions for the kind, courageous, recently-proved-his-integrity, devastatingly handsome celebrity with whom she shared every second of that mortal peril … I cannot help you. Get off the Internet this second and don’t come back until you know more about what it means to be human.
If you’re asking why Finn reciprocates Rose’s feelings, go watch the movie again, because he doesn’t. Perhaps by Episode IX he will; there’s lots to like about Rose. But in that moment, he’s as surprised as anyone else.“