Why was Finn even wearing the jacket in the first place?

Why was Finn even wearing the jacket in the first place? - Man Wearing Brown Leather Jacket Holding Black Android Smartphone With Brown Case

So in Star Wars: The Force Awakens, Finn survives the crash of the TIE Fighter on Jakku.

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He's alive, he's shaken, and he's also drenched in sweat. He is only able to retrieve Poe's jacket from the wreckage and he's ditched his Storm Trooper outfit as much as possible, both to avoid appearing like a Storm Trooper but also, I have to assume, because it's really hot and that can't be comfortable

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When he gets to the village he's now wearing the jacket

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I don't understand why he put on the jacket. I mean, I get the plot reason - BB-8 needs to recognize something from Poe to move the plot forward - but it's a million degrees outside. He's still sweating profusely in the jacket in a later scene

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If it's oppressively hot outside why would you put a jacket on to begin with? Just to blend in? Maybe I'm a huge wimp but it seems to me that ditching the jacket to begin with would have been the more logical move.

Later in the movie he's in environments that aren't deserts, and even the snowy surface of the Starkiller base, so I guess it's good he kept the jacket but is there a reason other than plot convenience to have donned the jacket on Jakku?

Note that I may be overthinking this because I just went through a record summer of heat in Texas...



Best Answer

Maybe I'm a huge wimp but it seems to me that ditching the jacket to begin with would have been the more logical move.

Then you wouldn't survive long!

Finn keeps the jacket to shield himself from the harmful rays of the sun.

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He also uses it to protect himself in a sandstorm.

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I don't understand why he put on the jacket.

Because that's the easiest way to carry it. I guess he could have slung it over his arm, but he's pretty dehydrated and tired - wearing it is the simplest option. He needs to keep the jacket in order to survive.




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How did Finn get Poes jacket?

Poe gives him the name \u201cFinn\u201d and while they make a good team, they are shot down and crash on Jakku. Finn is unable to find Poe, believing he died in the crash. He finds Poe's jacket and puts it on while trying to figure out where to go.

Why did Finn leave the first order?

Finn gets to know Jannah, who reveals that she and the entire settlement on Kef Bir are former Stormtroopers who mutinied after a battle. Finn tells her that he left the First Order as well, and suggests that the Force brought them together and caused them all to leave the Order.

How old is Finn Star Wars?

By the time Finn was ready for his first combat mission as a stormtrooper in The Force Awakens, it was the year 34 ABY, making him somewhere around the age of 23.



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More answers regarding why was Finn even wearing the jacket in the first place?

Answer 2

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This picture shows why he would wear a jacket. The jacket not only will protect him more than the clothes he has on, it also makes him stick out less. If being a storm trooper is the only thing he has know then will try his best to not look like one. It is the only thing he has with him. He could sell or trade it off for something he wants more.

Answer 3

Keep in mind that jackets don't keep us warm by generating heat. They keep us warm by trapping the energy level inside, and isolating from the outside - in a word, insulation. Insulation keeps energy/heat from transferring from what is contained withing and what is outside.

A thermos container will keep your coffee hot for a long period of time. Coffee left in a well-insulated container will still be very warm, at least, the next day.

But the opposite is also true. If I store something cooler, within, it prevents the greater heat from outside from getting into the container. That same well-insulated thermos container, if filled with ice water, will still have ice cubes present (but smaller/more melted) the next day.

On a cold, comfortable or hot day, trapping that body heat, 98.6 degrees F/37 C. is going to make the person hotter, less comfortable or maybe even endanger the person wearing the jacket because it keeps their body heat from dissipating. But what if the temperature outside was 110, 120, 125 degrees with direct sunlight? Then the jacket would keep the hotter outside air from adding even more heat than what is trapped inside, and would also protect the body from other types of sun-related energy, like UV.

Of course this doesn't take into account things like sweat evaporation, but I just wanted to plant the idea that, when the outside is 20 degrees hotter than body heat, maybe trapping that body heat at body heat temperature isn't always a horrible thing.

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