@gibbysreturn@lynziekate@HiMyNameIsJC_ That’s the most foolish statement l’ve ever heard. Maybe Chick should’ve tried to, oh l don’t know, try to win the piston without cheating by not crashing into everyone on purpose!
@Ayanogami1 It was supposed to show is character development. Remember when McQueen only cared about winning and himself moreover wanting to work alone. Well he’s now selfless, humble, values teamwork and now has learned that there’s more to life than winning a piston cup.
Cars 2: McQueen didn’t think he was better than Mater. He was indignant that Mater cost him the victory in Japan due to getting distracted by Holley Shiftwell. Honestly McQueen getting annoyed was valid. Mater as a friend just left him there for his race because the tow truck believe he was going on a date with Holley which made everything discombobulating. Plus this sequel wasn’t even about McQueen. It was about Mater
Cars 3: He didn’t blow off training. He trained with Cruz the old school way outside. I assume that’s how it was in McQueen’s generation whereas with Cruz, her generation’s technique with training was through gadgets and technology. Something McQueen was inexperienced at and wasn’t used too
In the opening scene of Cars 3, you literally see McQueen training in the location where he was admired by Doc’s greatness.
Also l think you misunderstood the moral of the film. It wasn’t about McQueen learning to be more humble. He grew out of that. It was about him learning to accept the fact that he’s not as GOATED as used to be in his prime years and that he should make way for the new generation which included Cruz Ramirez
Also about the ‘training’ argument again. If McQueen thought he was too good for training, then he wouldn’t have been a contender for the piston cup in his rookie season and he wouldn’t have apparently got those 7 titles. Hard work beats talent. If you don’t put in work, you won’t be successful. That applies to real life.