gigemags-99 said:
Eject was the wrong word to use. More like bail out...Flipping the plane was not the only way to do this. He could have bailed out while gliding. Like I said, it was obvious he contemplated bailing out, just wondering why he didn't.
You don't have to flip the plane, but you do have to turn so you can get out and slide down the wing to avoid hitting the tail. He was way too low to use a parachute in any case.
Nolan doesn't explain things. That's just his deal. We don't all know the ins and outs of ditching a WWI fighter, but where most directors would just walk you through it, Nolan doesn't. That's just his thing.
What the movie does tell is from context, though, is that ditching is VERY dangerous. We saw the previous pilot opt to crash land in the ocean instead of doing so. And, as you said, we saw Hardy consider it and then opt to land instead. That should be enough for us, as viewers, to get the message. It doesn't really matter that we don't understand exactly why, only that we saw him choose landing over ditching.