Why did Spider-Man take a detour to Dorset?Where did Iron Man 2 take place?When did Spider-Man get his mechanical web thrower?How did Spider-Man do it?Who is the water villain shown in Spider-Man: Far From Home trailer?When do events of Spider-man: Far From Home happen?How did Spider-Man get his powers in the MCU?What do I need to see before Spider-Man: Far From Home?What was the significance of Spider-Man: Far From Home being an MCU Phase 3 film instead of a Phase 4 film?By the time of Spider-Man: FFH, is the cause of the “blip” widely known to the public?

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Why did Spider-Man take a detour to Dorset?


Where did Iron Man 2 take place?When did Spider-Man get his mechanical web thrower?How did Spider-Man do it?Who is the water villain shown in Spider-Man: Far From Home trailer?When do events of Spider-man: Far From Home happen?How did Spider-Man get his powers in the MCU?What do I need to see before Spider-Man: Far From Home?What was the significance of Spider-Man: Far From Home being an MCU Phase 3 film instead of a Phase 4 film?By the time of Spider-Man: FFH, is the cause of the “blip” widely known to the public?






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36















In Spider-Man: Far From Home, Spider-Man ends up in the Netherlands. He then calls his friend Happy who picks him up in a private jet and they fly to London to fight the bad guy.



However before they reach London there is a scene where the jet flies over the Dorset coast (there is even a caption saying Dorset so there is no dispute there). What were they doing in Dorset? The movie gives no explanation as to why they needed to go there, and Dorset is not on the way to London from the Netherlands (in fact the quickest route to Dorset would involve pretty much flying over London).



The scene depicts the plane flying over the Old Harry Rocks in a south west direction (old harry points North East). Therefore I think the flight path would have looked something similar to this:
enter image description here



I can't remember the name of the dutch town so I have assumed Amsterdam.










share|improve this question



















  • 14





    My theories so far: 1. They needed time to print his new superhero costume so they flew to Brittany first just to kill time. 2. It wasn't actually Dorset, instead it was just one of the Bad Guy's illusions. 3. During the 5 years of the 'blip' a no deal Brexit has occurred and entry into the country from Europe is now illegal. They have to smuggle themselves in across the quietest bit of coast they could find, even though this substantially lengthens their journey. However this raises the question as to how his class mates were able to get there.

    – Stacey
    Jul 14 at 20:22







  • 13





    this question reminds me of the Robin Hood film with Kevin Costner where Robin Hood lands at the white cliffs of Dover, walks along Hadrian's Wall, and arrives at Sherwood Forest

    – Aaron F
    Jul 15 at 9:26






  • 4





    Because the Dorset coast is lovely! Sod the fate of London, lets go see some fantastic examples of coastal erosion, they were supposed to be on an educational trip after all!

    – Crazy Dino
    Jul 15 at 10:09






  • 2





    The real question is how did Happy get from New York to Europe so quickly? They even established at the beginning of the film that it's an ~8 hour flight (though that was to Venice, not Amsterdam, still probably comparable). Probably a bit less than that in his super fancy Stark Industries plane, but still not a short trip. But the movie made it seem like he made it there, what, maybe an hour later? Quickly enough that the entire incident (starting from the morning after Peter gave up Edith) took place in one day. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 16:46






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman: it’s a really fast plane! So fast they overshot London and didn’t realise and turn around until they were over the Atlantic and heading for Mexico!

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 17:29

















36















In Spider-Man: Far From Home, Spider-Man ends up in the Netherlands. He then calls his friend Happy who picks him up in a private jet and they fly to London to fight the bad guy.



However before they reach London there is a scene where the jet flies over the Dorset coast (there is even a caption saying Dorset so there is no dispute there). What were they doing in Dorset? The movie gives no explanation as to why they needed to go there, and Dorset is not on the way to London from the Netherlands (in fact the quickest route to Dorset would involve pretty much flying over London).



The scene depicts the plane flying over the Old Harry Rocks in a south west direction (old harry points North East). Therefore I think the flight path would have looked something similar to this:
enter image description here



I can't remember the name of the dutch town so I have assumed Amsterdam.










share|improve this question



















  • 14





    My theories so far: 1. They needed time to print his new superhero costume so they flew to Brittany first just to kill time. 2. It wasn't actually Dorset, instead it was just one of the Bad Guy's illusions. 3. During the 5 years of the 'blip' a no deal Brexit has occurred and entry into the country from Europe is now illegal. They have to smuggle themselves in across the quietest bit of coast they could find, even though this substantially lengthens their journey. However this raises the question as to how his class mates were able to get there.

    – Stacey
    Jul 14 at 20:22







  • 13





    this question reminds me of the Robin Hood film with Kevin Costner where Robin Hood lands at the white cliffs of Dover, walks along Hadrian's Wall, and arrives at Sherwood Forest

    – Aaron F
    Jul 15 at 9:26






  • 4





    Because the Dorset coast is lovely! Sod the fate of London, lets go see some fantastic examples of coastal erosion, they were supposed to be on an educational trip after all!

    – Crazy Dino
    Jul 15 at 10:09






  • 2





    The real question is how did Happy get from New York to Europe so quickly? They even established at the beginning of the film that it's an ~8 hour flight (though that was to Venice, not Amsterdam, still probably comparable). Probably a bit less than that in his super fancy Stark Industries plane, but still not a short trip. But the movie made it seem like he made it there, what, maybe an hour later? Quickly enough that the entire incident (starting from the morning after Peter gave up Edith) took place in one day. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 16:46






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman: it’s a really fast plane! So fast they overshot London and didn’t realise and turn around until they were over the Atlantic and heading for Mexico!

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 17:29













36












36








36


2






In Spider-Man: Far From Home, Spider-Man ends up in the Netherlands. He then calls his friend Happy who picks him up in a private jet and they fly to London to fight the bad guy.



However before they reach London there is a scene where the jet flies over the Dorset coast (there is even a caption saying Dorset so there is no dispute there). What were they doing in Dorset? The movie gives no explanation as to why they needed to go there, and Dorset is not on the way to London from the Netherlands (in fact the quickest route to Dorset would involve pretty much flying over London).



The scene depicts the plane flying over the Old Harry Rocks in a south west direction (old harry points North East). Therefore I think the flight path would have looked something similar to this:
enter image description here



I can't remember the name of the dutch town so I have assumed Amsterdam.










share|improve this question
















In Spider-Man: Far From Home, Spider-Man ends up in the Netherlands. He then calls his friend Happy who picks him up in a private jet and they fly to London to fight the bad guy.



However before they reach London there is a scene where the jet flies over the Dorset coast (there is even a caption saying Dorset so there is no dispute there). What were they doing in Dorset? The movie gives no explanation as to why they needed to go there, and Dorset is not on the way to London from the Netherlands (in fact the quickest route to Dorset would involve pretty much flying over London).



The scene depicts the plane flying over the Old Harry Rocks in a south west direction (old harry points North East). Therefore I think the flight path would have looked something similar to this:
enter image description here



I can't remember the name of the dutch town so I have assumed Amsterdam.







marvel-cinematic-universe spider-man-far-from-home






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 15 at 17:19







Stacey

















asked Jul 14 at 19:41









StaceyStacey

1812 silver badges5 bronze badges




1812 silver badges5 bronze badges







  • 14





    My theories so far: 1. They needed time to print his new superhero costume so they flew to Brittany first just to kill time. 2. It wasn't actually Dorset, instead it was just one of the Bad Guy's illusions. 3. During the 5 years of the 'blip' a no deal Brexit has occurred and entry into the country from Europe is now illegal. They have to smuggle themselves in across the quietest bit of coast they could find, even though this substantially lengthens their journey. However this raises the question as to how his class mates were able to get there.

    – Stacey
    Jul 14 at 20:22







  • 13





    this question reminds me of the Robin Hood film with Kevin Costner where Robin Hood lands at the white cliffs of Dover, walks along Hadrian's Wall, and arrives at Sherwood Forest

    – Aaron F
    Jul 15 at 9:26






  • 4





    Because the Dorset coast is lovely! Sod the fate of London, lets go see some fantastic examples of coastal erosion, they were supposed to be on an educational trip after all!

    – Crazy Dino
    Jul 15 at 10:09






  • 2





    The real question is how did Happy get from New York to Europe so quickly? They even established at the beginning of the film that it's an ~8 hour flight (though that was to Venice, not Amsterdam, still probably comparable). Probably a bit less than that in his super fancy Stark Industries plane, but still not a short trip. But the movie made it seem like he made it there, what, maybe an hour later? Quickly enough that the entire incident (starting from the morning after Peter gave up Edith) took place in one day. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 16:46






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman: it’s a really fast plane! So fast they overshot London and didn’t realise and turn around until they were over the Atlantic and heading for Mexico!

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 17:29












  • 14





    My theories so far: 1. They needed time to print his new superhero costume so they flew to Brittany first just to kill time. 2. It wasn't actually Dorset, instead it was just one of the Bad Guy's illusions. 3. During the 5 years of the 'blip' a no deal Brexit has occurred and entry into the country from Europe is now illegal. They have to smuggle themselves in across the quietest bit of coast they could find, even though this substantially lengthens their journey. However this raises the question as to how his class mates were able to get there.

    – Stacey
    Jul 14 at 20:22







  • 13





    this question reminds me of the Robin Hood film with Kevin Costner where Robin Hood lands at the white cliffs of Dover, walks along Hadrian's Wall, and arrives at Sherwood Forest

    – Aaron F
    Jul 15 at 9:26






  • 4





    Because the Dorset coast is lovely! Sod the fate of London, lets go see some fantastic examples of coastal erosion, they were supposed to be on an educational trip after all!

    – Crazy Dino
    Jul 15 at 10:09






  • 2





    The real question is how did Happy get from New York to Europe so quickly? They even established at the beginning of the film that it's an ~8 hour flight (though that was to Venice, not Amsterdam, still probably comparable). Probably a bit less than that in his super fancy Stark Industries plane, but still not a short trip. But the movie made it seem like he made it there, what, maybe an hour later? Quickly enough that the entire incident (starting from the morning after Peter gave up Edith) took place in one day. Seems a bit unlikely.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 16:46






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman: it’s a really fast plane! So fast they overshot London and didn’t realise and turn around until they were over the Atlantic and heading for Mexico!

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 17:29







14




14





My theories so far: 1. They needed time to print his new superhero costume so they flew to Brittany first just to kill time. 2. It wasn't actually Dorset, instead it was just one of the Bad Guy's illusions. 3. During the 5 years of the 'blip' a no deal Brexit has occurred and entry into the country from Europe is now illegal. They have to smuggle themselves in across the quietest bit of coast they could find, even though this substantially lengthens their journey. However this raises the question as to how his class mates were able to get there.

– Stacey
Jul 14 at 20:22






My theories so far: 1. They needed time to print his new superhero costume so they flew to Brittany first just to kill time. 2. It wasn't actually Dorset, instead it was just one of the Bad Guy's illusions. 3. During the 5 years of the 'blip' a no deal Brexit has occurred and entry into the country from Europe is now illegal. They have to smuggle themselves in across the quietest bit of coast they could find, even though this substantially lengthens their journey. However this raises the question as to how his class mates were able to get there.

– Stacey
Jul 14 at 20:22





13




13





this question reminds me of the Robin Hood film with Kevin Costner where Robin Hood lands at the white cliffs of Dover, walks along Hadrian's Wall, and arrives at Sherwood Forest

– Aaron F
Jul 15 at 9:26





this question reminds me of the Robin Hood film with Kevin Costner where Robin Hood lands at the white cliffs of Dover, walks along Hadrian's Wall, and arrives at Sherwood Forest

– Aaron F
Jul 15 at 9:26




4




4





Because the Dorset coast is lovely! Sod the fate of London, lets go see some fantastic examples of coastal erosion, they were supposed to be on an educational trip after all!

– Crazy Dino
Jul 15 at 10:09





Because the Dorset coast is lovely! Sod the fate of London, lets go see some fantastic examples of coastal erosion, they were supposed to be on an educational trip after all!

– Crazy Dino
Jul 15 at 10:09




2




2





The real question is how did Happy get from New York to Europe so quickly? They even established at the beginning of the film that it's an ~8 hour flight (though that was to Venice, not Amsterdam, still probably comparable). Probably a bit less than that in his super fancy Stark Industries plane, but still not a short trip. But the movie made it seem like he made it there, what, maybe an hour later? Quickly enough that the entire incident (starting from the morning after Peter gave up Edith) took place in one day. Seems a bit unlikely.

– Darrel Hoffman
Jul 15 at 16:46





The real question is how did Happy get from New York to Europe so quickly? They even established at the beginning of the film that it's an ~8 hour flight (though that was to Venice, not Amsterdam, still probably comparable). Probably a bit less than that in his super fancy Stark Industries plane, but still not a short trip. But the movie made it seem like he made it there, what, maybe an hour later? Quickly enough that the entire incident (starting from the morning after Peter gave up Edith) took place in one day. Seems a bit unlikely.

– Darrel Hoffman
Jul 15 at 16:46




2




2





@DarrelHoffman: it’s a really fast plane! So fast they overshot London and didn’t realise and turn around until they were over the Atlantic and heading for Mexico!

– Paul D. Waite
Jul 15 at 17:29





@DarrelHoffman: it’s a really fast plane! So fast they overshot London and didn’t realise and turn around until they were over the Atlantic and heading for Mexico!

– Paul D. Waite
Jul 15 at 17:29










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















34














Unclear.



This is most likely a goof or an overlooked detail. The only source on Google that mentions "spiderman far from home dorset" is IMDB, and here's what they have to say,




When the Stark Jet enters the UK, the caption states the Dorset coastline. Flying from Amsterdam to London you would cross the eastern coast of England, entering over the coast of Essex but the Dorset Chalk Cliffs are on the South West coastline which is 160 miles away.




Spider-Man: Far from Home (2019) Goofs




I strongly doubt there's anything more to it because of how tiny a detail it is.






share|improve this answer




















  • 35





    The chalk cliffs are fairly well-known, and often used in cinema to present a recognisable "you are now entering England" moment to international audiences (of course, the most famous ones would be the White Cliffs of Dover, which are not in Dorset, but hey, they look very similar). My guess would be that this clip was included for a similar reason. It's similar to how the Eiffel Tower seems to be visible from every window in Paris, according to movies.

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 8:36






  • 8





    @Chronocidal To be fair, to make Dover plausible, all you'd need is "the official flight corridors go this way" or "minor diversion for traffic/noise abatement" or something. Contrary to common belief, most civil flights don't just beeline point-to-point (even after accounting for great circle routing).

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 9:58






  • 4





    @CptEric First, Dorset is highly unlikely to be "over" any flight path - it features Lilliput, not Laputa. Second, with Dorset being on the South-West coast of Great Britain, it is only slightly less likely to be under any East Coast flight plans.

    – Chronocidal
    Jul 15 at 12:23







  • 2





    Might be a good question for Aviation.SE, but Heathrow is west of London, and you might want to approach it from further west so as to avoid flying over the city, so doing a loop over Dorset might not be all that uncommon. It does mean most of your flight would be over the Channel rather than over land, which is another possible advantage.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 14:49






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman Prevailing winds in the UK are from the west and aircraft typically land into the wind. On most days, most arrivals into Heathrow come in over central London. Even with an easterly wind, one wouldn't need to travel 150-200km beyond the destination just to turn around, which would almost double the distance flown from Amsterdam. As it happens, flights are landing at Heathrow from the west right now, and flights from the east are beginning their 180-degree turn roughly over Marlow, which means they only get about 20km west of Heathrow.

    – David Richerby
    Jul 15 at 16:16


















20














Airspace is not a free-for-all. Being a responsible pilot, Happy (or, more likely, the AI that's actually flying the plane) would have made sure to avoid restricted airspace, which could be much more expansive in 2023/4 given the damage caused by multiple alien invasions, and Britain's presumably-implemented-by-then exit from the European Union.



Out-of-universe, it might have been be an intentional joke about tourists mis-identifying landmarks (like when Flash temporarily confuses Happy by referring to Tower Bridge as London Bridge in a livestream). The location captions are used for comic effect previously, when they appear as a subtitle to the Dutch gentleman telling Happy which town Peter is in.



However, I think the coastline shown is indeed Dorset, rather than Dover, so it's probably not a joke.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    @Stacey yeah we've probably got a defence system built right into the chalk.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 12:40






  • 1





    @Oliver_C his goal is to safely reach London while no attack is happening. If he were to fly in restricted airspace he would be “attacking” England and would be the biggest threat at the time. However, a little plane isn’t going to do much damage when you have a giant monster over London about to destroy everything. After the monster attacked, he was able to land in London without worrying about the military.

    – Grant Garrison
    Jul 15 at 21:24






  • 1





    @PaulD.Waite - Why would east of London be restricted airspace, but not London itself? If there are heightened security concerns, why leave the south border open? And one would think that during an attack on London, the authorities would tighten security, making it even harder to enter London airspace without permission.

    – Oliver_C
    Jul 16 at 7:16







  • 1





    It might've still been a joke on people confusing Dorset and Dover - i.e. they got so confused that they flew hundreds of miles out of their way just to get the wrong white cliffs.

    – Martha
    Jul 16 at 16:46






  • 1





    @Oliver_C A no deal brexit wouldn't necessarily mean we would be enemies but we would have left the eu aviation market. bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-45019603

    – Stacey
    Jul 19 at 6:05





















2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









34














Unclear.



This is most likely a goof or an overlooked detail. The only source on Google that mentions "spiderman far from home dorset" is IMDB, and here's what they have to say,




When the Stark Jet enters the UK, the caption states the Dorset coastline. Flying from Amsterdam to London you would cross the eastern coast of England, entering over the coast of Essex but the Dorset Chalk Cliffs are on the South West coastline which is 160 miles away.




Spider-Man: Far from Home (2019) Goofs




I strongly doubt there's anything more to it because of how tiny a detail it is.






share|improve this answer




















  • 35





    The chalk cliffs are fairly well-known, and often used in cinema to present a recognisable "you are now entering England" moment to international audiences (of course, the most famous ones would be the White Cliffs of Dover, which are not in Dorset, but hey, they look very similar). My guess would be that this clip was included for a similar reason. It's similar to how the Eiffel Tower seems to be visible from every window in Paris, according to movies.

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 8:36






  • 8





    @Chronocidal To be fair, to make Dover plausible, all you'd need is "the official flight corridors go this way" or "minor diversion for traffic/noise abatement" or something. Contrary to common belief, most civil flights don't just beeline point-to-point (even after accounting for great circle routing).

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 9:58






  • 4





    @CptEric First, Dorset is highly unlikely to be "over" any flight path - it features Lilliput, not Laputa. Second, with Dorset being on the South-West coast of Great Britain, it is only slightly less likely to be under any East Coast flight plans.

    – Chronocidal
    Jul 15 at 12:23







  • 2





    Might be a good question for Aviation.SE, but Heathrow is west of London, and you might want to approach it from further west so as to avoid flying over the city, so doing a loop over Dorset might not be all that uncommon. It does mean most of your flight would be over the Channel rather than over land, which is another possible advantage.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 14:49






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman Prevailing winds in the UK are from the west and aircraft typically land into the wind. On most days, most arrivals into Heathrow come in over central London. Even with an easterly wind, one wouldn't need to travel 150-200km beyond the destination just to turn around, which would almost double the distance flown from Amsterdam. As it happens, flights are landing at Heathrow from the west right now, and flights from the east are beginning their 180-degree turn roughly over Marlow, which means they only get about 20km west of Heathrow.

    – David Richerby
    Jul 15 at 16:16















34














Unclear.



This is most likely a goof or an overlooked detail. The only source on Google that mentions "spiderman far from home dorset" is IMDB, and here's what they have to say,




When the Stark Jet enters the UK, the caption states the Dorset coastline. Flying from Amsterdam to London you would cross the eastern coast of England, entering over the coast of Essex but the Dorset Chalk Cliffs are on the South West coastline which is 160 miles away.




Spider-Man: Far from Home (2019) Goofs




I strongly doubt there's anything more to it because of how tiny a detail it is.






share|improve this answer




















  • 35





    The chalk cliffs are fairly well-known, and often used in cinema to present a recognisable "you are now entering England" moment to international audiences (of course, the most famous ones would be the White Cliffs of Dover, which are not in Dorset, but hey, they look very similar). My guess would be that this clip was included for a similar reason. It's similar to how the Eiffel Tower seems to be visible from every window in Paris, according to movies.

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 8:36






  • 8





    @Chronocidal To be fair, to make Dover plausible, all you'd need is "the official flight corridors go this way" or "minor diversion for traffic/noise abatement" or something. Contrary to common belief, most civil flights don't just beeline point-to-point (even after accounting for great circle routing).

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 9:58






  • 4





    @CptEric First, Dorset is highly unlikely to be "over" any flight path - it features Lilliput, not Laputa. Second, with Dorset being on the South-West coast of Great Britain, it is only slightly less likely to be under any East Coast flight plans.

    – Chronocidal
    Jul 15 at 12:23







  • 2





    Might be a good question for Aviation.SE, but Heathrow is west of London, and you might want to approach it from further west so as to avoid flying over the city, so doing a loop over Dorset might not be all that uncommon. It does mean most of your flight would be over the Channel rather than over land, which is another possible advantage.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 14:49






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman Prevailing winds in the UK are from the west and aircraft typically land into the wind. On most days, most arrivals into Heathrow come in over central London. Even with an easterly wind, one wouldn't need to travel 150-200km beyond the destination just to turn around, which would almost double the distance flown from Amsterdam. As it happens, flights are landing at Heathrow from the west right now, and flights from the east are beginning their 180-degree turn roughly over Marlow, which means they only get about 20km west of Heathrow.

    – David Richerby
    Jul 15 at 16:16













34












34








34







Unclear.



This is most likely a goof or an overlooked detail. The only source on Google that mentions "spiderman far from home dorset" is IMDB, and here's what they have to say,




When the Stark Jet enters the UK, the caption states the Dorset coastline. Flying from Amsterdam to London you would cross the eastern coast of England, entering over the coast of Essex but the Dorset Chalk Cliffs are on the South West coastline which is 160 miles away.




Spider-Man: Far from Home (2019) Goofs




I strongly doubt there's anything more to it because of how tiny a detail it is.






share|improve this answer















Unclear.



This is most likely a goof or an overlooked detail. The only source on Google that mentions "spiderman far from home dorset" is IMDB, and here's what they have to say,




When the Stark Jet enters the UK, the caption states the Dorset coastline. Flying from Amsterdam to London you would cross the eastern coast of England, entering over the coast of Essex but the Dorset Chalk Cliffs are on the South West coastline which is 160 miles away.




Spider-Man: Far from Home (2019) Goofs




I strongly doubt there's anything more to it because of how tiny a detail it is.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jul 15 at 16:04









Community

1




1










answered Jul 14 at 20:31









DaeronDaeron

7,8732 gold badges21 silver badges53 bronze badges




7,8732 gold badges21 silver badges53 bronze badges







  • 35





    The chalk cliffs are fairly well-known, and often used in cinema to present a recognisable "you are now entering England" moment to international audiences (of course, the most famous ones would be the White Cliffs of Dover, which are not in Dorset, but hey, they look very similar). My guess would be that this clip was included for a similar reason. It's similar to how the Eiffel Tower seems to be visible from every window in Paris, according to movies.

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 8:36






  • 8





    @Chronocidal To be fair, to make Dover plausible, all you'd need is "the official flight corridors go this way" or "minor diversion for traffic/noise abatement" or something. Contrary to common belief, most civil flights don't just beeline point-to-point (even after accounting for great circle routing).

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 9:58






  • 4





    @CptEric First, Dorset is highly unlikely to be "over" any flight path - it features Lilliput, not Laputa. Second, with Dorset being on the South-West coast of Great Britain, it is only slightly less likely to be under any East Coast flight plans.

    – Chronocidal
    Jul 15 at 12:23







  • 2





    Might be a good question for Aviation.SE, but Heathrow is west of London, and you might want to approach it from further west so as to avoid flying over the city, so doing a loop over Dorset might not be all that uncommon. It does mean most of your flight would be over the Channel rather than over land, which is another possible advantage.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 14:49






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman Prevailing winds in the UK are from the west and aircraft typically land into the wind. On most days, most arrivals into Heathrow come in over central London. Even with an easterly wind, one wouldn't need to travel 150-200km beyond the destination just to turn around, which would almost double the distance flown from Amsterdam. As it happens, flights are landing at Heathrow from the west right now, and flights from the east are beginning their 180-degree turn roughly over Marlow, which means they only get about 20km west of Heathrow.

    – David Richerby
    Jul 15 at 16:16












  • 35





    The chalk cliffs are fairly well-known, and often used in cinema to present a recognisable "you are now entering England" moment to international audiences (of course, the most famous ones would be the White Cliffs of Dover, which are not in Dorset, but hey, they look very similar). My guess would be that this clip was included for a similar reason. It's similar to how the Eiffel Tower seems to be visible from every window in Paris, according to movies.

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 8:36






  • 8





    @Chronocidal To be fair, to make Dover plausible, all you'd need is "the official flight corridors go this way" or "minor diversion for traffic/noise abatement" or something. Contrary to common belief, most civil flights don't just beeline point-to-point (even after accounting for great circle routing).

    – anaximander
    Jul 15 at 9:58






  • 4





    @CptEric First, Dorset is highly unlikely to be "over" any flight path - it features Lilliput, not Laputa. Second, with Dorset being on the South-West coast of Great Britain, it is only slightly less likely to be under any East Coast flight plans.

    – Chronocidal
    Jul 15 at 12:23







  • 2





    Might be a good question for Aviation.SE, but Heathrow is west of London, and you might want to approach it from further west so as to avoid flying over the city, so doing a loop over Dorset might not be all that uncommon. It does mean most of your flight would be over the Channel rather than over land, which is another possible advantage.

    – Darrel Hoffman
    Jul 15 at 14:49






  • 2





    @DarrelHoffman Prevailing winds in the UK are from the west and aircraft typically land into the wind. On most days, most arrivals into Heathrow come in over central London. Even with an easterly wind, one wouldn't need to travel 150-200km beyond the destination just to turn around, which would almost double the distance flown from Amsterdam. As it happens, flights are landing at Heathrow from the west right now, and flights from the east are beginning their 180-degree turn roughly over Marlow, which means they only get about 20km west of Heathrow.

    – David Richerby
    Jul 15 at 16:16







35




35





The chalk cliffs are fairly well-known, and often used in cinema to present a recognisable "you are now entering England" moment to international audiences (of course, the most famous ones would be the White Cliffs of Dover, which are not in Dorset, but hey, they look very similar). My guess would be that this clip was included for a similar reason. It's similar to how the Eiffel Tower seems to be visible from every window in Paris, according to movies.

– anaximander
Jul 15 at 8:36





The chalk cliffs are fairly well-known, and often used in cinema to present a recognisable "you are now entering England" moment to international audiences (of course, the most famous ones would be the White Cliffs of Dover, which are not in Dorset, but hey, they look very similar). My guess would be that this clip was included for a similar reason. It's similar to how the Eiffel Tower seems to be visible from every window in Paris, according to movies.

– anaximander
Jul 15 at 8:36




8




8





@Chronocidal To be fair, to make Dover plausible, all you'd need is "the official flight corridors go this way" or "minor diversion for traffic/noise abatement" or something. Contrary to common belief, most civil flights don't just beeline point-to-point (even after accounting for great circle routing).

– anaximander
Jul 15 at 9:58





@Chronocidal To be fair, to make Dover plausible, all you'd need is "the official flight corridors go this way" or "minor diversion for traffic/noise abatement" or something. Contrary to common belief, most civil flights don't just beeline point-to-point (even after accounting for great circle routing).

– anaximander
Jul 15 at 9:58




4




4





@CptEric First, Dorset is highly unlikely to be "over" any flight path - it features Lilliput, not Laputa. Second, with Dorset being on the South-West coast of Great Britain, it is only slightly less likely to be under any East Coast flight plans.

– Chronocidal
Jul 15 at 12:23






@CptEric First, Dorset is highly unlikely to be "over" any flight path - it features Lilliput, not Laputa. Second, with Dorset being on the South-West coast of Great Britain, it is only slightly less likely to be under any East Coast flight plans.

– Chronocidal
Jul 15 at 12:23





2




2





Might be a good question for Aviation.SE, but Heathrow is west of London, and you might want to approach it from further west so as to avoid flying over the city, so doing a loop over Dorset might not be all that uncommon. It does mean most of your flight would be over the Channel rather than over land, which is another possible advantage.

– Darrel Hoffman
Jul 15 at 14:49





Might be a good question for Aviation.SE, but Heathrow is west of London, and you might want to approach it from further west so as to avoid flying over the city, so doing a loop over Dorset might not be all that uncommon. It does mean most of your flight would be over the Channel rather than over land, which is another possible advantage.

– Darrel Hoffman
Jul 15 at 14:49




2




2





@DarrelHoffman Prevailing winds in the UK are from the west and aircraft typically land into the wind. On most days, most arrivals into Heathrow come in over central London. Even with an easterly wind, one wouldn't need to travel 150-200km beyond the destination just to turn around, which would almost double the distance flown from Amsterdam. As it happens, flights are landing at Heathrow from the west right now, and flights from the east are beginning their 180-degree turn roughly over Marlow, which means they only get about 20km west of Heathrow.

– David Richerby
Jul 15 at 16:16





@DarrelHoffman Prevailing winds in the UK are from the west and aircraft typically land into the wind. On most days, most arrivals into Heathrow come in over central London. Even with an easterly wind, one wouldn't need to travel 150-200km beyond the destination just to turn around, which would almost double the distance flown from Amsterdam. As it happens, flights are landing at Heathrow from the west right now, and flights from the east are beginning their 180-degree turn roughly over Marlow, which means they only get about 20km west of Heathrow.

– David Richerby
Jul 15 at 16:16













20














Airspace is not a free-for-all. Being a responsible pilot, Happy (or, more likely, the AI that's actually flying the plane) would have made sure to avoid restricted airspace, which could be much more expansive in 2023/4 given the damage caused by multiple alien invasions, and Britain's presumably-implemented-by-then exit from the European Union.



Out-of-universe, it might have been be an intentional joke about tourists mis-identifying landmarks (like when Flash temporarily confuses Happy by referring to Tower Bridge as London Bridge in a livestream). The location captions are used for comic effect previously, when they appear as a subtitle to the Dutch gentleman telling Happy which town Peter is in.



However, I think the coastline shown is indeed Dorset, rather than Dover, so it's probably not a joke.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    @Stacey yeah we've probably got a defence system built right into the chalk.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 12:40






  • 1





    @Oliver_C his goal is to safely reach London while no attack is happening. If he were to fly in restricted airspace he would be “attacking” England and would be the biggest threat at the time. However, a little plane isn’t going to do much damage when you have a giant monster over London about to destroy everything. After the monster attacked, he was able to land in London without worrying about the military.

    – Grant Garrison
    Jul 15 at 21:24






  • 1





    @PaulD.Waite - Why would east of London be restricted airspace, but not London itself? If there are heightened security concerns, why leave the south border open? And one would think that during an attack on London, the authorities would tighten security, making it even harder to enter London airspace without permission.

    – Oliver_C
    Jul 16 at 7:16







  • 1





    It might've still been a joke on people confusing Dorset and Dover - i.e. they got so confused that they flew hundreds of miles out of their way just to get the wrong white cliffs.

    – Martha
    Jul 16 at 16:46






  • 1





    @Oliver_C A no deal brexit wouldn't necessarily mean we would be enemies but we would have left the eu aviation market. bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-45019603

    – Stacey
    Jul 19 at 6:05
















20














Airspace is not a free-for-all. Being a responsible pilot, Happy (or, more likely, the AI that's actually flying the plane) would have made sure to avoid restricted airspace, which could be much more expansive in 2023/4 given the damage caused by multiple alien invasions, and Britain's presumably-implemented-by-then exit from the European Union.



Out-of-universe, it might have been be an intentional joke about tourists mis-identifying landmarks (like when Flash temporarily confuses Happy by referring to Tower Bridge as London Bridge in a livestream). The location captions are used for comic effect previously, when they appear as a subtitle to the Dutch gentleman telling Happy which town Peter is in.



However, I think the coastline shown is indeed Dorset, rather than Dover, so it's probably not a joke.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    @Stacey yeah we've probably got a defence system built right into the chalk.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 12:40






  • 1





    @Oliver_C his goal is to safely reach London while no attack is happening. If he were to fly in restricted airspace he would be “attacking” England and would be the biggest threat at the time. However, a little plane isn’t going to do much damage when you have a giant monster over London about to destroy everything. After the monster attacked, he was able to land in London without worrying about the military.

    – Grant Garrison
    Jul 15 at 21:24






  • 1





    @PaulD.Waite - Why would east of London be restricted airspace, but not London itself? If there are heightened security concerns, why leave the south border open? And one would think that during an attack on London, the authorities would tighten security, making it even harder to enter London airspace without permission.

    – Oliver_C
    Jul 16 at 7:16







  • 1





    It might've still been a joke on people confusing Dorset and Dover - i.e. they got so confused that they flew hundreds of miles out of their way just to get the wrong white cliffs.

    – Martha
    Jul 16 at 16:46






  • 1





    @Oliver_C A no deal brexit wouldn't necessarily mean we would be enemies but we would have left the eu aviation market. bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-45019603

    – Stacey
    Jul 19 at 6:05














20












20








20







Airspace is not a free-for-all. Being a responsible pilot, Happy (or, more likely, the AI that's actually flying the plane) would have made sure to avoid restricted airspace, which could be much more expansive in 2023/4 given the damage caused by multiple alien invasions, and Britain's presumably-implemented-by-then exit from the European Union.



Out-of-universe, it might have been be an intentional joke about tourists mis-identifying landmarks (like when Flash temporarily confuses Happy by referring to Tower Bridge as London Bridge in a livestream). The location captions are used for comic effect previously, when they appear as a subtitle to the Dutch gentleman telling Happy which town Peter is in.



However, I think the coastline shown is indeed Dorset, rather than Dover, so it's probably not a joke.






share|improve this answer















Airspace is not a free-for-all. Being a responsible pilot, Happy (or, more likely, the AI that's actually flying the plane) would have made sure to avoid restricted airspace, which could be much more expansive in 2023/4 given the damage caused by multiple alien invasions, and Britain's presumably-implemented-by-then exit from the European Union.



Out-of-universe, it might have been be an intentional joke about tourists mis-identifying landmarks (like when Flash temporarily confuses Happy by referring to Tower Bridge as London Bridge in a livestream). The location captions are used for comic effect previously, when they appear as a subtitle to the Dutch gentleman telling Happy which town Peter is in.



However, I think the coastline shown is indeed Dorset, rather than Dover, so it's probably not a joke.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jul 17 at 13:49

























answered Jul 15 at 10:00









Paul D. WaitePaul D. Waite

5185 silver badges15 bronze badges




5185 silver badges15 bronze badges







  • 2





    @Stacey yeah we've probably got a defence system built right into the chalk.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 12:40






  • 1





    @Oliver_C his goal is to safely reach London while no attack is happening. If he were to fly in restricted airspace he would be “attacking” England and would be the biggest threat at the time. However, a little plane isn’t going to do much damage when you have a giant monster over London about to destroy everything. After the monster attacked, he was able to land in London without worrying about the military.

    – Grant Garrison
    Jul 15 at 21:24






  • 1





    @PaulD.Waite - Why would east of London be restricted airspace, but not London itself? If there are heightened security concerns, why leave the south border open? And one would think that during an attack on London, the authorities would tighten security, making it even harder to enter London airspace without permission.

    – Oliver_C
    Jul 16 at 7:16







  • 1





    It might've still been a joke on people confusing Dorset and Dover - i.e. they got so confused that they flew hundreds of miles out of their way just to get the wrong white cliffs.

    – Martha
    Jul 16 at 16:46






  • 1





    @Oliver_C A no deal brexit wouldn't necessarily mean we would be enemies but we would have left the eu aviation market. bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-45019603

    – Stacey
    Jul 19 at 6:05













  • 2





    @Stacey yeah we've probably got a defence system built right into the chalk.

    – Paul D. Waite
    Jul 15 at 12:40






  • 1





    @Oliver_C his goal is to safely reach London while no attack is happening. If he were to fly in restricted airspace he would be “attacking” England and would be the biggest threat at the time. However, a little plane isn’t going to do much damage when you have a giant monster over London about to destroy everything. After the monster attacked, he was able to land in London without worrying about the military.

    – Grant Garrison
    Jul 15 at 21:24






  • 1





    @PaulD.Waite - Why would east of London be restricted airspace, but not London itself? If there are heightened security concerns, why leave the south border open? And one would think that during an attack on London, the authorities would tighten security, making it even harder to enter London airspace without permission.

    – Oliver_C
    Jul 16 at 7:16







  • 1





    It might've still been a joke on people confusing Dorset and Dover - i.e. they got so confused that they flew hundreds of miles out of their way just to get the wrong white cliffs.

    – Martha
    Jul 16 at 16:46






  • 1





    @Oliver_C A no deal brexit wouldn't necessarily mean we would be enemies but we would have left the eu aviation market. bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-45019603

    – Stacey
    Jul 19 at 6:05








2




2





@Stacey yeah we've probably got a defence system built right into the chalk.

– Paul D. Waite
Jul 15 at 12:40





@Stacey yeah we've probably got a defence system built right into the chalk.

– Paul D. Waite
Jul 15 at 12:40




1




1





@Oliver_C his goal is to safely reach London while no attack is happening. If he were to fly in restricted airspace he would be “attacking” England and would be the biggest threat at the time. However, a little plane isn’t going to do much damage when you have a giant monster over London about to destroy everything. After the monster attacked, he was able to land in London without worrying about the military.

– Grant Garrison
Jul 15 at 21:24





@Oliver_C his goal is to safely reach London while no attack is happening. If he were to fly in restricted airspace he would be “attacking” England and would be the biggest threat at the time. However, a little plane isn’t going to do much damage when you have a giant monster over London about to destroy everything. After the monster attacked, he was able to land in London without worrying about the military.

– Grant Garrison
Jul 15 at 21:24




1




1





@PaulD.Waite - Why would east of London be restricted airspace, but not London itself? If there are heightened security concerns, why leave the south border open? And one would think that during an attack on London, the authorities would tighten security, making it even harder to enter London airspace without permission.

– Oliver_C
Jul 16 at 7:16






@PaulD.Waite - Why would east of London be restricted airspace, but not London itself? If there are heightened security concerns, why leave the south border open? And one would think that during an attack on London, the authorities would tighten security, making it even harder to enter London airspace without permission.

– Oliver_C
Jul 16 at 7:16





1




1





It might've still been a joke on people confusing Dorset and Dover - i.e. they got so confused that they flew hundreds of miles out of their way just to get the wrong white cliffs.

– Martha
Jul 16 at 16:46





It might've still been a joke on people confusing Dorset and Dover - i.e. they got so confused that they flew hundreds of miles out of their way just to get the wrong white cliffs.

– Martha
Jul 16 at 16:46




1




1





@Oliver_C A no deal brexit wouldn't necessarily mean we would be enemies but we would have left the eu aviation market. bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-45019603

– Stacey
Jul 19 at 6:05






@Oliver_C A no deal brexit wouldn't necessarily mean we would be enemies but we would have left the eu aviation market. bbc.co.uk/news/amp/uk-45019603

– Stacey
Jul 19 at 6:05




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