@TAMAnnoying I agree with you entirely on this point of Luke had to do a lot of training to life even a few rocks, let alone his ship from the swamp, while Rey can do anything because she's God.
I couldn't find it if I'd mentioned it here, but basically Star Wars as a whole, and other movies, are The Hero's Journey and honestly, as I've read this topic, this has made me think that that formula was so enstilled inside Luke and Anki's tales that perhaps that's what they expected from Rey's? That's both a good and bad thing - one it means you have a literal formula that works, and two it means you have people who are either bored or know exactly what to expect. Don't fix what isn't broken, but how to branch out and change it slowly. With Rey it seems like none of it is following the arcs of that Journey.
I haven't seen any of the Rey movies, but Luke's three movies specifically tied into all three phases of the Journey nicely.
I still think Rey is a character built as a self-insert for girls to be happy about about because it's a girl in a Disney film (go up to my post #86 or something around there where I outlined it). But the point I want to make in this post is how the film isn't following the Journey it seems like - or isn't in an obvious way we can follow. As someone pointed out, most characters have just one film to make their case to the audience, which is true, but Luke had a complete adventure and a firm picture to the audience of what kind of person and character he was after movie numero uno. If we're this divided two movies in, then she's not made her case as firmly as he did.
And on a complete side note, I recently saw an interesting Film Theory episode about how Star Wars itself borrowed ideas from an existing comic book and how the elements are so strikingly similar that fans of that series were outraged at the time. Supposedly the actual creators of the comic said something akin to being flattered.