Hell, I can go on with this movie's flaws.
Was it me or were the first two acts of the film basically "scene" -> "not-Empire arrive and screw stuff up" -> "scene"
Also, was it me or did Kylo Ren have the capacity to teleport at will? He was badly wounded, but managed to ambush Reye in the forest in the final act.00
Also, wasn't it a bit of an omega-tier coincidence that the forest planet had the the Resistance base on it when Han only landed there to hand them off to people who could get them to the Resistance?
Also, why should I care about the Republic being nuked? We never see them in this movie other than the being nuked bit, which is also a rip off of ANH.
Also, if the not-Empire had a giant evil space laser which could obliterate the New Republic homeworld, couldn't they just bloodlessly take over the New Republic? They can kill them at will, and they just nuked a major city world place.
Also, why are most of the character backstories either not-existent or just told to us?
Also, why bother have Poe 'die' when the X-Wing crashes when it's not only incredibly obvious that he's not going to have died (Hey, Finn, you found the jacket the dude was wearing OUTSIDE OF THE SHIP, SANS BLOOD OR BODY PARTS.) but it's actually way more interesting if he and Finn buddy up.
Also, if Finn was programmed from birth to be a soldier, why did he actually decide not to be evil? Act of God willed it?
Also, if the giant map that R2-D2 has is just the map of the galaxy, how on earth does it make sense that the fragment of map that BB-8 has is unknown?
Also, how does the Empire apparently have all of the rest of the map, if the not-Empire managed to get it? If the Empire was destroyed before Luke went into hiding, how could Empire archives give them the rest of the map?
Also, why does R2-D2 only have all of the map but one bit?
Also, how did the map fragment actually come into the possession of the old man from the Civilisation V cinematic, and what is he doing in this movie?
Also, how did Finn manage to wander through a totally empty desert and manage to find his way to a settlement?
Oh man, this movie's plot...
Han's death makes perfect sense. He is trying desperately to save his son and is deceived by his sons actions. Kylo is talking about how he might be too weak to actually kill Han and do his job but emotionally conflicted Han instead hears a son who is desperately trying to fight against the dark and come home.
Kylo Ren is on record as betraying Luke, Han's closest friend, and he'd just finished telling Padme that their son had too much Vader in him.
Han's death in this was him being an idiot and I can't feel bad for a character that acts that dumb. Han practically deserves his galaxy's version of a Darwin Award - which he'd be disqualified for because he's already bred.