You don't think that, after chasing someone for 5 years, it's not interesting and germane and relevant to actually see that person finally crack the case?
My favorite Sherlock Holmes story is the one where he doesn't explain at all his methodology or how he arrived at his conclusions. He just says "You're guilty" and we accept it on faith.
Was one of those flashbacks in episode 10 Naboo? You better be careful with rebel attacks there. That's the Emperor's home world after all.
Yeah, my first thought when I saw that planet was Naboo.Though it wasn't named, I too had that thought about the planet that Luthen/Kleya bombed for their cafe lesson. The water, and the architecture of the bridges, was very reminiscent of Episode 1 Naboo.
Nice catch, I didn't even think of that.Rewatching, and oh man, the double entendre is killing me.
When Dedra confronts Luthen, before she shows her hand, she's pretending to be a customer. She asks if anything in the gallery is fake and Luthen hits her with "Only two pieces of questionable provenance in the gallery." He means the two of them. Can't believe I didn't catch that the first time around.
The writing here is stellar.
Please no, it was great, but I don't want all Star Wars to be like this.Goddamn that was good. The ending for some came a lot quicker than expected. They need to give these writers and directors all the Star Wars projects. This is what we want.
Poe's parents, Kes Dameron and Shara Bey are already recurring in the books and comics, and I doubt they're going to want to contradict that much content. One or two issues of a comic or a book are one thing, but they've shown up a ton of stuff, and I can't imagine they're going to want to wipe out that much content.I was going to make a joke about the baby being Poe Dameron, but people on social media are already doing it..... and not as a joke. They actually want the baby to be Poe Dameron and are going to riot if it isn't! Their view of Star Wars has become Filonied.
I was thinking about that too, at first I never would have thought she'd change sides, but after Ghorman and now being imprisoned for no good reason, I could see it happening.Dedra could survive until the New Republic, possibly have her case reviewed. There's a nonzero chance she could get paroled, assuming she survives.
I'm pretty sure the Death Star was built at least partly over Scarif in either the Rogue One novelisation or Catalyst. I can't remember where the idea came from, but I definitely remember it coming up somewhereWell, wookieepedia is one thing, but that was never mentioned in Rogue One or at any point in Andor.
Yeah, I agree, whatever would have happened to him if he left than room, it would have been a hell of a lot worse a blaster bolt to the headPeople keep calling partagaz a cowardly but if the choice is a quick blaster bolt to the head or facing a pissed of palpatine to explain why you done fucked up when 99.99% of us I think will pick the blaster.
They already tried that twice with the first seasons of Discovery and Picard and it really didn't work either time. Either the franchise just doesn't translate to that kind of thing well, or the people making the shows just can't pull it off.It'd be amazing to get a Star Trek series in the vein of "early HBO-style prestige drama" that like ANDOR is fully of a piece with what came before continuity wise.
That's one of the great things about franchises like this, they allow for a huge variety of stories, I'd hate to see Star Wars to lose that by forcing everything else into the Andor mold. I wouldn't be against more shows in this style, but I'd still want to be able to get things like Skeleton Crew and Ahsoka and Skeleton Crew alongside it. I also think this kind of storytelling would really work well for the animated series.I think so. No reason the Andor approach and the Skeleton Crew approach can't exist side by side. I look forward to seeing both types.
Having Bix on Alderaan would have been a horrible way to end it, they wanted to end the show on a positive note, and that would have been the complete opposite.As cliche as her moving to Alderaan would've been, it would've made sense that someone in the position of Bail Organa could've forged identity documents for her (and in fact this may have been along the lines of Cassian's plan when he mentioned to Bix about running off together) whereas we now have a scene for shock emotional value that falls apart the more you think about it.
There's never been any question about that, they've always been terrorists. Terrorism can be justified if you're in the kind of situation the early Rebels were in. Hell, if our country went in that direction, I'd be right there rooting on the "terrorists" even if I didn't have to guts to join them myself.Hot take: Andor is an excellent piece of work, but I’m not crazy about the fact that per this series plus earlier hints elsewhere, terrorism was an important part of the early Rebellion. I know that’s realistic, but it puts a pall over the idealistic fantasy series I’ve followed since I was eight.
There’s no need to be condescending. I don’t have fantasies about real war, and I’m aware of the difference between that and fantasy space opera originally meant for kids — which I was a when I began following the franchise in 1977.I always knew that the rebellion had to get it hands dirtly even as a child.
Its good your fantasty got shattered. Ine should not have idealized views about war even in fiction.
War is not pretty.
War sucks and people die.
Starwars is a franchise about war, it says so in the name.
If showing diffrent aspects or war makes you uncomfortable then this is the wrong franchise for you. May I suggest series 1 and 2 of TNG would be more your own cup of tea.
At first I thought it might be a callback to the Battle of Mimban that was happening at the same time as the early scenes of Solo, but it might be an entirely different planet. It's definitely Empire, albeit only a handful of years after the end of the Clone Wars.BTW does anyone know what planet Luthen was on in the first flashback when he met Kleya? Was that during the Clone War era or the Empire?
Oh, there's a small goof in the final arc where the characters include Scarif in the discussions about the Death Star alongside Krennic, Eadu and Galen Erso.
Uh, Scarif had literally nothing to do with the development of the Death Star. It was literally just a records library full of all kinds of Imperial info/intel.
Galen's message indicates that there's a copy of the plans at Scarif, but that's really just for record-keeping purposes, not because any actual Death Star work was done on the premises.
Well, wookieepedia is one thing, but that was never mentioned in Rogue One or at any point in Andor.
So Luthen would have been part of the Empire then? It makes me slightly surprised how he could hide under the radar as this whole other persona with that kind of history.At first I thought it might be a callback to the Battle of Mimban that was happening at the same time as the early scenes of Solo, but it might be an entirely different planet. It's definitely Empire, albeit only a handful of years after the end of the Clone Wars.
He was a sergeant. Not exactly high in the Empire's echelons.So Luthen would have been part of the Empire then? It makes me slightly surprised how he could hide under the radar as this whole other persona with that kind of history.
Andor shouted out to the sequel trilogy at least four or five times over the course of its run, the most recent example being when Wilmon was working with Saw's group in the same place where the Resistance was based in Episode 7.Ergh can we NOT ruin something as great as andor by linking it to the abomination that is the shitquel trilogy?
More that abomination is side lined the better.
Certainly don't taint andor with it.
Tell that to Gul Dukat, who literally called her a terrorist many times.It drove me nuts that they kept calling her a "terrorist" in the show. Her homeland was literally under a hostile foreign occupation. In no way, shape, or form does that make someone trying to repel that invading force a "terrorist."
The foreign aggressors don't get to make that call.Tell that to Gul Dukat, who literally called her a terrorist many times.
Is that a joke? We're supposed to "know" that planet is Scarif because it looks like the most generic blue-green planet ever?Not true.
The mid credits scene in the final episode of Andor's Season 1 showed the Death Star under construction over Scarif. Rebels already established that Geonosis had been abandoned, they figured out that something big was being build there, but were not able to connect the dots.
Well, this time we did get a Tooka... ( I thought it was a Loth-cat! )And they say Gilroy doesn't do fanservice.
I'm not saying they "get" to make that call. I'm just saying they're already them terrorists while we call them freedom fighters. That is all.The foreign aggressors don't get to make that call.
I also thought that was a Loth-cat! But I'll take either.Well, this time we did get a Tooka... ( I thought it was a Loth-cat! )
I also wondered if that was a reference to Mortis.And was the open palm/closed fist image a reference to Mortis? Or to the High Republic? Or both?
Not sure about that. If Krennic had maintained command of the Death Star, then even if he didn't deduce exactly what Galen Erso did or connect it with the exhaust port, he definitely would've sent a MASSIVE fleet of TIEs after the 30 Rebel ships and the Rebels would've been toast. It was Tarkin's arrogance and Vader only bringing in a small TIE force that ended the Death Star. Otherwise, even with Galen's sabotage the Rebels would've lost.Tarkin in the same sense, except he was more competent and a little less self-serving than either of them.
That's just EU bullshit that someone came up with later to "explain" the relatively small number of TIEs seen in the movie.Not sure about that. If Krennic had maintained command of the Death Star, then even if he didn't deduce exactly what Galen Erso did or connect it with the exhaust port, he definitely would've sent a MASSIVE fleet of TIEs after the 30 Rebel ships and the Rebels would've been toast. It was Tarkin's arrogance and Vader only bringing in a small TIE force that ended the Death Star. Otherwise, even with Galen's sabotage the Rebels would've lost.
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