Andor was one of the great TV triumphs of the decade. Here's why.
Warning: this story contains spoilers for the season two finale.
It reinvented Star Wars
Loading
The many Star Wars films and subsequent television shows in George Lucas' blockbuster fantasy galaxy were made for children. Andor is the first project made for adults. Gilroy has described it as 'a definitive work about revolution', tracking Cassian's progress from apolitical thief to committed operative over five years while the rebellion takes shape and the authoritarian machinery of the Empire seeks to suppress it.
Whether as a heist thriller, an espionage drama, or a study of guerilla warfare, the show leant into complicated, contested spaces.
The Force was not with them
Traditionally Stars Wars stories are about heroic, often super-powered individuals, beginning with Tatooine teenager turned Jedi Knight Luke Skywalker, pulling off extraordinary feats. The space wizards are nowhere to be seen in Andor, with but a hint of their spiritual side quietly seeping into the second season. Ordinary people mattered in Andor. The show details how oppression slowly, inexorably builds, and the different ways that individuals choose to defy the Empire's fascistic control. Not everyone had to blow up the Death Star to be heard.
The infrastructure mattered
Andor showed the messy, slow-turning steps required to build a rebellion. The initial wave of dissidents and saboteurs had to be put to work. Funding had to be acquired. The politicians and the partisans had to move in tandem.
The show's Rebel spymaster, Luthen Rael (Stellan Skarsgard), choreographed an entire movement, and he did it while being evasive, cynical, and sometimes untrustworthy. The cost paid by various Rebels was always felt. As Luthen put it, 'I burn my decency for someone else's future.'
The Empire had an org chart
In parallel to the Rebels, Andor charted the workings of the Imperial Security Bureau (ISB), the secret police tasked with negating democratic institutions, cracking down on dissent, and eventually using military might to destroy opposition. The Emperor, and his enforcer Darth Vader, were never seen. But some senior ISB officers attended meetings the dictator was at and brought orders back. Andor focused on the people who carried out those orders, whether out of zealotry, misplaced duty or simple workplace expectations. Obsessive ISB supervisor Dedra Meero (Denise Gough) became one of the show's most compelling characters.
The real world was always present
Loading
It was impossible to watch Andor and not draw connections to real-life events. For some that meant looking to the war in Gaza, while others saw historic precedents. A major storyline in the second season was the Empire cracking down on the planet of Ghorman, with a view to seizing direct control for destructive mass mining.
From the clothes to the language, Ghorman drew on France's experiences under Nazi occupation in World War II. There was no one correct interpretation, all were valid. What was unquestionable, however, was how harrowing the Empire's stage-managed massacre eventually was.
It was a tactile experience
One of the show's true unsung heroes was production designer Luke Hull. His work permeated every scene, invoking grand spaces that conveyed power and authority, but also makeshift bases and everyday residences. So many items had a casual, scuffed utility. This was a Star Wars experience where people had a home life, and the plausible homes that went with that. The science-fiction technology was often not overwhelming and screen-based, but rather mechanical. The communications console secretly operated by Luthen's unyielding offsider, Kleya Marki (Elizabeth Dulau), was a mass of plugs and knobs.
The actors got to feast
Gilroy assembled an almighty writers' room, including his brother Dan (Nightcrawler) and Beau Willimon (House of Cards). The episodes had an urgent, uneasy momentum, but at the right point they would feature a memorable monologue. Cassian's adoptive mother, Maarva Andor (Fiona Shaw), delivered a posthumous anti-Empire speech that literally started a riot.
My favourite? Forest Whitaker's paranoid militant Saw Gerrera huffing starship fuel and exhorting a young Rebel to embrace the madness of rebellion: 'You're right here, and you're ready to fight!'
The pay-offs were sublime
In season one, Cassian's first mission for Luthen is helping steal an imperial payroll. The participants include a young idealist, Karis Nemik (Alex Lawther), who is fighting the Empire by writing a manifesto that articulates its tactics. Like most of the team, Nemik doesn't make it, and his manuscript goes to Cassian. At the show's end, a senior ISB officer, sensing that their control is failing, ruefully listens to a recording that has been illegally circulating through the galaxy. It is Nemik reading his manifesto.
Uncompromising to the end
Loading
The body count was always high in Andor. The odds were so often against the nascent rebels and the show's stormtroopers could actually shoot straight. From early on it was apparent that if a character hadn't featured in Rogue One, the odds were against them surviving the series.
Luthen was clear in his belief that he wouldn't live to see his plans come to fruition, and when the time came the storytelling adhered to that. That Luthen killed his own agent inside the ISB, to preserve the top-secret material he'd just handed over, and then attempted to take his own life when Dedra came calling, was grim and fitting.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
12 hours ago
- Perth Now
Joe Jonas drops hint over Camp Rock 3
Joe Jonas appears to have suggested Camp Rock 3 is on its way. The Sucker singer, along with his Jonas Brothers bandmates and siblings Nick and Kevin Jonas, starred opposite Demi Lovato in the 2008 Disney movie and its 2010 follow-up Camp Rock 2: The Final Jam, and he's suggested a script has been written for a third installment in the series, though he didn't share any further details. The Jonas Brothers appeared on the latest episode of Hot Ones Versus and Joe was asked to read the last entry on his Notes app out loud. He looked at the camera and said: "Uh-oh." He then cleared his throat and said: "Read Camp Rock 3." Nick put down his glass of milk and made a shocked face, prompting laughter from his brothers and the crew, before he said: "It's pretty good." Kevin added: 'Okay, that's a pretty good one.' Joe pointed at his phone and said: "It's the truth. It's literally right here. "Sorry, Disney." Back in 2017, Nick declared he'd be keen on making an adult-rated Camp Rock 3. He added to People magazine: 'If the right thing comes together, I think that'd be fun. It's a really delicate thing because [they're two films] really beloved by fans. So I think for it to work, it'd have to be some creative new version where we get a writing team and do something special." Earlier this year, Alyson Stoner, who played Caitlyn Geller, insisted she hadn't heard any talk of a Camp Rock 3 and was unsure how the cast could reunite for another film. She told People magazine in June: "I truly cannot confirm or deny anything. They haven't given me a ring. "I wonder where that plot line would go. It would thicken. It would have to thicken quite a bit to get all of us back." Camp Rock followed Mitchie Torres (Lovato) as she attended the titular prestigious music camp and caught the attention of pop star Shane Gray (Joe), who was also attending the camp to reignite his passion, while the sequel saw the facility fight for survival amid the launch of a rival, Camp Star.


West Australian
a day ago
- West Australian
Mid West and Gascoyne coasts to feature in season two of Shipwreck Hunters Australia
Shipwrecks off the Mid West and Gascoyne coasts will feature in season two of Shipwreck Hunters Australia, which premieres on Disney+ later this month. The season will feature six missions along the rugged WA coastline, home to more than 1600 shipwrecks, filmed in locations across the Mid West, Gascoyne, Wheatbelt, Southwest and Goldfields-Esperance regions. Raising some of WA's long-lost shipwreck secrets, season two welcomes back the fearless shipwreck hunters, with captain Ash Sutton again at the helm with the highly skilled crew of ocean adventurers uncovering maritime stories at the State's most breathtaking locations. The series is funded through the WA Regional Screen Fund, supported by $4 million a year through Royalties for Regions from the Department of Primary Industries and Regional Development. The fund aims to encourage regional film industry activity, build capacity and contribute to the livability and vibrancy of regional WA, according to Creative Industries Minister Simone McGurk. 'We are sending a strong message to the international film industry, that WA is rapidly growing as a popular destination for film production and that we have remarkable and appealing stories to tell,' she said. Shipwreck Hunters Australia is estimated to have brought more than $4.4m to WA, including more than $1.6m in regional towns. 'Shipwreck Hunters Australia is a rousing and exciting documentary series set against the backdrop of Western Australia's beautiful coast, and I am intrigued to see what these adventurers uncover,' Screenwest CEO Rikki Lea Bestall said. Season two of Shipwreck Hunters Australia drops on August 27. The trailer can be viewed at .


Perth Now
a day ago
- Perth Now
Alan Tudyk reveals why Will Smith drama got him pulled from I, Robot promotional materials
Alan Tudyk claims he was removed from I, Robot promotional materials after "testing higher than Will Smith" with fans. The 54-year-old actor - who played robot Sonny in the 2004 blockbuster, which starred Will as Detective Del Spooner - has admitted he was "so shocked" by the decision, which came after trial audiences were shown the movie. He told the Toon'd In with Jim Cummings podcast: "A lot of people didn't know I did Sonny the robot in I, Robot, and there's a reason for that, actually. "They were doing test audiences with the movie and they score the characters and I got word back, 'Alan, you're testing higher than Will Smith'. 'And then I was gone. I was gone. There was no publicity and my name was not mentioned." Will is yet to comment on the claims. As well as voicing the robot, Tudyk - who has also appeared in the likes of Firefly, Tucker and Dale Vs. Evil and numerous Disney animations - shot the motion capture for the CGI character, noting he "put a lot into" the performance. He added on the podcast - which was released in June but has only just started to make waves online: "I was so shocked, I was like, 'Wait, what? How do they — nobody's going to know that I —' and [Fox] was like, 'Mhm'. "It was sad. I put a lot into it, because he had to move like a robot, so I had to move [like a robot].... At the time, I was very upset." Tudyk has voiced characters in everything from Rogue One: A Star Wars Story and Creature Commandos to Aladdin, Moana and Superman, and he insisted the artform deserves more respect. He said: "I was in the room. I'm at the wheel, I was with the actor back and forth. "My voice is completely attached to the world that everyone is seeing."