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‘Andor' is very Latino-coded. Here's how.

‘Andor' is very Latino-coded. Here's how.

Looking back, casting Diego Luna in 'Rogue One: A Star Wars Story' may well prove to be the single most consequential decision in that storied franchise's history. Hearing Luna's Mexican accent in a galaxy far, far away was not only refreshing. It was radical.
And as Season 2 of 'Andor' proved, it set the stage for what has to be the most Latino-coded of all the 'Star Wars' tales, which is fitting considering this Tony Gilroy-created series was designed not just to explore Cassian Andor's backstory but flesh out the dashing revolutionary spirit Luna had brought to the character. What better place to, pardon the pun, mine for inspiration than the vast history of resistance and revolution throughout the American continent?
Here are a few ways in which 'Andor' felt particularly Latino.
Warning: this article contains some spoilers.
Season 2 of 'Andor' found Cassian, Bix (Adria Arjona), Brasso (Joplin Sibtain) and Wilmon (Muhannad Bhaier) relocated to the agricultural planet of Mina-Rau. It's a place that served as a safe haven for these Ferrix folks, allowing them to be housed while working for a local farmer — all without papers. Yes, our very own Cassian is an undocumented laborer (when he's not, you know, on some super-secret Luthen-guided mission, that is).
'Andor' has always focused on the way the Empire functions at a granular level, while the 'Star Wars' feature film trilogies are all about big-picture stuff. In its two-season run, this Luna-fronted project followed the day-to-day lives of those living under the thumb of the Empire. And in the scenes at Mina-Rau, the show insisted on showing what happens when those with a semblance of power (a uniform, a weapon) confront those who they think have none.
When Lt. Krole (Alex Waldmann), a lowly Imperial officer carrying out a run-of-the-mill audit of the crops in Mina-Rau, comes across Bix, he sees an opportunity. She's clearly alone. And, perhaps most obviously, at a disadvantage: She has no papers. If she's caught, the secure, if precarious, life she and Cassian have built in Mina-Rau will come crumbling down — all while putting them at risk of being revealed as smugglers and rebels.
Still, watching Krole escalate his slimy sexual advances into a rape attempt was a reminder of the impunity of such crimes. When those who are undocumented are seen as undeserving of our empathy, let alone the protections the law is supposed to provide — like many people in our current government seem to think — the likes of Krole are emboldened to do as they please.
Such ideas about who merits our empathy are key to authoritarian regimes. Borders, after all, aren't just about keeping people out or in. It's about drawing up communities and outlining outsiders; about arguing for a strict sense of who belongs and who does not.
When Cassian and Bix land in Coruscant after their escape from Mina-Rau, they struggle with whether to just lay low. You see Cassian being jumpy and constantly paranoid. He can't even handle going out shopping; or, if you follow Bix's winking joke at the grocer, he can't really handle the spice. But that's expected if you constantly feel unsafe, unable to freely move through the world, er, galaxy.More tellingly: If your existence is wedded to bureaucracy, it's easy to be dispensed with and disappeared. Bix knows that all too well. She's still haunted by the specter of Dr. Gorst (Joshua James), the Imperial Security Bureau officer who tortured her. He appears in her nightmares to remind her that this is a war now littered with 'desaparecidos': 'His body won't be found and his family won't know what happened to him,' his hallucination taunts her. It's not hard to read in that line an obvious reference to those tortured and disappeared under the military dictatorships of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and the like.
Throughout 'Andor' Season 2, we also watched the Empire slowly rev up its border policing — especially when it came to Ghorman. At first a planet most known for its gorgeous textiles, Ghorman later became the anchor for the show's entire narrative. The best way to control a people is to surveil them, particularly because soon enough they'll start surveilling themselves.
The beauty of 'Star Wars' has always been its ability to speak to its time. When the original film first premiered in 1977, echoes of the Vietnam War and anti-imperialist sentiment could be felt in its otherwise outlandish space-opera trappings. But not until 'Andor' could the politics of George Lucas' creation be so viscerally felt. This is a show, after all, that didn't shy away from using the word 'genocide' when rightly describing what happened in Ghorman.
In 'Who Are You?' audiences got to see the Empire at its cruelest. Watching the Death Star destroy Alderaan from afar is one thing. But getting to watch Stormtroopers — and a slew of young, inexperienced Imperial riot police officers — shooting indiscriminately into a crowd that had just been peacefully singing in protest was brutal. It was, as Senator Mon Mothma (Genevieve O'Reilly) would later frame it, unconscionable.
The chants in the crowd 'The galaxy is watching' are clearly meant to evoke the chants heard at the 1968 Democratic National Convention: 'The whole world is watching.' But the essence of the massacre harks back to another infamous 1968 event: the Tlatelolco massacre.
Just like Ghorman, the Oct. 2 student protests at Mexico City's Plaza de las Tres Culturas began as a peaceful demonstration. But soon, with helicopters up above and an encroaching military presence from every which way, chaos followed and the incident has long served as a chilling example of state-sanctioned violence. The kind now best distilled into a fictional massacre in a galaxy far, far away.
In the hands of Gilroy and Luna, 'Andor' billed itself over two seasons as the begrudging rise of a revolutionary. Cassian spent much of Season 1 trying to hide from who he could become. It took being sent to a grueling slave prison complex in a remote location (sound familiar?) to further radicalize the once-smug smuggler.
But with every new Empire-sanctioned atrocity, he found himself unable to escape his calling as a member of the Resistance. Yes, it costs him his peaceful life with Bix, but neither would have it any other way. Cassian has a solid moral compass. And while he may not play well with others (with authority, really), he's a charming leader of sorts whose childhood in Ferrix set him up to be the kind of man who would sacrifice his life for a cause.
You don't need to have Luna sport a mustache, though, to see in his rascal of a character hints of revolutionary icons from Latin America. Even if Cassian is more Emiliano Zapata than Pancho Villa (you'd never find him starring in films as himself, for instance), the revolutionary spirit of those historical Mexican figures is undeniable. Especially since Cassian has long been tied to the marginalized — not just in Ferrix and Mina-Rau but later still in Ghorman.
Add the fact that his backstory grounds him in the indigenous world of Kenari and that he is quite at home in the lush jungles of Yavin IV (where he may as well be playing dominoes in his spare time) and you have a character who clearly carves out homages to resistance models seen all over Latin America.
As attacks on those most disenfranchised here in the United States continue apace, 'Andor' (yes, a spinoff sci-fi series on Disney+!) reminds us that the Latin American struggles for liberation in the 20th century aren't mere historical stories. They're warnings and templates as to how to confront this moment.
And yes, that message obviously works best when delivered by the devilishly handsome Luna: 'The Empire cannot win,' as his Cassian says in the first episode of the show's stellar second season. 'You'll never feel right unless you're doing what you can to stop them. You're coming home to yourself. You've become more than your fear. Let that protect you.'

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