"Andor" makes its clearest "Star Wars" condemnation of authoritarianism yet
When 'Andor' originally debuted, the prequel series to a prequel movie set after the prequel trilogy wasn't heavily promoted by Disney+. With no adorable Baby Yoda a la 'The Mandalorian,' only the most devoted fans tuned in. However, as critics quickly discovered, 'Andor' contained something far better than plush puppets. For the first time in the franchise's history, a show took the premise of the original 1977 'Star Wars' film and used it to seriously explore the question of how someone becomes radicalized.
Due to a variety of factors and 2020 shutdowns, 'Andor' wasn't released until 2022. Season 2, which premiered its first three episodes on April 22, took another three years. But the series hasn't lost a step, broadening its focus from the individual to the collective as it portrays an entire population teetering on the edge of rebellion. I'd argue that the episodes we've seen suggest 'Andor' is the best 'Star Wars' series ever made. And it's an incredibly well-timed reminder of how relevant the franchise's story of democracy vs. authoritarianism actually is.
Over the course of nearly 50 years, George Lucas' 'Evil Empire' has stood in for many things. But 'Andor' is the clearest use of the 'Star Wars' mythology yet as a critique of our own government, concurrent with the events being allegorized. (One could argue — and people have — that 'Return of the Jedi' had Vietnam War overtones, but it came out in 1983, long after the war ended.) 'Andor' is showing how the wheels come off a fictional democracy just as the wheels appear to be coming off a very real democracy most thought was indestructible.
The result is a show that hits far too close to home. The series' Mexican-born star Diego Luna (who also has an executive producer credit) plays an undocumented immigrant on the run from the British-accented white men of the Empire, falling in and out with random groups of would-be rebels in various stages of radicalization. Midlevel government stooges root out the undocumented under the guise of 'the census.' They may not wear vests emblazoned with 'ICE,' but comparisons to reports on the nightly news are too obvious to miss. The well-dressed and privileged citizens casually discussing the demolition of an entire planet while snacking on the most fantastic hors d'oeuvres feels similarly pointed. (The camera makes sure to linger over the delicacies as we hear the diners casually discussing genocide.)
Disney is releasing the series in three-episode groups over four weeks. This is partly due to the show's structure, which focuses on different vignettes around the galaxy, tracing the threads of the growing crisis to its explosive center. But it also means that Disney+ may be trying to downplay criticism. (April and May are some of the most crowded months of the television calendar, making 'Andor' one of many high-profile series currently trying to get traction in the entertainment sphere.)
It's also possible Lucasfilm was never expecting 'Andor' to become such a runaway success, political themes and all. Not that anyone has said a bad word about the show — when you have a hit, you smile and tell everyone how much you believed in it from the get-go. The show had early support from Luna, who was eager to reprise his popular 'Rogue One' character. Perhaps more importantly, the show was greenlit in 2018, before Lucasfilm released 'The Rise of Skywalker,' a sequel that took what had been a successful trilogy revival of the franchise and destroyed it by capitulating to small but vocal pockets of reactionary fans.
There is now nothing else like 'Andor' in the 'Star Wars' pipeline.
In fact, there's barely anything in the pipeline. Since Disney bought Lucasfilm in 2012, two dozen projects from high-profile writers have been triumphantly announced, only to be quietly canned. Meanwhile, the feature film count since 2019's 'The Rise of Skywalker' stands at zero. We are in a moment when the 'Star Wars' story is more relevant than it's possibly ever been. We need more powerful characters standing up for democracy and against injustice. This isn't a long time ago or in a galaxy far, far away. 'Andor' shouldn't be the outlier; it should be the new standard.
This article was originally published on MSNBC.com
Hashtags

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


Fox News
an hour ago
- Fox News
Former Disney star Christy Carlson Romano reveals shocking details about nearly losing her eye
Christy Carlson Romano is speaking out about nearly losing an eye after she was shot in the face four months ago. During an appearance on the upcoming June 10 episode of the "Not a Damn Chance!" podcast, via a sneak peek by People magazine, the 41-year-old former Disney star recalled the terrifying incident while she was shooting clay pigeons with her husband, Brendan Rooney, for his birthday. Asked how it happened, Romano explained she was not "at liberty to say specifics," according to People. The actress previously revealed on Instagram that she was "hit in five places," including below her eye. Romano shared details for the first time about what transpired. "It's a birdshot that got sprayed in my direction by another party, and essentially it was within 200 feet, which means really fast and hot," she told hosts Neen Williams and Frankland Lee. "They weren't malicious," Romano clarified. "It wasn't aggravated assault. It's what happened." The "Even Stevens" star then emphasized the importance of gun safety and described her initial response. "I feel very out of body about it. … It's pretty wild," she said. "I'm shocked, and what goes through my head immediately is, 'Oh that's dope, I just got shot.' And then I go, 'Oh now I'm gonna die,'" she said. "I take a knee. My husband witnessed it and was like, 'Hey are you hit?' because I didn't scream. I didn't do anything. I was just out of body." Romano recalled she had a knee-jerk reaction upon being shot that stemmed from her time on the third season of the FOX reality TV series "Special Forces: World's Toughest Test." In the show, celebrity contestants take on grueling military exercises and challenges under the direction of ex-Special Forces operatives. Romano explained that the contestants were trained to give a thumbs-up to let their fellow cast members know that they were OK during the series' perilous challenges. The "Kim Possible" alum recalled that, out of habit, she gave Rooney a thumbs-up immediately after she was shot. "He was like, 'Oh, you're good.' And I was like, 'No I'm hit.' He goes, 'Oh s---,'" Romano recalled of her husband's reaction. She remembered that Rooney rushed to her aid and had to restrain himself from retaliating against the other party. "So, he's running to me and making sure I'm OK, and he's fighting the urge to hurt the person … but he's been practicing stoicism recently, and there was something in him," Romano recalled. "He was immediately into action mode, evaluating me and ran to get the car. "I felt this huge rush that I'd never felt before where I was starting to get really woozy. I think it was shock." Romano told the hosts she didn't experience any pain initially and described the thoughts that were running through her head, including her fears her children might be affected. The actress shares daughters Isabella, 7, and Sofia, 5, with Rooney. "I was covered in blood from my forehead … and I said three things. I was like, 'Am I gonna die? Who's gonna take care of the girls? Is my career over?'" she recalled. Romano explained that she came close to being blinded or killed. "If my head would've been tilted in any other direction, I would have been blind in my right eye. Or if I had turned my head, I could have gotten hit in a softer side of my skull, and I would have potentially been dead," Romano said. "It's still in my eye," she said of the pellets from the shotgun. "I have a fragment still in my forehead, and I have a fragment still behind my eye, which is 1 millimeter away from blinding me." Romano previously explained on Instagram that the lead fragment behind her eye had to remain in her face because removing it could leave her blind. The shot fragment lodged in her skull will also remain in place because doctors said it will expedite her healing process. During her podcast interview, Romano told hosts she put on a brave face at first and was making jokes about her medical crisis after she arrived at the hospital. "In retrospect, I was trying to be funny and not cry because I wanted the people around me to feel more calm so that they could take better care of me," Romano said. The former Broadway star admitted that it has been difficult to accept she is a "gunshot survivor." Clay pigeon shooting is an outdoor sport in which upside-down circular disks made of limestone and pitch used as targets are propelled into the air by machines called traps. Shooters use shotguns, with each shot projecting hundreds of small lead balls to hit the clay pigeons. The sport is typically not considered dangerous as long as safety measures are followed.


New York Post
2 hours ago
- New York Post
‘From the World of John Wick: Ballerina' leaps into first position at the box office
The latest installment in the 'John Wick' series leaped into first position at the box office. 'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina,' pirouetted to the No. 1 spot Friday, its opener, raking in $10.65 million, according to The Numbers. The thriller, which The Post said 'has good fights, bad everything else,' is the fifth installment of the 'John Wick' franchise starring Keanu Reeves — and features Ana de Armas as a ballerina who doubles as an assassin. Landing in second was the live-action remake 'Lilo & Stitch,' with sales of $9.3 million. The film, which was slated to be a direct-to-streaming title on Disney+, went on to set the record as the biggest four-day Memorial Day weekend domestic opening of all time. 3 In 'From the World of John Wick: Ballerina,' Ana de Armas plays a ballerina who doubles as an assassin. ©Lions Gate/Courtesy Everett Collection 'I and the other filmmakers always believed that it could be a big, perfect summer blockbuster to go see on a huge screen,' its director, Dean Fleischer Camp, told Variety. 'I'm proud of how hard it delivers on that. It's super funny, it's action-packed, and it's super emotional.' Taking third was 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning' with $4 million in revenue. 3 Maia Kealoha made her film debut in 'Lilo & Stitch.' ©Walt Disney Co./Courtesy Everett Collection Tom Cruise's stunts in the film just earned him the Guinness World Record for most burning parachute jumps by an individual. 'The star leapt out of a helicopter 16 times while strapped to a parachute pre-soaked in fuel and lit ablaze, before cutting away the charred remnants of the first chute and safely deploying a backup. No other actor or stuntman has come close to that amount of death-defying drops,' the record book stated on its website. 3 Tom Cruise earned a Guinness World Record for his stunts in 'Mission: Impossible — The Final Reckoning.' ©Paramount/Courtesy Everett Collection Wes Anderson's 'The Phoenician Scheme,' which Slate called the filmmaker's 'worst yet,' was in fourth, with a $2.55 million dollar take. 'Karate Kid: Legends,' which The Post said was 'awful,' fought its way to fifth, earning $2.45 million.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Khaby Lame Posts on Social Media After ICE Confirms Detaining Him
Khaby Lame, the world's most popular TikToker, has posted several times on social media since ICE confirmed detaining him. According to a statement ICE emailed Men's Journal on June 7, the agency detained Lame on accusations of immigration violations in Nevada but let him voluntarily leave the country. You wouldn't know that from his social media pages, though, as Lame has posted to both his Instagram story and TikTok page since news went viral that he was arrested by ICE. Lame posted a video with costumed mascots to TikTok, and he posted several times to his Instagram story, including a photo showing a hand holding a book in a bookstore and a shout-out to an athlete for his birthday. He also posted about Eid Mubarak. He has more than 162 million TikTok followers. News that ICE had taken Lame into custody first broke via an X influencer named Bo Louden, although many people raised questions about the initial report because Lame no longer came up in the ICE detention database. That may be because the agency now says it let him leave the country. Louden wrote that he was the person who reported Lame to ICE. Here's the official statement by ICE, which the agency emailed to Men's Journal on June 7, after Men's Journal wrote ICE the night before to ask whether it was true the world's most followed TikToker had been arrested. 'U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement detained Seringe Khabane Lame, 25, a citizen of Italy, June 6, at the Harry Reid International Airport, Las Vegas, Nevada for immigration violations,' ICE confirmed to Men's Journal. 'Lame entered the United States April 30 and overstayed the terms of his visa. Lame was granted voluntary departure June 6 and has since departed the U.S.,' ICE wrote. Khaby Lame Posts on Social Media After ICE Confirms Detaining Him first appeared on Men's Journal on Jun 7, 2025