Call your relative to come and sing "We're Gore" ... but only after watching the latest three episodes of the Andor 2 season. Large spoilers forward.
"Andor" is really the only biggest narrative achievement of the franchise "War on the Starwells", isn't it? This show is nothing less than a miracle, Bold, bold, complex experiment This makes almost 50-year-old franchise better in retrospect. Season 2 brought all the arches of the character and the conspiracy to a masterful boiling on the road to Rogue One with a tragic, shocking research on the cost of combating fascism. There is no mistake: this beautifully made, recorded and designed show is not only great television "Starwalks War", but one of the best TV shows of the decade, period.
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In an already tragic, yet epic season, it was hard to say goodbye to the characters we followed from season 1. Of course, Andor will not only kill everyone for shock value because it is foretelling. Instead, the show woven together spectacular stories in a way that feels inevitable, and even when the characters meet with the end, I hate to see her, feels the way Tony Gillroy and his team have to be told.
Last week, we bid farewell to the worst rebel in Galaxy, Synta Kaz. Now, this week, we say goodbye to another beloved (from a certain point of view) character "Andor". That's right, I think of Favorite space to boot all Nazi braids, Cyril Carn (Kyle Soller). One of the most unique antagonists "Starwell War", Cyril Carn was not a frightening cyborg with a black cloak, or a boy with a red face and devilish horns. No, Cyril was more human and recognizable; Not as frightening as Tarkin and nowhere near as smart as a traum, but a simple man of naive faith in fascism and imperial propaganda, who would do everything to promote his career and further imperial control.
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Cyril is not a supervisor, so his death came as less than a bang and more than a whim. It was a pathetic end to the pathetic character, so let's look back and bid farewell to the guy of mom who loves cereals.
Cyril Carn was the biggest fool of the Empire
Episode 8 of Andor's Season 2 is an exercise for how long you can withstand a pit in your stomach and tighten your buttocks for an hour. This is The moment fans of the "Starwalks War" are afraid of: The Blue Marskria.
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Of course, Cyril is in the middle of it, as he is at least partly responsible for getting the Gormian front to the extent that the Empire could destroy them in a frightening episode. At first, Cyril does not believe that nothing is wrong, and even repeats imperial propaganda when Caro Rilanz (Richard Sammel) faces him for imperial mining operations on the planet. But he quickly realizes that something is wrong because Gurman is starting to sing, as their national anthem looks like in one of the most emotionally filled moments in the whole franchise, a moment that temporarily brings Les Misrables and Casablanca into the galaxy away.
Cyril finally adheres and faces Dedra Merrero, seeking answers and threatens violence. That is The end of the Nazi powerful couple - A girl from the imperial zeal and a naive fascist romantic boy. Also, it is Kyle Siller's best hour like Cyril, giving the character despair, because he finally realizes how pion he really is and how the empire used his zeal to commit an inexpressible crime. He did not bring Gurman's destruction in the name of peace, freedom, justice and security of the empire, as he thought, but because of the war in the resources and plan that a bureaucrat is cooking for political fame.
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Anyone who assumed that Cyril would turn on the empire Type of Isn't it a testimony to the brilliance of writing in the episode that he not only joins the rebels. Cyril's breakthrough is limited to him, realizing that his entire adult life is spent in the service of ideology that puts zero value for his life and those of innocent. What makes it tragic is that Cyril understands this too late, and he is powerless to stop the coming massacre, forced instead of standing stupid towards the people he met, while the storm closes and open fire.
However, this is "Andor". Everything is tragic with little sense of humor. Cyril never had to save the day, but he would not only die in the middle of the square, massacred along with the Gomens. No. He deserved more (and less).
Goodbye, you stupid prince
While trying to make sense of everything that was happening, the Imperial Butling part of Cyril Stops Cassian on the square and trying to justify his behavior. Obviously, Cassian is involved in the uprising, and he is here working with the Gurman front, so the empire was justified after all, right? That would mean that Cassian is responsible, not in Cyril. Having this in mind, he goes ham to the revolutionary and tries to kill him. It is an ugly, hard, bloody struggle with the likes we really don't see in the "Starwell War". There is no elegant fencing or cowboy -style shooting, just an old -fashioned fight in the middle of a war zone.
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Cyril does not receive speech, explanation, and even a chance to oppose Cassian. Instead, Valjan to Cyril destroys the obsession worth years with three simple words: "Who are you?" This destroys the whole psyche of Cyril and moves him long enough for Caro to shoot him in his head. In the end, Cyril Carn finished as just a footnote in the history of the rebellion, without the recognition he loved from the empire and without even a chance to try to make up for his sins. Only a pion died, Butliker was rejected when he was no longer in use.
Goodbye, Cyril Karn. You got exactly what you deserved, but it was still a little sad to see you. This was the most creative, quiet disgusting character in "Andor" and villain like no other. Of course, he is Technically not the worst villain in the "Starwell War", But with the inadvertently causing the massacre in Gurman, even if he did not understand it (until it was too late), he was involved in one of the most terrible moments of the history of "Starwells War".
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