The revolution is not for the Sun, but for those who watched the finals of Andor's season 2, because there are Heavy spoilers forward.
Similar to "Rogue One" before him, part of Andor's magic is to see how much nuance and context it gives the space opera on the original trilogy. It turns what is a pretty simple story about the good guys who are growing to fight the wicked empire in a complex story of morality, in detail the difficulties of oppression resistance and fascism and personal costs of standing for others. Thanks to this show, the Empire is now a much more famous thing than it used to be more-not just a collection of mustache villains, but daily evil. (A type of fancy snow resorts to plan genocide and then hide through the propaganda.) Have some of the worst pictures in the history of "Starwells War", But it is probably the best bow of the story in the almost 50-year franchise history.
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The show also adds a shade to the uprising, turning them from a heroic group of freedom fighters in a messy collection of people with different ideals, approaches and goals. There are Constant struggle, contrasting moral positions and shades between rebels That we haven't seen it before in the franchise section. We see this in the radically different approaches between Luten (Stellan Scarsgard), Kauti Organ (Benjamin Brother) and we saw Ericera (Forrest Whitaker), and as the group Javin IV moved to legitimize as a person at the rebellion of all of his contributions to the point where he was all about the fact that he was all about the fact that he was all about the fact that he was all about the fact that he was all about the fact that he was all about the fact that he was all about the fact that he was all about his contribution to the point where he was in the midst of all, the father.
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Speaking of SAW, he is one of the best and most complex characters in all the "Starwells War". His bow from the "clone wars" all the way to "Rogue One" is fascinating, showing his life as a revolutionary and eventually his decline. In the Andor final, there is a scene that echoes a fantastic moment from "Starwells War" making the story of the saw and the uprising even tragically.
The saw is right about the Javin rebels IV
In Andor Season 2 Episode 12, we get on with the Mont Motma (Evneeviv O'Rili), which is now fully in her era of rebellion with the hairstyle we know from the "dishonest one". We see the MES talking Charre with a hill -addict Through the hologram, the two discuss their methods. The MES believes he has seen it going too far, it is too open and has attracted too much attention from the Empire, who have already sent a Starwar destroyer to EDEDA. (Of course, we know that this is not because of a saw, but because of the cyber needed to power the death Starwar.)
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"If you just fought as well as lying," he responded, accusing the MES and Javin IV rebels to spy on, which she denies. Again, we know better, and just minutes later, the bail confirms that they have a look at the Saw group.
The scene is a fantastic echo on a similar stage in the "Starwells War" in which I saw the MES for the inability of her group to take the fight to the empire, sitting on their laurels and not doing enough. The MoES, however, hopes that its Senate allies can find a solution through diplomacy instead of fighting, while the species admits that the empire has already marked all as criminals, so they will start acting better as it and fight on their own conditions, not the empire. It is one of the best scenes in the whole series, exploring the basic differences in every leader's approach to the fight against freedom. Although we know he is an extremist who carries things too far, he has the point-like animation and live action. When Mont Motma accuses him of breaking any rule of engagement, Saw's response is:
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"I hope, the senator, once you lose, and the empire rules over the unmistakable galaxy, you will find comfort in the knowledge that you have fought by the rules."
The uprising alienated saw
The fact that we know that the MES and bail have actually sent people to spy on Saw, means a state of paranoia in which we find it when we see it in "Rogue One" is fully justified. Tony Gilroy has long teased that season 2 of Andor will shine a new light on "Rogue One", but we did not know to what extent it would prove to be true. The saw we meet in that film, depends on the breathing deviceUnsidential and paranoid, it felt at the time as the film just shows us another side of the uprising and how some people could become too radicalized.
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But now we know that sight is a man who has spent a lifetime in the fight against oppression - first reviewing the separatists of his home planet, and later the empire - and depends on the drug in the process. His compatriots did not trust him and spied on his allies. Can you blame him for mistrust of ynin and body when they arise that they claim to have information, saw convenient years in search of?
Season 2 "Andor" has shown the complexity of creating a rebellion, the necessary victims and the difficulty of keeping it together. It also makes the rebel alliance more human and nuance by making them deeply flaws. Until the last three episodes of the season, the Alliance turns the back of Luten and efficiently deletes it from history, but is also painted as a lonely extremist with zero ties with them in an attempt to legitimize and clear the image of the Javin IV rebel cell. But we know better. The species was not perfect, far from it, but he was just as a rebel as Luke, Jan or Leia.
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