The uprisings are built on hope - the hope that you have seen it to Episode 12 of Andor's Season 2, because there is Heavy spoilers forward.
"Starwell War" is a sandstone that can support a wide range of stories and tones, from the miracle of children-friendly to the "skeletal crew" to the darker story of the "bad series" morality. And yet, there is nothing like "Andor" in the galaxy away, far away. At times it is difficult to look at what the show Tony Gillroy and his team achieved and consider it part of the same universe as the original space fantasy of George Lucas. Of course, they both focus on the empire, the rebellion and have a storm, but "Andor" is far away The darkest, most frightening and cardiac thing we've ever seen in "Starwell War".
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During 12 episodes, season 2 of Andor showed human costs to combat fascism, epic victims made in the name of freedom and how messy could be. The rebel alliance is no longer just a purely good faction of freedom fighters, but a morally complex and tinted coalition of many groups with its own goals and ideals. That is Alliance that was ready to erase probably her biggest associate For the sake of good PR, who left the allies and it was too cowardly to fight until the individuals took matters into their own hands.
With such a dark show, especially the one being built until the beginning of "Rogue One" - a movie dying of all the main characters - it would be easy for Andor to end up on a depressing note. Fortunately, Tony Gilroy knows better, and the show ends with a pretty cordial scene: Bix (Adria Arjona) returned to Mina-Rau, with her and the child of Cassian on his hands.
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/The movie Ben Pearson spoke with Tony Gillroy about the making of Season 2 and referred to the decision to end the series in this way. "I had to finish something hopeful. I knew I did," Gilroy said, explaining:
"It's just so hard a show of characters. Much of it is really hard, and you know where you go to 'Rogue (one)' It's pretty dark, so it would be, not just a crime against storytelling, but only in my spirit. I really have to end up with something exciting.
Cassian built a better future for his child
Making BIX not only makes it alive, but also living happily with her and Cassian's child is probably the only best end in the franchise "War of the Starwives" (along with the Boer boy in "The Last Edice"). It justifies any action that Andor's characters made during both seasons. Every victim, every death - was all about this. Cassian (Diego Luna) set fire to the sunrise he never saw, but Bix did. The Skywalker saga is everything about how the republic and Eddie fell, because a very stupid man could not let the woman who loved her. BIX was He can miss the man he wants, to put the uprising in the first place, and thus paved the way for a better future.
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Now, has Bix ever learned about what happened to Scarif? Is it in contact with Fare Marsay? We don't know, but knowing that Cassian is dying at Scarif at the moment, his child is alive and safe somewhere? No doubt, the biggest victory in the "war on the Starvali".
Well, the second largest. The biggest victory at the end of Andor, and what all this was about, is the short B2 shot on Mina-Raou happily playing with another droid like a few old dogs in the park. Cassian leaving his faithful spirit behind him remains probably the brightest moment of the seasonKnowing that the only thing the bee was expecting to be united with Cassian. Well, the knowledge that they have never seen each other is still emotionally devastating, but maybe everyone has done the old Duid courtesy and never, sometimes, sometimes told him about the death of Cassian.
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If one deserves a happy ending, be blessed for any bad thing that happens in the galaxy and just living a quiet life in the big farm up to play with other Duids, it's B2ME. To quote Gilroy, "otherwise, what are we doing?"
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