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Andor season 2 came to an end this week, putting an end to Cassian’s chapters of the Skywalker saga and bringing about one of the greatest additions to Star Wars‘ modern era. Across four arcs jumping us closer and closer to the time of Rogue One, the season delivered some of the best Star Wars has had to offer–which made looking back on the season to collect what was the very best of the best joyous and painful in equal measure. But considering we can’t just say “all of it”, here’s our pick for 20 of the highest highlights from Andor‘s long goodbye.
Andor so rarely allows itself a big damn hero action setpiece–action is, more often than not, the terrifying climax of tense release, from the Narkina 5 prison riot to the Imperial oppression on Ferrix and Ghorman. But season 2 opens with a wonderful little display to give us a Cassian who has smoothly settled into his part as a Rebel agent, infiltrating Imperial ship research facilities on Sienar to swipe a prototype TIE (one with a fun Expanded Universe legacy). And then, just to knock him down a peg, it has him alert all the guards he can by accidentally backing it into a wall while he figures out the controls. Can’t let him get too smooth.
Krennic’s Imperial meeting room to reveal his plans for the planet of Ghorman is already a delicious example of how the Empire controls and abuses people on various fronts, but really, the reason this scene is so good is Ben Mendelsohn just relishing being back in Krennic’s white cape. This is Krennic on the precipice of completing everything he’s ever wanted, and all he needs is one more thing: Kalkite. Deep, substrate, foliated kalkite, to be specific.
It’s just a joy to watch Medelsohn dance around like he’s top dog as he practically chews every word in the scene. Krennic’s just enjoying being in the spotlight as he lays out how this room of top Imperial brass, from the ISB to propaganda divisions to the navy, is going to help him achieve it.
There is already so much going on as Andor hits you with the reveal that Dedra and Syril have started seeing each other, and the relationship is as weirdly charged as you could’ve imagined. But in witnessing a slice of their bizzaro domesticity, we get the diva-off fans could only have dreamed off: a dinner at home with Syril’s mother Eedy, which leads to a stern Dedra turning the tables and making very clear who is wearing the immaculately-ironed pants in this relationship.
As the eye of Imperial oppression looms ever further over Mina-Rau, we see the true evils the Empire’s power manifests as in a shocking first for Star Wars, an attempted rape, explicitly named as such, when one of the inspection officers corners Bix and goes to assault her. It’s gutwrenching to watch, and one of the most tense fight sequences we’ve ever got in Star Wars, even as we get to see Bix triumph over her would-be abuser. It’s a powerful moment, and a chilling way to make the Empire’s abusive rot come to the forefront.
The sequence of Mon Mothma’s crashout at Leida’s wedding has a bunch of layers to it–the tacit realisation from her that Luthen is willing to kill anyone he needs to to protect her, Cinta and Vel’s distant connection as the latter realises the former’s there to do Luthen’s dirty work, it all climaxing with Cassian coming just too late to save Brasso on Mina-Rau. But tying that all into the hypnotic, almost delirious sequence of Mon walking away from her conversation with Luthen to just give herself a moment to be lost in the crowd of dancing, exhilarated partygoers, swaying to the thrumming electro beats of that banger of a track… it’s a beautiful way to climax the first act.
As a nice mirror to his infiltration on Sienar, when Luthen first sends Cassian to Ghorman–a planet known for its exports of fashion–we get to see him do a bit of classic spywork and really dress to play the part, masquerading as designer Varian Skye to set up a meeting with the Ghorman resistance. It’s a very cool look (those shades!), but it’s also another way we get to see Cassian play his charm offensive, swaggering around with the confidence of a classy elite before he really makes clear to the Front just how much more prepared for this kind of thing he is compared to them.
Syril’s infiltration of the discontent Ghormans and ‘Varian’s’ arrival on the planet reveals a wonderful bit of layering to Star Wars continuity: the massacre we’ve all known was coming this season wasn’t the first on Ghorman, there was one that took place years prior under the watch of Wilhuff Tarkin. It is, of course, a nod to the Expanded Universe’s original Ghorman Massacre, but Andor‘s choice to not just thrown in a nod to that version of events, but synthesize into its own history as further commentary on the Empire is a brilliant way to have an easter egg mention otherwise have some real dramatic heft.
Andor‘s second season is somehow even more tense than the first a lot of the times, and one of its best moments just layers on that tension thick: Kleya recruiting Lonni at a party hosted by Davro Sculden so she can successfully remove a listening device from an antique Luthen sold to the Chandrilan magnate before it’s discovered. There’s so much at play, not just as Kleya struggles to manage both her own nerves and Lonni’s as she struggles to free the device: they’re interrupted by Krennic and more ISB bigwigs being toured around by Sculden, who then bring up Luthen, Perrin, and Mon Mothma. The butting of heads between Senator and Director, the will-they-won’t they of just who might get ratted out in this moment it’s all deliciously done.
The tragic, sudden death of Cinta after she and Vel are also sent to Ghorman on Luthen’s behalf is one of season 2’s most delicate moments, but after the initial shock of her catching a stray blaster bolt from the unseasoned Front member Samm, what really twists the knife in is Vel’s reaction afterwards. Not content to leave the distraught young man be, Vel takes all her pain and pushes it into a terrifying warning for Samm that what he’s done, the life he’s unjustly destroyed, will haunt him for the rest of his life. A harsher punishment than if she’d lashed out or tried to hurt him in turn.
Saw makes a compelling case for why so many are willing to follow him in a brilliant, charismatic scene with Wilmon after the Partisans use the young man’s technical skills to successfully steal a load of highly volatile starship fuel. Inviting Wil to huff the toxic fumes as he has taken to–a predilection that we know will eventually leave Saw’s body broken down even further by Rogue One. Saw’s loving ode to Rhydonium as the symbol of everything his fight against the Empire stands for is equal parts rousing and heartbreaking. Admitting that he’s long exchanged his life and his sanity for what he has to do to resist the evil of the Empire, in that moment Saw truly becomes the charismatic leader we’ve been told he is, consequences be damned.
Andor has largely drawn itself to other forms of spirituality than the Force up to his point, but Cassian’s brief encounter with a mysterious healer at the Yavin base is a wonderful way to bring Star Wars‘ core mysticism into the fold. It’s treated with a sense of weight and trepidation in equal bearing, as the healer offers a portent of Cassian’s importance to the skeptical man and an awestruck Bix. If so much of Star Wars is going to play with the idea of destiny and fate, this was a clever, beautiful way to bring in the inevitability of the events of Rogue One into the narrative of Andor.
The explosion of the protests on Ghorman into a full-on Imperial massacre is one of the most chilling sequences in contemporary Star Wars. A brilliant mirror to the climax of season 1 and the riots on Ferrix being putdown by the Imperials, the Ghorman Massacre not only becomes bigger from an action standpoint, but thematically denser and richer as it weaves in Syril realising just too late that everything Dedra was working him for was a horror on a scale unlike anything he could’ve comprehended. It’s also so brutal and horrible to watch, and that’s even before you get to…
Ah, what a perfect end to Syril Karn. From the moment he spots Cassian among the screaming masses being slaughtered on the plaza, to the moment a confounded Cassian hits him with the question that’s haunted his whole life, Syril’s final moments are a brilliant exploration of what has made his character so compelling, a deft commentary on how the Imperial machine craves young, impressionable men like him, only to forge them into useful, evil tools that can be discarded at a moment’s notice. A fitting end to one of the show’s best characters.
We don’t get to hear the full version, but we hear enough of Mon’s rousing denouncement of the Ghorman Massacre to matter, as does the galaxy, as she finally lets her rebellion step into the sunlight for all to see. It’s already potent for the moment it represents in Star Wars, but it’s a profound step for the franchise’s relationship with its own political history, with the explicit invocation of Empire’s actions as genocide. It’s always been the endeavour of the foolhardy to obfuscate Star Wars‘ political message, but this was the franchise shouting it for all to hear in a way you can’t ignore.
Andor has layered all sorts of connective tissue to the wider world of Star Wars across its story, but in making Mon Mothma a central figure of its story, it was always going to be running headlong towards another series almost as inevitably as it was Rogue One: her flight from Coruscant to Dantooine as depicted in Star Wars Rebels, to make the formal declaration of the Rebel Alliance. How Andor handles that is subtle, but fascinating, climaxing Mon and Cassian’s flight from the Senate with a moment of realization for the latter, and just how much this wider Rebellion is going to distance itself from the part that raised Cassian up: the story of Cassian’s extraction will be handed off to a more proper Yavin escort, the story told in a cleaner, more palatable way. It is by no means a knock to Rebels, but it’s a brilliant way to bridge those two stories.
It’s unfair to practically assign an entire episode of prestige television as a best ‘moment’, but christ, that’s kind of what “Make It Stop” ends up being. From Dedra cornering Axis at last, to Kleya’s one-woman infiltration mission to send Luthen on his way after he mortally wounded himself rather than give up the Rebellion, it’s an incredible farewell to one of Andor‘s core characters, while passing on his legacy to the next generation, woven throughout a brilliant exploration of their history together. Andor‘s got a lot of finest hours in its two seasons, but this is the finest among them.
Not to pick a moment within the above moment, but it would be remiss to not point out the moment Dedra’s obsession and ambition finally lays her low. The moment of terror as she realizes Krennic has come to bludgeon the systems she has upheld against her for hoarding all the little scraps of information that lead to word of the Death Star making it out to Luthen is incredibly played by Denise Gough, and Mendelsohn again manages to balance the delectably scene-chewing bravado of Krennic with a genuine menace.
Getting to hear Nemik’s manifesto one more time might have been enough to mark this as a best moment, but the way it’s deployed is incredibly satisfying: one of the last things ISB head Major Partagaz hears, as he prepares to kill himself rather than face comeuppance for the ISB’s failures is an unknown voice of rebellion that’s echoing across the galaxy. His final admittance that the “disease” he sought to contain has come to choke him is a fitting end.
One of the first things Andor set up was Cassian’s search for his long lost sister, and in an age where Star Wars is more broadly obsessed with filling in as many details it can about its world and its characters, the fact that the show largely moved on from the “mystery” became something of a sticking point for some fans. Andor season 2 doesn’t give us an answer either–or rather, perhaps not one that would satisfy that need for cold, hard facts. One of the last things we see Cassian do in the whole show is wake up from a brief dream of his sister, and it’s all we really need to know: that he still thought of her, even right up to the very end, even if neither he or we got the answer.
Regardless of the controversy around Bix’s arc in season 2, the very last scenes of the series climaxing with her living a life of peace on Mina-Rau are a potent, hopeful note to end the series on. A series that was always barrelling towards the tragic sacrifice of its titular character instead ends on the revelation that the legacy he loved and shared with Bix will live on into a new generation, one that, at least for a while, will get to eventually come of age in a galaxy at peace.
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