Season 2 of Andor is just as incredible and politically astute as the first, but while modern day metaphors are everywhere, Tony Gilroy hopes we’ll see more
Andor has returned for its second season and it’s just as fantastic as ever. While the first three episodes of the show get us ever-closer to the Death Star-focused finale in Rogue One, scenes of characters hiding from visa-checking Imperial forces also make it clear in this first batch of episodes that Andor hasn’t lost the real-world grounding that made it great in the first place. And while it’s easy to map moments from these episodes onto our current political moment, perhaps its strongest real world comparison came from paralleling the Empire to the Nazis.
Star Wars’ Galactic Empire has never been far from Nazi Germany comparisons — if nothing else, the aesthetic inspiration is instantly obvious and totally inescapable. But rarely, if ever, has the connection between the two been drawn quite so clearly as Andor creator and showrunner Tony Gilroy draws it in the first episode of season 2, when Krennic (Ben Mendelsohn) calls together a secret Imperial meeting to discuss Ghorman.
[Ed. note: This post contains spoilers for Andor season 2, episodes 1-3.]
During the meeting, Krennic shows the table an informative video about the planet of Ghorman, and shows a video about the fabric it exports, which is widely renowned as some of the finest in the galaxy. He then lets everyone know that Ghorman also hosts a rare substance inside the planet that the Empire needs for completion of Emperor Palpatine’s “Energy Program” — and that mining it will mean destroying the planet completely.
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