I also think Andor is definitely part of a breakout, as opposed to being plucked out by Meero, as there's still this shot from the trailers, of Andor with wet hair swinging at pipe-looking object at something on a wall...
Brian Earl Spilner said:
One of my good Star Wars buddies (even went to Celebration with me) hasn't watched Andor and I've been begging him to try it again. (He said he got bored in episode one.)
It truly saddens me that this isn't a bigger show.
From Wookiepediapocketrockets06 said:
Am I the only one who remembers Andor has been in an Imperial prison before? I swear when the corporate security people pull up his mug shot in episode 2 they mention prison time for sedition and insurrection against imperial order or something like that. It may be the result of him assaulting the storm troopers after his dad was hung but he's been in this spot before.
I also though TIE Fighter while watching that part of the show, but the TIE was built by Seinar Systems for the Empire. I was under the impression that the Empire controlled that floating prison, and wouldn't think Imperial prisoners would be co-opted into producing these fighters. But maybe I'm just overthinking this.Mathguy64 said:
If they arent just random widgets, I like them as the end cross braces on the wings of a TIE fighter. They need a lot of them because they lose a lot of them.
I get that. As I said, my initial thought was the TIE Fighter, specifically the piece connecting the wing panels to the fuselage.redline248 said:
It's pretty easy to look up images of TIE fighters and compare them to the parts being made in Andor's prison floor.
double aught said:
You guys have covered pretty much everything, but I still wanted to chime in and say how much I'm loving this show. Some obvious stuff:
Diego Luna did a lot of acting with just his face this episode and was up to the task.
Love the music on the show.
Bix is really hot.
Very true but Alan is a TV critic, which might explain his disdain for the 12 hour movie comment, but I still found it odd because he usually is a really good critic/TV reviewer.The Porkchop Express said:
In the age of the Internet, there are about 99% too many movie critics.
The Porkchop Express said:
In the age of the Internet, there are about 99% too many movie critics.
TCTTS said:
I used to love reading Sepinwall, but he's had some super weird opinions the past few years. For instance, he doesn't like Succession either, which is basically considered the best writing on TV, has won every Emmy, etc. Just feels like he's past his prime now, for whatever reason, and a relic of the Golden Age of TV, when he was the go-to for The Sopranos, The Wire, Mad Men, etc.
Average Joe said:The Porkchop Express said:
In the age of the Internet, there are about 99% too many movie critics.
There are 100% too many. Watch movies that are interesting to you and form your own opinion.
I forgot about his disdain for Succession...that's the reason I didn't watch it for the longest time and then binged it over the summer and was like Alan, WTF?TCTTS said:
I used to love reading Sepinwall, but he's had some super weird opinions the past few years. For instance, he doesn't like Succession either, which is basically considered the best writing on TV, has won every Emmy, etc. Just feels like he's past his prime now, for whatever reason, and a relic of the Golden Age of TV, when he was the go-to for The Sopranos, The Wire, Mad Men, etc.
Andor’s great because it’s a grounded, thoughtful drama with nuanced characters who at any given moment could meet Jar Jar Binks
— Ben Joseph (@jenboseph) October 27, 2022
That show did not get the attention it deservedpocketrockets06 said:
I realized tonight what this show reminds me of and it's "The Night Manager". The pacing, acting, sense of menace, it's all there.