Warning! SPOILERS for Andor episode 5.
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, Andor’s story unfolds at a time when a proper Rebel Alliance as seen in the Star Wars movies was still far from being formed. As such, Andor has the chance of exploring what the Empire’s threat actually means for the galaxy, and the show is so far succeeding at it.
With four episodes in, Andor has so far set up mysteries more than it has answered them. The origin of the Rebel Alliance is a story other Star Wars movies and shows have tried to tell, but due to its realism and more serious tone, Andor is set to be Star Wars’ definitive rebel tale. While Cassian Andor is the protagonist whose journey from Kenari to Scarif will guide the show, Andor is telling a broader story that tackles several characters – from the Empire to the yet-to-be Rebel Alliance.
The fact that Andor has a more realistic and serious take on Star Wars than the Star Wars movies. In fact, a lot of recent Star Wars stories had failed to convey what truly makes the Empire scary, especially compared with how George Lucas envisioned the Empire and how Palpatine’s reign of terror came to be. During Andor episode 5, Karis and Cassian discuss what they are fighting for and what they have lost in the fight against the Empire, with the themes of freedom being brought up throughout the entire episode. That loss of freedom referenced in Andor is exactly what makes the Empire so scary in Star Wars.
George Lucas’ Star Wars Was Always About The Loss Of Freedom
From the original Star Wars to the prequel trilogy, an oppressive Sith empire lead by Palpatine.
According to George Lucas for the Star Wars Archives: Episode I – III book, he was not interested in telling a story about how someone took democracy away from the galaxy but rather about “How do you give away a democracy". While Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace and the prequel trilogy as a whole were criticized for the often long, boring political meeting scenes about the Trade Federation and votes of no-confidence, those were essential for the story George Lucas wanted to tell. Whereas the original Star Wars trilogy was about the unlikely heroes fighting for that lost freedom, the prequels were about how the galaxy lost that freedom in the first place.
Recent Star Wars Had Made The Empire’s Threat Too Superficial
While Star Wars will always have content aimed at all ages, recent Star Wars movies and shows had made the Empire’s threat too superficial, that is, they made the Empire nothing but an obstacle in the stories of the main characters. With so many Star Wars stories taking place during the Galactic Civil War, plus the Star Wars sequels borrowing a lot from the Age of the Empire time period, the idea of stormtroopers and TIE-fighters lost a lot of its original impact. Instead of a symbol of how defeated the galaxy had become, the Empire began to be depicted as a more cartoonish supervillain group for the Jedi and other Star Wars characters to fight.
This was a problem for Rogue One, for example. Promoted as a more serious, visceral take on the Darth Vader and the Inquisitors.
Andor Episode 5 Honors Revenge Of The Sith’s Best Line
By far the best line in the Clone Wars, the Republic and the Jedi little could see what was really happening.
That is a theme Andor episode 5 continued. When discussing the threat of the Empire and the reason why he was fighting, Karis mentioned how people were slowly losing the sense of what the Empire was doing to the galaxy. Karis also mentioned to Cassian how liberty was being stripped away from the galaxy starting with the most mundane things, which is an interesting flip of the “thunderous applauses” from Revenge of the Sith. Andor suggests that more than a decade after the fall of the Republic and the rise of the Empire, the galaxy no longer re what it was fighting for.
Andor Episode 5 Summarizes What Truly Makes The Empire Scary
More than stormtroopers, TIE-fighters, and imperial cruisers, what truly makes the Empire scary in Star Wars is how it was able to remove all sense of hope and optimism from the galaxy for almost two decades. Apart from small movements like between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope were technically about the despair and the losses the galaxy was facing. That was something most of the Star Wars movies and shows set in that time period were failing to replicate, but that Andor is fortunately ing.
New episodes of Andor release on Wednesdays on Disney+.