Warning: This article contains spoilers for Andor season 2, episodes 4-6.45 years ago, The Empire Strikes Back’s director, Irvin Kershner, explained one of the fundamental rules contributing to Star Wars’ success – and now Andor has broken it. Star Wars has always been about the ongoing battle between good and evil, the light and the dark. There was a clear distinction between the two sides. The Rebels fought the Empire; the Sith were the ancient, villainous enemies of the Jedi. As an audience, it was easy to know who to root for. Why would we ever want to identify with the bad guys?

This is George Lucas’ original target audience being 12-year-old kids. There’s nothing wrong with that, of course, but as the franchise evolved, its storytelling evolved, too, and now, Andor has given us the most nuanced and complex depiction of good vs. evil the franchise has ever seen.

The Empire Strikes Back's Rebels Have A Clear Sense Of Right & Wrong

The fundamental message of The Empire Strikes Back was the same as in the original 1977 Star Wars movie, later retitled A New Hope. The Rebels were the heroes trying to make the galaxy safer for all. They’d dealt a massive blow to the Empire by destroying the Death Star. There’s no denying that, but there was so much more work to be done, and brave men and women lined up to do it, knowing the dangers that awaited them.

When The Empire Strikes Back was first released, Irvin Kershner spoke with Alan Arnold for Once Upon a Galaxy: A Journal of the Making of The Empire Strikes Back. As Kershner noted in his interview, one of the reasons Star Wars appealed to such a broad audience is that “The order of things is clear. This is right, this is wrong; this is good, this is bad; this is effective, this is not effective, and so on.”

Andor shows us that love isn’t always enough. The Rebellion needed to start somewhere. It needed to start in the shadows.

The earliest depiction of the Rebel Alliance played a major part in creating that distinction. There’s an absolute sense of right and wrong, a clear message that there are good people in the world, and they aren’t willing to compromise their beliefs and ideals to achieve their goals. That’s the kind of idealized reality we all want to live in. It’s as relevant today as it was in the late 70s and early 80s.

As Kershner pointed out, “Princess Leia’s Rebel forces will not do anything to win. They will not sacrifice lives. They do not descend to the level of the enemy. That’s the difference between the Rebels and the Empire. It’s possible to fight because you love, not just because you hate.” The Rebels in the original Star Wars trilogy fight for love. That’s what sets them apart from the Empire. Andor, however, shows us that love isn’t always enough. The Rebellion needed to start somewhere. It needed to start in the shadows.

Andor's Rebels Don't Know Where To Draw The Line

A well-organized, well-funded, and effective Rebellion like the one portrayed in the original Star Wars movies doesn’t spring up overnight. It takes determination, grit, fear, anger, grief, and a willingness to bend the rules to become something that can even remotely stand up to the might of an authoritarian machine like the Empire. The story of the Rebellion is a story of revolution, and Andor is the first Star Wars production that truly digs into the sacrifices needed to overthrow a dictatorship.

Yes, George Lucas’ original Rebels sacrificed things, too. Rebel pilots and ground troops gave their lives for the cause. What we get to witness so viscerally in Andor, however, is how the earliest Rebels were also forced to sacrifice their sense of self. They’ve forfeited their morals, relationships, and sanity, all for the promise of a better tomorrow. The Rebels in Leia’s and Mon Mothma’s leadership era could at least sleep peacefully at night, knowing they were doing the right thing. Can we honestly say the same about those in Andor?

The Rebels in Leia’s and Mon Mothma’s leadership era could at least sleep peacefully at night, knowing they were doing the right thing. Can we honestly say the same about those in Andor?

In the early days, the Rebels didn't know where to draw the line because, quite frankly, there was no line. Not yet. Every single minor win is hard-fought. Danger lurks around every corner. No one can be trusted. How can someone operate with hope and love when the threat of betrayal is everywhere? In this stage of the war, a war that hasn’t even officially begun yet, everything must remain hidden. Hard choices must be made, and this theme is present throughout season 2’s second block of episodes.

In Andor season 2 episodes 4-6, Cassian Andor and Luthen Rael are at odds over Ghorman. Well-versed Star Wars fans know that a massacre is imminent on Ghorman, one so vile it forces Mon Mothma to call out Emperor Palpatine publicly and urge various Rebel cells to form what will become known as the Alliance. As such, the audience is working with more information than Luthen and Cassian. This makes Luthen’s decision even more harrowing.

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The Rebels & The Empire Share The Same Dark Goal: Andor Episode 6 Ending Explained

Andor episode 6’s ending caps off another arc of the show, proving that the Empire and Luthen may both have gotten what they wanted in a dark way.

Cassian heads to Ghorman, discovers that the Ghormans want to fight back against the Empire, and says that helping them do so is not worth it, because he knows the Empire will only retaliate. Luthen doesn’t care. Every pushback against the Empire is a win in his book, even if it escalates the conflict on what was once an inherently peaceful planet. At what point does what’s right for the Rebellion become wrong for everyone else? When does that distinction start to matter?

Both Versions Of The Rebellion Work

While the two versions of the Rebellion we see between Andor and the original Star Wars trilogy are undeniably different, both are equally valid. Leia's Rebels couldn't exist without Luthen’s. The changed title for the original Star Wars movie, A New Hope, tells us everything we need to know. It is the infusion of hope that changed the Rebel Alliance. They leaned on hope when the cells ed together to fight as one, and the tide turned when brave Rebels, led by Cassian Andor, stole the Death Star plans.

There is no revolution without sacrifice. That much is clear. While Andor’s Rebellion efforts are harsher and more underhanded than we’re used to from Star Wars, there’s no denying that the seeds of Princess Leia’s, Mon Mothma’s, and Bail Organa’s eventual hope-fueled Rebel Alliance are already being planted.

New episodes of Andor premiere Tuesdays exclusively on Disney+.

Release Date

Episode Drop

April 29, 2025

Andor season 2, episodes 4-6

May 6, 2025

Andor season 2, episodes 7-9

May 13, 2025

Andor season 2, episodes 10-12

Andor Seasoon 2 official poster

Your Rating

Andor
TV-14
Action & Adventure
Drama
Thriller
Sci-Fi
Release Date
2022 - 2025-00-00
Network
Disney+
Showrunner
Tony Gilroy

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Andor is a Star Wars prequel series set before the events of Rogue One, following Cassian Andor as he navigates a world of danger and deception. The series delves into his transformation into a pivotal figure in the struggle against the Galactic Empire.

Directors
Susanna White
Writers
Dan Gilroy
Franchise(s)
Star Wars
Main Genre
Sci-Fi
Creator(s)
Tony Gilroy
Producers
Diego Luna, Kate Hazell, Kathleen Kennedy, Tony Gilroy, Sanne Wohlenberg, Toby Haynes, Michelle Rejwan
Seasons
2
Number of Episodes
12
Streaming Service(s)
Disney+