Andor, Tony Gilroy
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Intricate, thrilling and heartbreaking to the very end: this was a brilliant show about the people who never get statues.
Tony Gilroy is trying, unsuccessfully, to look relaxed. We’re sitting in his Los Angeles hotel room less than two weeks before “Andor” — the Emmy-nominated, Peabody-winning “Star Wars” series he created — concludes its second and final season on Disney+.
Warning: this article contains spoilers for Andor season two, up to episode nine. This week, many fans are diving into the final episodes o
Tony Gilroy on why that sexual assault attempt against an "undocumented" fugitive in the show's season two premiere block was necessary to tell an accurate tale of revolution — even within the Star Wars universe.
Tony Gilroy's Andor on Disney+ is a radical, subversive take on rebellion, drawing from real-world history and current events.
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‘Andor’ Creator Says Star Wars Series Isn’t Political Commentary, Parallels Reflect “Repeating Patterns Of Revolution And AuthoritarianismTony Gilroy clarifies that Andor is not a direct commentary on current politics, but rather on historical cycles of "revolution and authoritarianism."
It wasn't planned this way, but Andor Season 2 arrived on Disney+ when Star Wars: Revenge of the Sith celebrated its 20th anniversary with a theatrical rerelease. This coincidence gives even greater resonance to Genevieve O'Reilly's performance in the final season of Andor,
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This article contains spoilers through the end of Andor.