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‘Andor' Creator on That Stunner 'Genocide' Speech and Its Real-Life Inspiration

‘Andor' Creator on That Stunner 'Genocide' Speech and Its Real-Life Inspiration

Yahoo05-06-2025

Great sci-fi often serves as an allegory for current social and political issues.
But never before has Star Wars hit such a topical bullseye — intentional or not — as Tuesday's episodes of Andor season two when a character delivered a stunner speech that warned of rising government authoritarianism, the dilution of fact-based reality, and the reluctance to use the word 'genocide.'
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Airing on Disney+ the same day a Drudge Report headline became the latest to warn of 'America's Slide Into Authoritarianism,' the acclaimed drama series featured a sequence where the courageous politician Mon Mothma (Genevieve O'Reilly) risks her life to deliver a speech before the Galactic Senate where she furiously attacked Emperor Palpatine and his Imperial forces. But one can also easily imagine her words being said by a politician on C-SPAN right now.
'I believe we are in crisis,' Mothma says. 'The distance between what is said today and what is known to be true has become an abyss. Of all the things at risk, the loss of an objective reality is perhaps the most dangerous. The death of truth is the ultimate victory of evil. When truth leaves us, when we let it slip away, when it is ripped from our hands, we become vulnerable to the appetite of whatever monster screams the loudest.'
And then, referring to a prior sequence where Imperial forces massacred peaceful protesters on the planet Ghorman — a world the Imperials invaded to exploit a precious mineral — Mothma says, 'What took place yesterday… was unprovoked genocide.'
At this, the other senators cry out in protest at Mothma's use of the word. 'Yes, genocide!' she repeated. 'And the monster screaming the loudest, that we helped create, the monster who will come for us all, soon enough, is Emperor Palpatine.'
It's worth noting that Andor season two began production in November 2022 and wrapped around February 2024. So filming was completed long before the reelection of Donald Trump and just a few months after the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023 (the latter having sparked much debate among experts over the last two years — such as here and here — over the right or wrongness of using the word 'genocide' when describing Israel's military response in Gaza). Nonetheless, the scene has some viewers on social media interpreting the moment as pro-Palestinian.
Asked about the sequence and its real-life inspirations, Andor creator Tony Gilroy told The Hollywood Reporter, 'The really sorry truth about the about this question — and we get it a lot — is that peace and prosperity and calm are the rarities. Those are rarities throughout the last 6,000 years of recorded history. You could drop this show at any point in the last 6,000 years, and it would make sense to some people about what's happening to them.'
Continued Gilroy: 'I mean, the control of truth has always been a scabbard of power. Power dictates the narrative, and always has tried to always do that. Look at what the Empire does to Ghorman with their propaganda campaign. The very first scene [in the season] that Krennic has where he talks about Ghorman, that's based on the Wannsee convention — the convention where the Nazis got together and planned the final solution over a business lunch. You could say all this about the Gulf of Tonkin — which got America into Vietnam — or you could say the burning of the Reichstag [which paved the way to the Nazi's rise to power], or you could say the sinking of the Lusitania [which pushed America into World War I]. You go all the way through history, and power is the control of truth. So I think with that speech, we were looking to be timeless and classic.'
Added the creator, a bit wearily, 'And I'm not psychic.'
The second and final season of the Star Wars drama has been not pulling punches when it comes to depicting a wartime drama. In addition to that Wannsee convention scene (see the real-life photos and how closely the Andor setting matched up), the show made headlines during its premiere episodes by staging the first rape attempt in Star Wars content in a scene involving Bix (Adria Arjona).
'I get one shot to tell everything I know — or can discover, or that I've learned — about revolution, about battles, with as many incidents and as many colors as I can get in there, without having [the story] tip over,' Gilroy said about the latter sequence. 'I mean, let's be honest, man: The history of civilization, there's a huge arterial component of it that's rape. All of us who are here — we are all the product of rape. I mean armies and power throughout history [have committed rape]. So to not touch on it, in some way… It just was organic and it felt right, coming about as a power trip for this guy. I was really trying to make a path for Bix that would ultimately lead to clarity — but a difficult path to get back to clarity.'
Andor Disney+'s acclaimed Star Wars drama series which currently has the highest rating of any Star Wars TV show or movie on Rotten Tomatoes. The show follows the adventures of Rebel Alliance leader Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) and leads up to the events in the film Rogue One. The final three episodes air next week.
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Box Office: ‘28 Years Later' Scares Up $30 Million Start, ‘Elio' Lands Worst Debut in Pixar History With $21 Million
Box Office: ‘28 Years Later' Scares Up $30 Million Start, ‘Elio' Lands Worst Debut in Pixar History With $21 Million

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Box Office: ‘28 Years Later' Scares Up $30 Million Start, ‘Elio' Lands Worst Debut in Pixar History With $21 Million

A spunky, alien-obsessed preteen and undead army were no match at the box office against a loyal, fiery dragon. Universal's 'How to Train Your Dragon' remake has remained No. 1 in North America despite the presence of two newcomers, Disney and Pixar's intergalactic adventure 'Elio' and Sony's zombie thriller '28 Years Later.' More from Variety How 'Elio' Pays Homage to Classic Sci-Fi Films Like 'The Thing,' 'Close Encounters' and 'Alien' Box Office: '28 Years Later' Chomps on $14 Million Opening Day; 'Elio' Facing Pixar's Lowest Debut Ever as 'How to Train Your Dragon' Rules Again That Terrifying Chant in '28 Years Later': Danny Boyle Explains How a 110-Year-Old Recording Came to Define the Film 'Elio' has cratered in third place with $21 million from 3,750 theaters, ranking as the worst start in modern history for Pixar. Heading into the weekend, the otherworldly tale about a young boy who connects with aliens after getting mistaken for Earth's intergalactic ambassador was aiming for $25 million to $30 million. The film, which cost $150 million to produce, added just $14 million overseas for a catastrophic global total of $35 million. 'This is a weak opening for Pixar,' says David A. Gross, who runs the FranchiseRe movie consulting firm. 'These would be solid numbers for another original animation film, but this is Pixar, and by Pixar's remarkable standard, the opening is well below average.' Pixar's prior low-water mark was 2023's opposites-attract fable 'Elemental,' which opened to $29.6 million domestically and $44.5 million globally. However, that film was embraced by audiences and managed to endure at the box office, ultimately ending its big screen run with $155 million domestically and $496 million globally. 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Innocent Movie Moments That Terrified Kids
Innocent Movie Moments That Terrified Kids

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time3 hours ago

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Innocent Movie Moments That Terrified Kids

When we watch movies as kids, sometimes the weirdest things scare scar us for life. On the popular r/AskReddit subreddit, u/GabeyTheArtist asked people to share an absolutely-not-scary movie scene that absolutely terrified you as a child. Some of the answers left me scratching my head (and remembering how messed up some of these movies were): "When the lights dimmed and the movie started, and the MGM lion roared, 4-year-old me screamed and crawled for my life over my father's shoulder and into the lap of the lady in the row behind us." "When Boo started crying in Monsters Inc. and the lights started flickering." "That scene in The Little Mermaid when King Triton discovers Ariel's collection of land junk, loses his sh*t and screams at her." "In Sesame Street Presents: Follow That Bird when they capture Big Bird, paint him blue, put him in the cage, and make him sing that sad song. Terrified me as a child. Still hate it." "The nuclear bomb scene in The Terminator. Nightmares for weeks. I live in DC. Still live in fear that a bomb will vaporize us some day." "For some strange reason, the heffalumps and woozles in the Winnie the Pooh movie terrified me as a kid. I can't remember anything about that movie or why I was so scared." "Jim Carrey's How the Grinch Stole Christmas, when he goes crazy in the mail room, wrapping up Cindy Lou Who." "In Ice Age: The Meltdown, when the iceberg slowly turns around to reveal the two water dinosaurs. I hid until I knew the next scene was playing, like the monster could see me." "Aladdin, when he steps into the sand lion's mouth. I always had to cover my ears and my eyes." "The Fates in Disney's Hercules passing around (and at one point dropping) their shared eyeball." "The Bumble from Rudolph the Red-nosed Reindeer." "The end of the 'I Love To Laugh' scene in Mary Poppins, where the laughing people start to cry to get back to the ground. I thought crying was a horrible thing to show people doing." "The furnace scene in Home Alone. I was constantly scared of the basement after that, and we didn't even have a furnace down there." "The zombie in Hocus Pocus gave me nightmares for literally years." "I have beef with Janice from The Muppets." "I couldn't watch the Siamese cats song from Lady and the Tramp without losing my sh*t when I was a kid." "In Pinocchio, when that one kid turned into a donkey." "The pink elephants from Dumbo scared the absolute sh*t outta me as a child." "In E.T., when E.T. screams, running through the forest." "When E.T. gets all sick and white, and they put him in the bag. That frightened me for YEARS." "Everything in Mars Attacks! scared the living sh*t out of me as a kid, then I come to find it was a comedy." "I think when they went in the trippy tunnel in Willy Wonka and the Chocolate a kid, it scared the heck out of me." "The scene of Augustus Gloop going up the pipe in Willy Wonka & the Chocolate Factory." "The witch's feet curling under the house that fell on her in The Wizard of Oz. It still seems scary." "The flying monkey scene in The Wizard of Oz." "The Wheelers from Return to Oz." "'Be sure and tell 'em Large Marge sent ya!''" "The skeksis from The Dark Crystal really did a number on me as a kid. They were terrifying." "The Child Catcher in Chitty Chitty Bang Bang!" "When the mutant toys appear in Toy Story." "The waterfall scene in The Brave Little Toaster." "THAT Bilbo scene in The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring." "The forest fire when Bambi's mother dies." "The opening scene of The Great Mouse Detective. When the dad gets kidnapped by the bat." And finally, "The CATERPILLAR in Alice in Wonderland. 'Whoooo are you?'"

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