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ANDOR Fans Say the Show Reframes a Major Cassian and Jyn Moment in ROGUE ONE — GeekTyrant
ANDOR Fans Say the Show Reframes a Major Cassian and Jyn Moment in ROGUE ONE — GeekTyrant

Geek Tyrant

time9 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Geek Tyrant

ANDOR Fans Say the Show Reframes a Major Cassian and Jyn Moment in ROGUE ONE — GeekTyrant

'Andor has truly increased the depth and meaning of anything it touches.' That's how Star Wars fans are describing the emotional ripple effect Andor has had across the galaxy, especially when it comes to one key moment in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story . Rewatching the film after Andor Season 2 has been a revelation for many, casting old scenes in a new, much heavier light. Specifically, fans are pointing to the moment when Jyn Erso confronts Cassian Andor aboard the stolen Imperial ship after escaping Eadu. It's the heat of the moment, her father Galen has just died in her arms, and she's furious to learn Cassian was sent to assassinate him. But now, through the lens of Andor, this clash hits differently. One fan posted on Reddit: 'Rewatching Rogue One for the first time since finishing Andor S2. The scene where they escape Eadu in the stolen Imperial ship and Jyn confronts Cassian about her father's death reads so differently to me with the context of the show. Before I thought Cassian was in the wrong, and his indignation at Jyn's accusations further proved that. 'But now it feels like Jyn is naive, and Cassian has just gone through the most intense few days of his years as a rebel, and he's had it. Both of them partially right and both of them a bit wrong. But Cassian in particular has sacrificed too much at this point to be lectured, not when the stakes are this big and so close. Anyway, I love that it feels like Andor has truly increased the depth and meaning of anything it touches.' That shift in perspective seems to be widely shared. Another fan chimed in: 'I had a similar reaction rewatching Rogue One after Andor. His speech helped me see how our experiences shape the way we feel moments. 'That's what made Cassian so mysterious at first watch I'm thinking —what had he lost, what weight was he carrying? At first, it seemed like Jyn had the darkest past, but Andor shows that the Empire takes from everyone.' That's been one of the coolest things about Andor , its ability to shade in the corners of the rebellion and give emotional weight to the political. The same Reddit thread also points out how both Jyn and Cassian share similar trajectories, despite coming from different worlds. 'Jyn basically goes through a condensed character arc that's the same as Cassian—aka wanting to avoid the rebellion before realizing they have no choice but to fight.' Another agreed: 'This right here is one of my favorite parts of RO and Andor. That Jyn and Cassian have been through a similar journey. It makes RO even better for me.' Andor hasn't just deepened Cassian's story, it's retroactively elevated Rogue One. The choices, the trauma, the urgency, all of it carries a sharper edge now that fans know what came before. All episodes of Andor Season 2 are now streaming on Disney+. So if you haven't already… it might be time for a Rogue One rewatch. Just don't be surprised if it hits you a little harder this time.

Scarlett Johansson says joining Jurassic World fulfils her lifelong dream
Scarlett Johansson says joining Jurassic World fulfils her lifelong dream

Business Standard

time2 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Business Standard

Scarlett Johansson says joining Jurassic World fulfils her lifelong dream

At the star-studded world premiere of Jurassic World: Rebirth at London's Odeon Luxe Leicester Square, Scarlett Johansson lit up the red carpet — not just as a Hollywood icon, but as a lifelong fan stepping into a world she had dreamed of since childhood. 'I was 10 when I saw Jurassic Park, and it left a mark on me,' Johansson told Reuters. 'For the next thirty years, I would've done anything to be part of this universe.' Now, under the direction of Rogue One filmmaker Gareth Edwards, she finally joins the legendary franchise that first sparked her imagination. Jurassic World: Rebirth plot overview The story follows a team of specialists who venture to a forbidden island, home to a secret research facility tied to the original Jurassic Park. Their mission: to retrieve DNA samples from three unique dinosaurs in hopes of achieving a groundbreaking medical breakthrough. The film stars Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali, Jonathan Bailey (Bridgerton), and Rupert Friend in lead roles. Rupert Friend called the experience "exhilarating," saying, 'I love adventure. I love being taken on a ride where you don't know what's going to happen. I love the unknown. I love risk.' Director Edwards admitted that the pressure of reviving such a beloved franchise truly hit him at the premiere. 'It's all front and centre here. It feels a bit weird to be honest. I can't quite get my head around it,' he said. Jurassic World: Rebirth cast Here's the list of Jurassic World: Rebirth cast: Scarlett Johansson Mahershala Ali Jonathan Bailey Rupert Friend Manuel Garcia-Rulfo Luna Blaise David Iacono Audrina Miranda Ed Skrein Philippine Velge Bechir Sylvain About Jurassic World: Rebirth Set as a standalone sequel to Jurassic World Dominion (2022), Jurassic World: Rebirth is the seventh instalment in the globally popular Jurassic Park franchise. Written by David Koepp, who also penned Jurassic Park (1993) and The Lost World (1997), and directed by Gareth Edwards, the film introduces a fresh ensemble cast including Scarlett Johansson, Mahershala Ali, and Jonathan Bailey. Filming took place across Thailand, Malta, and the UK between June and September 2024. The movie had its premiere on June 17, 2025, and is set for theatrical release on July 2, 2025, by Universal Pictures.

Tony Gilroy Created His Own ‘Star Wars' Endings and Aimed for ‘Legit Hope'
Tony Gilroy Created His Own ‘Star Wars' Endings and Aimed for ‘Legit Hope'

Gizmodo

time4 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Gizmodo

Tony Gilroy Created His Own ‘Star Wars' Endings and Aimed for ‘Legit Hope'

But where and when Lucasfilm uses 'Andor' characters in the future is out of his hands. When Tony Gilroy and his Andor star Diego Luna decided to cram half a decade's worth of new Star Wars lore into three episodes per year leading up to the events of Rogue One, they knew the task was unbelievably ambitious. In a chat with the Wrap, Gilroy expressed the excitement everyone involved felt over their great big heist of an entry into Lucasfilm's Star Wars lore. 'We kept waiting for it to fail, going, 'There must be something that's going to bite us here.' We kept waiting for a bugaboo that never appeared,' he said. 'I wrote the top and the tail of each block to set the frame for each year. And I took that into the writers' room so nobody could tell me that it wouldn't work. And then we filled in from there.' Now with the Disney+ series at an end and awards season kicking in, Andor's mission is one fans would say really paid off for the critically acclaimed show. No one really cared that it didn't tie into shows like The Mandalorian or Ahsoka and Gilroy wasn't forced to embed any sort of direct lines to get more viewers to those shows. 'I paid rigorous attention to the canon that I'm supposed to pay attention to. I've ignored the canon that I'm allowed to ignore,' he stated, but that doesn't mean his canon if off the table for other projects: 'I don't own the IP, so they can do what they want.' Instead Gilroy was able to say goodbye to his characters on his own terms. He told the trade that key final moments such as Dedra's face-off with Luthen, and when Andor meets a Force healer in probably the only time the energy which courses through Star Wars was directly mentioned, didn't all come together that meticulously. 'You spend so much time constructing and tearing down in your imagination. It's just such a constant process,' he said about how the series still surprised him as they finished the last scene. 'I wanted to be able to not feel like a sadist with what I was doing with these characters and have some hope,' he said of the moment we see Bix in the field with her and Andor's child facing out into the future; to Gilroy, that's the close to his time with Star Wars. 'Legit hope. Not cheesy T-shirt hope, but real hope.'

Ratings: Tony Awards Surge 38% to Biggest Audience Since 2019
Ratings: Tony Awards Surge 38% to Biggest Audience Since 2019

Yahoo

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Ratings: Tony Awards Surge 38% to Biggest Audience Since 2019

CBS will be telling the story of Tonys night for some time…. America's Most Watch Network's presentation of the 78th Tony Awards on Sunday night averaged 4.85 million total viewers, an increase of 38% year-over-year to mark the biggest audience since 2019 for the telecast. (In 2020, there was no formal Tonys ceremony.) More from TVLine Andor Tops Nielsen Streaming Chart With Release of Series Finale; Rogue One Returns to Top 10 Movies Save the Dates: Brett Goldstein's Apple Movie, Hallmark's Christmas at Sea and More Casting News: black-ish Star Joins Boston Blue, Carrie TV Series Adds 14 and More The show also enjoyed its largest live streaming audience ever on Paramount+, up 208% vs. 2024. In the demos, this year's Tonys saw gains of 91% with the 25-54 crowd, 107% among Adults 18-49 and 147% with those age 18-34. This year's telecast was hosted by Tony Award winner and Wicked star Cynthia Erivo, with Maybe Happy Ending emerging as the big winner and the original Broadway cast of Hamilton reuniting for a medley commemorating the hit musical's 10th anniversary. Last year, Academy Award winner Ariana DeBose lorded over a ceremony where Stereophonic and The Outsiders grabbed the most trophies.

Tony Gilroy on Giving ‘Andor' a ‘Hopeful' End, Bringing Back K-2SO, and Episode 10's Revealing Backstory
Tony Gilroy on Giving ‘Andor' a ‘Hopeful' End, Bringing Back K-2SO, and Episode 10's Revealing Backstory

Yahoo

time11-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Tony Gilroy on Giving ‘Andor' a ‘Hopeful' End, Bringing Back K-2SO, and Episode 10's Revealing Backstory

On Tuesday, Disney+ dropped the last three episodes of 'Andor,' wrapping up the series and directly setting up 'Rogue One.' It's not typical that a television show needs to pass its baton to a film made almost a decade earlier, and 'Andor' creator Tony Gilroy did not want to approach the show's final episode in a typical way, either. While on this week's episode of the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast, Gilroy talked about fighting against the need to incorporate one final big decision or turning point in wrapping up the series heading into 'Rogue One.' More from IndieWire 'Murderbot' Review: Alexander Skarsgård's Goofy-Great Apple Series Wants Us to Watch TV, Together How 'Love, Death and Robots' Season 4 Made the Ultimate Cute Little Guy 'Episode 12 is really its own thing where we didn't put a lot of pressure to jack anything up,' said Gilroy on the podcast. 'This is kind of a 'deliver the pizza' episode, and the pizza is emotional, and everybody settled into it, and we took the pressure off ourselves.' Gilroy specifically wanted to go out on a hopeful note. 'Andor' Season 2 was about the personal sacrifices and impossible choices characters faced in taking on the cause of the nascent rebellion, and the series creator felt as if 'Andor' had earned the right to end with a measured note of optimism. 'We're really putting the audience through some amazingly difficult journeys [of] what time does to people that hopefully you care about, and [what] time, under these really extreme circumstances and these extreme adventures that they're on, does to them,' said Gilroy. 'So there's a lot of attrition at the end. There's a lot of sadness at the end. But really, in the end, this is the beginning of 'A New Hope.' What's going to come out of this is the phoenix of the Rebellion.' The last three-episode cycle 'Andor' also saw K-2SO (voiced by Alan Tudyk) back into the fold, returning to the prominent supporting role that the modified KX-series security droid plays in 'Rogue One.' It's a move Gilroy purposefully delayed and left to the series end. As Gilroy explained on the podcast, his initial involvement with 'Andor' was as a friend to the franchise, giving notes to Lucasfilm on its initial plans for a 'Rogue One' prequel series. In addition to his advice to take a 'back-to-the-studs' approach to Cassian Andor's (Diego Luna) arc, which would become the basis of his own series, he highly recommended they abandon their ambitious plans for K-2SO. 'I was saying, I don't think you can have K-2 all the way through this show, which they kept wanting to try to do because that was the, 'Let's have a Butch and Sundance' show,' said Gilroy of the initial plans to have Cassian and the droid go on 40-episodes worth of missions together — a proposal that reminded the 'Rogue One' writer of his own story struggles with K-2. 'He's the worst piece of luggage in the world. He's not a spy, you can't take him undercover, he's seven feet tall. KX units are so inhibiting. If you watch 'Rogue' with that in mind, how many times is he is not allowed to get out of the ship, or 'I have to wait here and do something.'' In a series which, at its core, is about supplying an emotional understanding of what brings characters of all stripes to fight a fascist Empire, Episode 10 is arguably the holy grail of 'Why We Fight' Rebellion backstories: Luthen (Stellan Skarsgård) and Kleya (Elizabeth Dulau). Gilroy said very early on he knew he would explore Luthen's backstory, and was saving it for a key storyline of the stealthy underground leader for near the end of 'Andor.' 'I had a variety of backstories that Stellan and I spoke about early in the first season,' said Gilory. 'The one thing he didn't want was he didn't want revenge. He said, 'I don't want it to be a revenge story. I see that in some of the other characters, and I think that's the one I don't want.' The ultimate Episode 210 storyline, and the incorporation of Kleya, as an almost adopted daughter, into Luthen's backstory, was motivated and inspired by the talents of Dulau. Gilroy and Skarsgård had both been impressed by the previously unknown actress's talents, and wanted to give her and the character the opportunity to spread their wings before saying goodbye. 'Elizabeth Dulau, who plays Kleya, was such an incredible surprise. It's her first job. She came right out of RADA, and we had a couple of actresses who were signed up for that part, who got offered other things along the way, and we let them go. And suddenly we have this young actress [who we don't really know,' said Gilroy. '[Her] audition's very good, and her scenes are very good, but how good is she? And oh my God, you start to realize what someone can do. She's a Meryl Streep. I mean, she's just astonishing.' To hear Tony Gilroy's full interview, subscribe to the Filmmaker Toolkit podcast on Apple, Spotify, or your favorite podcast platform. You can also watch the full interview at the top of the page or on IndieWire's YouTube page. Best of IndieWire The 19 Best Thrillers Streaming on Netflix in May, from 'Fair Play' to 'Emily the Criminal' Martin Scorsese's Favorite Movies: 86 Films the Director Wants You to See Christopher Nolan's Favorite Movies: 44 Films the Director Wants You to See

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