So I kind of got into that feeling like I’m a founding father or something, you know? Of this mythology. But there’s like a direct connection between this and- what kind of turns me on about the thing is this-chronologically, it’s one of the more “Star Wars,” because this takes us to ‘Rogue One,’ which takes us to ‘A New Hope,’ I think, is that kind of how works, yeah. Take some money from the Empire, free this little goat and sheep planet and blow some stuff up. We’re a group of radicals trying to like free their little corner of the universe. But it’s so compartmentalized I don’t really know so much beyond my stuff, which was just very straightforward. It’s about the politicization of like a nihilist kind of like, right? Cassian, that is. When asked about the series’ huge emotional stakes and how the Empire-Rebel conflict is being approached in a different way, he said the following: But I don’t know what else I can say about our “Star Wars.” This is kind of crazy.” And I have to talk about [laughs, parsecs and things like that and something triggers something in my childhood, you know? It was a surprisingly profound and scary little moment there. There’s our moon there.” And then I have like these lines to say, and, and I, “oh man, this is, this is a lot. And even though it’s been a while, and you know, I’d like to think I’ve graduated beyond all this I’m more sophisticated, I’m a more cynical dude, but my first day on set, there are people pointing to the sky, “there’s a moon there and, there are three planets there. Those early “Star Wars” films are more complex, I think. It was so weird to– I mean, I was born in 1977. I mean, let me try to put myself back there, dude. I think my character shows up in episode four? I mean, you probably know way more than me cause I haven’t even seen the show or read the first three scripts. I mean, you’ve seen it, so you know, we were trying to make something more real, more serious. That’s even like way more than ‘Star Wars,’ I was there for that dude. It was fucking Tony Gilroy, right? I mean, that is the man right there. Unsurprisingly, Moss-Bachrach was kept in the dark about the story beyond scenes his character is involved in, something he commented on while explaining at length why he joined the show: Vel’s squad feels more fragmented than you would like right before a critical mission, and we’re sure some of the tension that started to brew after Cassian promptly joined the group will explode in this week’s episode.Īmong those new faces was Ebon Moss-Bachrach’s Arvel Skeen, who appears to be highly critical of the current situation, but is willing to push forward under Vel’s orders anyway. Perhaps the most interesting group is the one collaborating with Stellan Skarsgård’s Luthen Rael on the planet Aldhani. The fourth episode of Andor, which aired last week, introduced a bunch of different characters in both the Rebel and Imperial side of the rising conflict. Andor actor Ebon Moss-Bachrach, of Girls and The Bear fame, recently spoke with The Playlist and discussed joining the Star Wars universe and more.
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