A fugitive once more, Cassian must make his next move before it is too late.A fugitive once more, Cassian must make his next move before it is too late.A fugitive once more, Cassian must make his next move before it is too late.
Dave Chapman
- B2EMO
- (voice)
Matthew Lyons
- Dewi Pamular
- (as Matt Lyons)
Nicholas Moss
- Lieutenant Keysax
- (as Nick Moss)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaFirst major on-screen appearance of the Cantwell-class Arrestor Cruiser, the ship's design, based off a World War II aircraft carrier, was first created by visual effects artist Colin Cantwell as one of the potential designs for the Imperial Star Destroyer in Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977), though it ultimately was not used. 40 years later the production crew for Solo: A Star Wars Story (2018) looked through Lucasfilm archives for ship design ideas and came across this design and decided to use it for an Imperial ship in the film, though it only wound up being used in a short Imperial recruitment video. The name for the ship, Cantwell-class, was first used in the novelization of the film when it almost captured the Millennium Falcon, the original script for the film featured a scene where the Falcon was captured by the cruiser but it was ultimately cut from the final version.
- GoofsWhen Cassian is calling Xanwan, he tells him to use no names, twice. Then immediately following the second time, he mentions Xan's name.
But he personally already mentioned "Marva Andor", so with "no names" he clearly meant not to mention only HIS name, "Cassian Andor".
- Quotes
Vel Sartha: What have you done for him lately?
Kleya Marki: I don't have lately. I have always. I have a constant blur of plates spinning and knives on the floor and needy, panicked faces at the window, of which you are but one of many.
- ConnectionsReferences Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999)
Featured review
Another stellar episode
Tony Gilroy along with Beau Willimon from House of Cards have brought a level of sophistication and nuance to the Star Wars universe beyond all expectation. Their brilliant writing delves into the minute details of what fascism really is and exposes the empire's evil in a way no other film or series in the franchise has done before. It's like watching a real historical drama about rebellion and resistance against Nazi Germany.
The tension in the previous two episodes where Andor was imprisoned in the empire's concentration/labor camp was riveting and nerve wracking, not only because of the writing, but also the exquisite ATTENTION TO DETAIL. The brutal subjugation protocols of the prison down to the minute details of their forced labor on the prison assembly line along with the beautifully crafted sets (on all the different worlds) all serve to make this the best and most intelligent Star Wars franchise ever made.
This is by far my favorite show streaming on any platform right now. The rest of the Star Wars universe pales in comparison.
The tension in the previous two episodes where Andor was imprisoned in the empire's concentration/labor camp was riveting and nerve wracking, not only because of the writing, but also the exquisite ATTENTION TO DETAIL. The brutal subjugation protocols of the prison down to the minute details of their forced labor on the prison assembly line along with the beautifully crafted sets (on all the different worlds) all serve to make this the best and most intelligent Star Wars franchise ever made.
This is by far my favorite show streaming on any platform right now. The rest of the Star Wars universe pales in comparison.
helpful•625
- mzand-751-539572
- Nov 16, 2022
Details
- Runtime43 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39 : 1
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