this post was submitted on 21 Feb 2026
51 points (96.4% liked)

Star Wars

6124 readers
76 users here now

Discussion for all things Star Wars. Movies, books, games, TV shows and more are welcome.

  1. Keep it civil. Don’t insult other community members in posts or comments, and don’t make posts designed to insult other community members or parts of the fandom with different opinions.

  2. Posts must be on-topic.

  3. No real life politics. That means no political advocacy, and no real life political discussions vaguely dressed up as on-topic posts. If you want to discuss real life politics, you are free to start your own community.

  4. No memes/low-effort spam/Youtube poops style posts. !starwarsmemes@lemmy.world is a place for those.

  5. Posts must be coherent.

  6. If a post is otherwise allowed but has realistic gore or nudity, please mark it NSFW.

Community icon art from DeviantArt user DavidDeb.

Banner art by Ralph McQuarrie.

founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
top 2 comments
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
[–] aeronmelon@lemmy.world 27 points 15 hours ago

Science fiction has always been a way to talk about the problems that you’re not allowed to talk about. It has this magical property to look like nothing to censors and conservatives while being a bolt of lightning to anyone who’s paying attention.

…And with that comment forming in my head, I realize something.

Andor is largely considered better than the average Star Wars and I wholeheartedly agree. But now I fully understand why I agree.

I have been watching Star Trek since I was a kid. And while I was lured in with space travel and aliens and time travel and cool effects, I appreciate it more now because of the intelligent messaging of acceptance and understanding that has been a part of its identity from the beginning. No amount of campy acting or cardboard sets will diminish my love for Trek because of that.

Andor elevates Star Wars to that level. Star Wars has always been a classic tale of good vs evil. But it’s primarily fun, action-orientated entertainment. Andor is much more than that. Andor is Star Wars with the intelligent messaging of acceptance and understanding (and the dangers of failing to do so). It’s not just very good Star Wars, not just very well-produced Star Wars, it’s a whole new evolution of the brand into something so much more important than simply seeing the bad guy lose.

It’s shocking that Disney allowed Andor to be Andor. Except that it’s not. Mickey Mouse can’t make a moral stand against genocide, but Andor can. Because science fiction has always had the ability to make a pointed message look like safe, surface-level entertainment to some people while also having tremendous meaning to other people.

Thank you, Tony Gilroy. Hope to see more in the future.

[–] jaaake@lemmy.world 13 points 14 hours ago

What a great "mask off" interview. I love hearing about all the subjects they covered without the pretense of selling the show within studio guidelines. Feels much more "VH1 Behind The Music" than "press junket."