Summary

  • The new season of Andor will introduce a legacy Star Wars character with a new performer, breaking tradition.
  • The Star Wars timeline now includes projects set all over the map, but still centers around the original trilogy era.
  • Recasting legacy characters in Andor signifies moves away from excess use of digital effects, favoring authenticity.

In a recent interview regarding the impending second season of Andor, showrunner Tony Gilroy seemingly confirmed that a legacy Star Wars character would not only be appearing, but would be portrayed by a new performer. Although we don't know just which character that is, this announcement is good news.

Given the space saga's muddled and often controversial history of utilizing digital effects to either de-age or flat-out resurrect the original performers of legacy characters, this is a marked change, but it's one that is undoubtedly for the better. Here's why audiences should be looking forward to a new take on an established character.

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Star Wars Timeline Problems

From the outset of the series in 1977, Star Wars has been a story that was told out of order. George Lucas made the deliberate decision to thrust audiences into a story already in progress, kicking things off with what was canonically the fourth chapter of a serialized saga. It wasn't until over twenty years later that audiences would finally be treated to the actual first episode of the series.

As a result of this approach, the Star Wars franchise has always jumped around its own timeline. However, the projects that have been made since the Disney acquisition have taken this to new heights. Now, between films and streaming TV shows, there are projects set all over the map. The Acolyte was set hundreds of years prior to any of the films, while The Last Jedi was set decades after the original trilogy. However, the overarching franchise has routinely returned to a central sweet spot in the timeline: right around the original trilogy.

Rogue One, The Mandalorian, Ahsoka, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Skeleton Crew, Andor, and more — every one of these projects has been set within a few years of the original trilogy. This aligns neatly with Disney's primary financial motivation from the get-go of acquiring Star Wars, which is to mine the property for its nostalgia and give fans something familiar. After all, Disney's first project was The Force Awakens, a film that took things back to basics and all-but-entirely ignored the prequels. To this end, the original trilogy settings make sense. These stories get to be set in a Star Wars universe in which many of the franchise's legacy characters (Luke, Leia, Han) are still in their prime and kicking around.

Star Wars Stories Don't Age, But Actors Do

Luke Skywalker at the start and end of his journey as a Jedi

The problem is, real life doesn't work that way. But as the divisive response to The Last Jedi demonstrated, audiences apparently don't want to see their heroes grow old. They want them to remain perfect, encased in the amber of nostalgia in perpetuity, like an action figure inside its box. But like it or not, the reality is that performers like Mark Hamill and Harrison Ford have aged, so Star Wars was faced with the question of how to incorporate these legacy characters into new stories.

Rather than recasting, the franchise has regularly elected to utilize groundbreaking digital effects to preserve the original performers. This began with Leia and Tarkin's appearances in Rogue One, and continued with Carrie Fisher's posthumous digital revival in The Rise of Skywalker and Luke Skywalker showing up in The Mandalorian's second season. The franchise appeared committed to not wavering on this point.

What's even stranger about all of this is that, before this digital reanimation was possible, the franchise had recast the performers of legacy characters. And it worked extremely well. No one was demanding that Alec Guinness's likeness be digitally trotted out and pasted over someone's face in The Phantom Menace in 1999. Instead, George Lucas hired Ewan McGregor, a talented young actor, to play the part, and he did. Now, several decades later, McGregor is a fan favorite and an integral part of the franchise.

More recently, the role of Han Solo was recast in Solo, with the ever-talented Alden Ehrenreich stepping into the role. For a long time, it seemed as if Lucasfilm had taken that film's financial hardships as proof that audiences wouldn't accept a legacy character's recasting. However, many fans found both Ehrenreich's Han and Donald Golver's Lando (also a recast legacy character) to be some of the strongest elements of that film. A feature-length film starring the uncanny valley faces of de-aged Harrison Ford and Billy Dee Williams pasted atop younger actors' bodies sounds like a literal nightmare. Lucasfilm was foolish for acting like they made a mistake by casting brilliant new actors instead.

Andor Brings Change to Star Wars

kay vess and carbon frozen han solo

Fortunately, as Andor's second season prepares to release, it appears the franchise has had a change of heart, and it's absolutely for the betterment of these individual projects and the Star Wars saga as a whole. Having a real actor give a real performance and make real, authentic decisions will always be better than any digital mimicry can muster.

In recent years, these digital recreations have grown more technologically advanced thanks to evolving tools. (Luke's appearance in The Mandalorian was aided by the use of AI in appearance and voice.). But if anything, they feel even less human. When a digitized version of young Mark Hamill pops up in something, it doesn't feel like Luke Skywalker: it feels like some inhuman approximation of him. To this end, recasting these roles allows new performers to pick up the mantle and imbue these beloved characters with actual agency and life once more. Hopefully, we'll get to see that with whatever legacy character Andor has in store.

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TV-14
Action & Adventure
Drama
Thriller
Sci-Fi
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Release Date
2022 - 2025-00-00
Network
Disney+
Showrunner
Tony Gilroy
Directors
Susanna White
Writers
Dan Gilroy
Franchise(s)
Star Wars
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  • instar49831518.jpg
    Diego Luna
    Cassian Andor
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    Stellan Skarsgård
    Luthen Rael

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming
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Creator(s)
Tony Gilroy