I’ve been very excited for ’s second season. 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:Like my colleagues, and also basically anybody that’s ever seen this show, I consider it to be the best television that has to offer. Hell, it might be the best thing the franchise has 🐻ever produced, fullstop.

It’s been a landmark achievement, garnering universal critical praise and a ton of award nominations. The first season was widely considered some of the best television of 2022, if not the best. Even if you don’t particularly care about Star Wars, it’s damn good television, an entirely compelling spy thriller that delves into𒁏 conte𝔉mporarily relevant themes of fascism and resistance. It’s one of my favourite shows of all time.

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168澳🍬洲幸运5开奖网: 🍎 Star Wars Can Be Anything, Even Horror

Andor's 💃Tony Gilroy says a Star Wars horror project is in the works, whic💫h can only be good for the franchise.

Andor’s Chapter Structure Isn’t All Bad

Mon Mothma crying sadly in Andor.

But I haven’t watched the second season at all. I simply can’t bring myself to do so, and that’s entirely because of its unorthodox release schedule. When it comes to shows like HBO’s , which I’ve been watching and 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:analysing as episodes release, it’s fairl𒆙y easy to keep up. I do this partly because of the nature of my job, yes, but it’s also very easy to sacrifice an hour out of my week to keep up with a series I’m genuinely interested in watching. It’s something I can do after my work day or during a lunch break. It’s something to g💛et excited about – when Monday comes, I have a new episode to deep dive into.

Season two of Andor doesn’t have a typical release cadence. Every week, three full length episodes are released at the same time, all ♌of which are around 40 minutes to an hour long. Each trio of episodes makes up a chapter, which covers a span of time within a single year. A year passes between 🤪each chapter, allowing the series to cover a significant swathe of time in a single season, focusing on smaller chunks of time on an episode level but telling a larger story over the full season

This structure, in itself, isn’t a bad idea. In fact,🌟 the negative sp﷽ace between each chapter would allow for audiences to see the long-term consequences of actions unfolding over time, and how those actions dovetail into the events of Rogue One at the end. It’s an interesting concept. Does it work well in practice? I don’t know! I don’t have time to watch it!

But It’s A Weird Release Cadence Nonetheless

Diego Luna as Cassian Andor piloting an experimental Imperial TIE Fighter in an Imperial flight suit in Star Wars: Andor.

Three episodes being released in a week feels like a compromise between entire seasons being released at once, which we’ve become accustomed to since the advent of streaming services, and the weekly episode release schedule that used to be the norm, back in the days of yore when television shows had dedicated time slots on cable. You can’t quite binge the whole season on a hungover Sunday, but you can binge what’s basically an A﷽ndor movie on a w🌄eekly basis.

A very long Andor movie, at that. There are people who prefer this schedule because they’re used to the way streaming typically works –൲ you can watch as much as you want of a season whenever you want. This schedule gives fans a full-length movie to enjoy, a feast instead of a snack. Some fans🏅 are very happy to get more every week.

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The timelines line up. The Death Star is beingꦇ built. Could people be on🐬to something?

I’m not happy, largely for selfish reasons: I don’t have three spare hours a week to watch one show. A lot of people don’t. We have jobs and hobbies and social lives. Some of us have families. Sure, most people don’t need to watch Andor as it unfolds, but a lot of people want to and just can’t spare that kind of time.

But also, importantly this isn’t actually how the series was made to be viewed – the release schedule was after filming was done, and it wasn’t showrunner Tony Gilroy’s decision. This is a very carefully written and paced spy thriller, not something meant for binging. The format feels like a d⛎isservice toཧ Andor, and I’m not loving that it’s been intentionally made more bingeable for audiences.

I really wish streamers would move away from dropping entire shows all at once, because it dilutes the reasons why television used to be so special. A weekly release schedule was, and continues to be, a completely different format of storytelling that makes television unique, and leaving that behind♎ feels like a dilution of the medium. Andor is as close to prestige TV as Star Wars has ever gotten, so why isn’t it being treated with the respect it deserves?

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Your Rating

168澳洲幸运5开奖网: Andor
TV-14
Action & Adventure
Drama
Thriller
Sci-Fi
Release Date
September 21, 2022
Network
Disney+
Showrunner
ꦓ Tony Gilroy
Directors
ꦆ Susanna White
Writers
♑ Dan Gilroy

Cast

  • instar49831518.jpg
    Diego Luna
  • instar53465615.jpg
    Stellan Skarsgård
  • instar49940749.jpg
    Kyle Soller
  • instar53654713.jpg
    Denise Gough

Andor is a Star Wars prequel series set before the events of Rogue One, following Cassian Andor as he navigates a world of danger and deception. The series delves into his transformation into a pivotal figure in the strಞuggle against the Galactic Empire.