
This post contains the last three episodes of the Destroyer Andonow streaming on Disney+.
In the conclusion of this season, therefore Ando As a series, Vel and Kleya discuss some of the horrible things they have to do to keep the rebellion alive, including Kleya’s decision to kill Luthen to prevent the ISB from tortureing information about the Rebel Alliance.
For Claya, it was a very painful thing for her mentor and her acting father. But, as we saw in this week’s flashback-driven opening episode, Luxen trained her very well. When she talks to Vel, she tries to remain philosophical about all the tragedy and recalls Luthen’s advice: “He once said, ‘You know your way out before you go in.’”
These three episodes are the clear situation in the suggestion. Ando Be considered Rogue Oneand a way to show how Cassian Andor became a master of spies Star Wars. So if you look back at the origins of the show, then these remaining chapters (especially the finale) will be so dedicated to making the ultimate most important task of Cassian and K2SO make it appropriate.
but Ando From the origin story about its title character quickly developed into a wider, more powerful, more powerful look of the origins of the Rebel Alliance itself, as well as all the moral sacrifices Luthen, Luthen, Kleya, Kleya, Vel, Mon Mothma and others had to go along the way. therefore Rogue One Besides the key points - the remains of the performance Ando Almost no longer immediately.
Some of the decisions made here seem to be entirely to align with the film, not because they make sense to the characters. For example, Luthen murdered Lonny Rogue One
Editing selection
In the film, Cassian's connection seems to know nothing about Galen Urso's planet killer. If you go back to watch that scene now, it either faces what he learned on Yavin or you have to read his reaction more because he realizes that Luthen’s message is correct. But at least the trio starts with the best independent installment in the series, which seems to be positioning Kleya instead of Cassian as the real hero of the show. Kleya was a very small figure in her first season and I admit, I didn't know her name until this year. But slowly but surely, Elizabeth Dulau and the writer turned her into a symbol of everything
About, even more than Luxen. As we learn in the process of this episode, when her family is killed, she is just a little girl, part of the massacre carried out by the Imperial military force Luthen, is (in his real name, Lear - "Rael", backward). It was a straw that broke the back of a future antique dealer on the empire, and he decided to give up his post to raise the child, instilling her from an early age with the lessons of Antifastroric and Spycraft. When we glimpse their journey, sometimes she seems to be more central than his career, although in part because he is older, smarter, and more ready to play long games, even if it requires short-term sacrifice. But he lived a fulfilling life before he met her, and when he first began indoctrinating rebellion, she had little to no. That's all she really knows, he's the whole family she owns.
Related content So when an overconfident Dedra enters the antique shop alone to arrest Luthen, who Luthen takes advantage of this to commit suicide so that he cannot be forced to open up allies, Kleya is given an impossible but necessary task. Luthen must die to prevent the doctor from curing him enough for interrogation and torture. Kleya is the only one available- in some ways the only one with emotional perseverance does. Yavin's group has grown into distrust, resentment and even a complete hatred of Luthen, partly because they don't feel they can trust him, and because he's willing to do something they simply won't. A good example: Ending Luson's life to silence him is a bridge, which is too far for most people. But doing it yourself is the best way for Claya to remember everything Luson taught her. She entered the hospital, passing through the level of the guard, because no one would want to doubt a modest and modest nurse and do what needs to be done. She knew that Lonni was delivering very little information and assumed that Cassian could take her away from Coruscant, she could take it to her competitors on Yavin.
Rogue One
When he realized that his contact could not escape the soon-to-be-closed Imperial Force, Cassian killed the man to protect the mission. Lucasfilm Ltd Of course, there is still an escape problem, which leads to some pretty action on the corridors of the apartment building, and the K2SO proves once again to be a single-man army. Kleya looks at the next step while hiding in the apartment where Cassian and Bix live in the second chapter of the season, lamenting: "yavin. It's all this after all. It's a painful ending." Once everyone is at Yavin for the finale, it's even more bittersweet, or too low-key, rather than total pain. Kleya and Vel lament what they have lost in their loved ones and their own souls. The leaders of the Rebel Alliance seem very reluctant to believe the intelligence brought by Kleya because
Star Wars The universe is usually a crazy tunnel. Most of the time, we just count down the Cassian and K2SO takeoff
Rogue One mission.
Tony Gilroy once said Jimmy Smits
. But maybe he doesn't have to play a deliberate fool in this issue and feel relieved? This is not a bad plot. It's just not the ending
Ando That's where it comes. We get closure on some of the series-specific characters — Dedra has wound up in a prison much like the one Cassian was stuck in for the first season's best arc, while Mon Mothma's unloving husband Perrin finally gets to exercise his libido on some other women — and the actual including image is of Bix, back living on the wheat planet, raising the baby that Cassian will never live to hold. . But most are. We also glimpses Cassian dreams of his sister, which is a major reminder of the season when he wants to find her inadequate plot in any necessary way. Hot stories In many ways, the series’ theme conclusions are several earlier scenarios. Dedra's boss Partagaz is listening to a manifesto recorded by idealist young revolutionary Karis Nemek, who is part of the second arc of the crew robbery in Season 1. One of Partagaz's protégés has been arrested. The other one is dead. The rebellion seemed to grow bigger and bigger in the day. He is old and can serve the Republic. Although he seems to be largely asked to do everything on behalf of the Empire without any dilemma, he also knows that his career has been lost and that all of these recent ISBs screwed up may have fallen on him. So he took out a blaster and committed suicide. Luson believed deeply about something bigger than himself and was ready to die to achieve that- as he told Lonnie in his speech “The Sunrise I Never See”, he knew he was almost certainly in