Wanting again, casting Diego Luna in “Rogue One: A Star Wars Story” might nicely show to be the only most consequential resolution in that storied franchise’s historical past. Listening to Luna’s Mexican accent in a galaxy far, far-off was not solely refreshing. It was radical.

And as Season 2 of “Andor” proved, it set the stage for what must be probably the most Latino-coded of all of the “Star Wars” tales, which is becoming contemplating this Tony Gilroy-created collection was designed not simply to discover Cassian Andor’s backstory however flesh out the dashing revolutionary spirit Luna had delivered to the character. What higher place to, pardon the pun, mine for inspiration than the huge historical past of resistance and revolution all through the American continent?

Listed below are just a few methods by which “Andor” felt significantly Latino.

Warning: this text incorporates some spoilers.

Undocumented laborers

Season 2 of “Andor” discovered Cassian, Bix (Adria Arjona), Brasso (Joplin Sibtain) and Wilmon (Muhannad Bhaier) relocated to the agricultural planet of Mina-Rau. It’s a spot that served as a protected haven for these Ferrix of us, permitting them to be housed whereas working for a neighborhood farmer — all with out papers. Sure, our very personal Cassian is an undocumented laborer (when he’s not, you already know, on some super-secret Luthen-guided mission, that’s).

“Andor” has all the time targeted on the way in which the Empire features at a granular stage, whereas the “Star Wars” characteristic movie trilogies are all about big-picture stuff. In its two-season run, this Luna-fronted challenge adopted the day-to-day lives of these dwelling below the thumb of the Empire. And within the scenes at Mina-Rau, the present insisted on exhibiting what occurs when these with a semblance of energy (a uniform, a weapon) confront those that they assume have none.

When Lt. Krole (Alex Waldmann), a lowly Imperial officer finishing up a run-of-the-mill audit of the crops in Mina-Rau, comes throughout Bix, he sees a chance. She’s clearly alone. And, maybe most clearly, at a drawback: She has no papers. If she’s caught, the safe, if precarious, life she and Cassian have inbuilt Mina-Rau will come crumbling down — all whereas placing them prone to being revealed as smugglers and rebels.

Nonetheless, watching Krole escalate his slimy sexual advances right into a rape try was a reminder of the impunity of such crimes. When those that are undocumented are seen as undeserving of our empathy, not to mention the protections the legislation is meant to supply — like many individuals in our present authorities appear to assume — the likes of Krole are emboldened to do as they please.

Hiding in plain sight and los desaparecidos

Such concepts about who deserves our empathy are key to authoritarian regimes. Borders, in any case, aren’t nearly conserving folks out or in. It’s about drawing up communities and outlining outsiders; about arguing for a strict sense of who belongs and who doesn’t.

When Cassian and Bix land in Coruscant after their escape from Mina-Rau, they wrestle with whether or not to only lay low. You see Cassian being jumpy and continually paranoid. He can’t even deal with going out buying; or, if you happen to comply with Bix’s winking joke on the grocer, he can’t actually deal with the spice. However that’s anticipated if you happen to continually really feel unsafe, unable to freely transfer by the world, er, galaxy.Extra tellingly: In case your existence is wedded to paperwork, it’s simple to be disbursed with and disappeared. Bix is aware of that every one too nicely. She’s nonetheless haunted by the specter of Dr. Gorst (Joshua James), the Imperial Safety Bureau officer who tortured her. He seems in her nightmares to remind her that this can be a warfare now suffering from “desaparecidos”: “His body won’t be found and his family won’t know what happened to him,” his hallucination taunts her. It’s not onerous to learn in that line an apparent reference to these tortured and disappeared below the army dictatorships of Argentina, Brazil, Chile and the like.

All through “Andor” Season 2, we additionally watched the Empire slowly rev up its border policing — particularly when it got here to Ghorman. At first a planet most recognized for its beautiful textiles, Ghorman later turned the anchor for the present’s complete narrative. One of the best ways to manage a folks is to surveil them, significantly as a result of quickly sufficient they’ll begin surveilling themselves.

The Ghorman Bloodbath

The fantastic thing about “Star Wars” has all the time been its potential to talk to its time. When the unique movie first premiered in 1977, echoes of the Vietnam Conflict and anti-imperialist sentiment could possibly be felt in its in any other case outlandish space-opera trappings. However not till “Andor” might the politics of George Lucas’ creation be so viscerally felt. It is a present, in any case, that didn’t shrink back from utilizing the phrase “genocide” when rightly describing what occurred in Ghorman.

In “Who Are You?” audiences obtained to see the Empire at its cruelest. Watching the Dying Star destroy Alderaan from afar is one factor. However getting to look at Stormtroopers — and a slew of younger, inexperienced Imperial riot cops — capturing indiscriminately right into a crowd that had simply been peacefully singing in protest was brutal. It was, as Senator Mon Mothma (Genevieve O’Reilly) would later body it, unconscionable.

The chants within the crowd “The galaxy is watching” are clearly meant to evoke the chants heard on the 1968 Democratic Nationwide Conference: “The whole world is watching.” However the essence of the bloodbath harks again to a different notorious 1968 occasion: the Tlatelolco bloodbath.

Similar to Ghorman, the Oct. 2 scholar protests at Mexico Metropolis’s Plaza de las Tres Culturas started as a peaceable demonstration. However quickly, with helicopters up above and an encroaching army presence from each which manner, chaos adopted and the incident has lengthy served as a chilling instance of state-sanctioned violence. The type now finest distilled right into a fictional bloodbath in a galaxy far, far-off.

Villa, Zapata, Andor

Within the palms of Gilroy and Luna, “Andor” billed itself over two seasons because the begrudging rise of a revolutionary. Cassian spent a lot of Season 1 making an attempt to cover from who he might turn out to be. It took being despatched to a grueling slave jail advanced in a distant location (sound acquainted?) to additional radicalize the once-smug smuggler.

However with each new Empire-sanctioned atrocity, he discovered himself unable to flee his calling as a member of the Resistance. Sure, it prices him his peaceable life with Bix, however neither would have it another manner. Cassian has a strong ethical compass. And whereas he might not play nicely with others (with authority, actually), he’s an enthralling chief of kinds whose childhood in Ferrix set him as much as be the sort of man who would sacrifice his life for a trigger.

You don’t have to have Luna sport a mustache, although, to see in his rascal of a personality hints of revolutionary icons from Latin America. Even when Cassian is extra Emiliano Zapata than Pancho Villa (you’d by no means discover him starring in movies as himself, as an example), the revolutionary spirit of these historic Mexican figures is simple. Particularly since Cassian has lengthy been tied to the marginalized — not simply in Ferrix and Mina-Rau however later nonetheless in Ghorman.

Add the truth that his backstory grounds him within the indigenous world of Kenari and that he’s fairly at residence within the lush jungles of Yavin IV (the place he might as nicely be taking part in dominoes in his spare time) and you’ve got a personality who clearly carves out homages to resistance fashions seen throughout Latin America.

As assaults on these most disenfranchised right here in the US proceed apace, “Andor” (sure, a by-product sci-fi collection on Disney+!) reminds us that the Latin American struggles for liberation within the twentieth century aren’t mere historic tales. They’re warnings and templates as to the right way to confront this second.

And sure, that message clearly works finest when delivered by the devilishly good-looking Luna: “The Empire cannot win,” as his Cassian says within the first episode of the present’s stellar second season. “You’ll never feel right unless you’re doing what you can to stop them. You’re coming home to yourself. You’ve become more than your fear. Let that protect you.”