Ever Been to Ghorman?
- El episodio se transmitió el 29 abr 2025
- TV-14
- 54min
Cassian y Bix se adaptan a un refugio Luthen. Todos los ojos están puestos en Ghorman. Wilmon visita a Saw Gerrera.Cassian y Bix se adaptan a un refugio Luthen. Todos los ojos están puestos en Ghorman. Wilmon visita a Saw Gerrera.Cassian y Bix se adaptan a un refugio Luthen. Todos los ojos están puestos en Ghorman. Wilmon visita a Saw Gerrera.
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Opiniones destacadas
I would say this episode centers mostly on the events on Ghorman! It was introduced to us in the first episode and I feel like that its a planet which will play a larger role in this season! Its nice to see the consequences of what the empire is doing, and the secrecy of it, only makes you more invested!
The small character moments is enough to make you speculating on what is gonna happen later on with some of the characters! Syril gets to play a larger role, and Brix is struggling with her experiences! We see how this is slowly turning more serious and that war has consequences! Is it all worth it or not?
This episode was not very eventfull but it has enoigh to make you excited for whats next and the production is still on point!
The one-year jump between arcs is admittedly a bit disorienting at first. Characters are suddenly in new roles, new settings, and new emotional states - but Beau Willimon's precise and thoughtful writing ensures that the transitions feel purposeful rather than abrupt. Once the episode finds its rhythm, the benefits of this structure become clear. The story can now stretch across broader terrain, introducing larger-scale operations, layered political maneuvering, and escalating tension without needing to belabor the connective tissue. The writing is efficient yet rich, allowing the audience to fill in emotional blanks while remaining deeply engaged in the now. Character development thrives under this format. We return to familiar faces, but they're not quite the same - we're catching them mid-journey, weathered by unseen events and quietly shaped by time. These shifts deepen our investment. Relationships have morphed, missions have evolved, and yet the characters remain tethered to their essential selves. The separations of characters across different fronts adds a fascinating dynamism, as we start to understand how their paths will once again converse under Luthen's orchestration. Atmospherically, the episode is steeped in a quiet, simmering tension. There's a growing awareness of the Empire's tightening grip - its bureaucracy, manipulation, and silent brutality. The tone remains somber, echoing the lingering emotional weight each character carries. From Mon Mothma's political futility to Cassian's cautious infiltration and Bix's psychological scars, trauma and regret haunt every decision. The world feels colder, more precarious, and entirely plausible.
"Ever Been to Ghorman?" marks a thoughtful and compelling turning point in "Andor," showcasing just how effective this time-jump approach can be when handled with intelligence and care. It's a striking blend of ambition and restraint - an episode that deepens the series' themes while setting the stage for the arcs to come.
Bix comes across as more compelling here, even though she feels like a victim of circumstance. We also get a deeper look into the lives of these spies and rebels, who are trying to adapt to life in new cities while carrying the psychological weight of their past experiences, and being focused on their compartmentalized missions.
Throughout the episode, we see different rebel factions attempting to resist the Empire-some more organized than others. The political corridors are increasingly frustrating and ineffective, pacifists are being pushed to act, and extremists are becoming dangerously unpredictable.
The set design really stands out-especially the Ghorman capital, with its stunning and distinct architecture that sets it apart from other planets.
Overall, this episode shines through its character focus. The members of the Ghorman Front are particularly well written, and their French-inspired language adds a believable layer of cultural depth.
Lonni is a very interesting chracter and I'd love to see where he will end up, though if you're thinking realistically he will probably end up dead.
The music is as beautiful as ever and delivers so much more emotion to each scene. This was a great episode, a plot builder at its finest that has me very hooked to where we go from here. A strong episode. F the minimum character requirement.
This is not slow. This is perfection.
One of the darkest stories in SW universe. An astonishing storytelling with a great amount of details that keeps you interested in without breathing.
The spy game here is mindblowing, the acting is superb, the dark and full of tension atmosphere is thrilling.
The visuals, the sets, the props, the costumes, the photography and cinematography, the characters, the music... all in this episode is just perfection.
And is just the first of the second arc.........
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe Ghor language was devised by dialect coach Marina Tyndall. Its structure was inspired by French, although it doesn't use any actual French vocabulary. The Ghor characters were played mostly by French and German actors, who spoke the fictional language with their own accents.
- ErroresAt 45:50 when Saw Gerrera is talking to Wilmon, just before it cuts to a close-up of Saw you can hear him start delivering his lines but his mouth is not moving in the wide shot, it then cuts to him mid-sentence for the close-up.
- Citas
Lezine: ... steal a neighborhood. Move the people into boxes. Put the boxes downwind from dust. You'll be spitting all day long! And then, at night, when we're trying to sleep, when we try to forget - our city - is being destroyed! We've got transports, convoys! Rumbling all night long, racing through our streets. Horns blowing! Engines whining!
Carro Rylanz: Lezine!
Lezine: What?
Carro Rylanz: Give someone else a chance. Settle down!
Lezine: They'll make a prison of Palmo before they're done. Mark my words.
Carro Rylanz: Please.
Lezine: MARK MY WORDS!
Carro Rylanz: Thank you, thank you.
Lezine: [directs obscene Ghorman gesture at Rylanz]
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 54min
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido