Actually, the ending is also pretty ambiguous about her force sensitivity. I have the impression that Ventress was lying.
None of the tests she gave were tests for force sensitivity in canon. They looked like tests a master would give to a prospect to see if they would be fit to be trained...
It was a bit dark for me too (LG CX set to HDR). A side effect of this is that it's hard to see which clone is which, which sort of adds to the chaos of what was going on for me in a positive way.
I was thinking it could be Tech, but Crosshair said they could not condition him when they tried because he was defective. Tech might not be susceptible to the conditioning as well.
I'd argue when viewed over the season, even the "filler" episodes add to character development and later reveals too. The racing episode for example foreshadowed Cid's later betrayal of the team.
I think it shows more about the shortcomings of the Empire that would lead to its eventual downfall. Basically they thought they could force her to compliance just by fear alone (threat to Omega). It's pure arrogance on the part of the Empire and I like that they depicted this that way...
Yes, but this is like Thanos caring for Gamora. Fisk's concept of caring does not equate to how normal humans think of caring for other people. I think this is him caring for her much in the same way you'd care about a thing you own.
Which I think adds to this IMO. He is capable of learning...
Actually, I like that he didn't learn sign language. It shows that he didn't particularly care enough to learn it for Maya. He only cared enough for her to use her.
I liked what this show was trying to do, but the execution was bad.
D'Onofrio was so good in this series, he made everyone apart from Echo's grandparents look like second-rate stage actors. I guess trying to find a Native American deaf amputee for the role was tough, but Alaqua Cox just did...
I just pre-ordered this. I missed out on all the Mk 2s so I guess this is my chance to snag one. Now I'll only be missing the Mk IV to complete the first 7.
I tried watching it in English, it felt off to me. Being set in Japan and hearing it in Japanese was better for me. The Japanese voice cast were awesome too.
Did Andor have much fanfare either before it actually aired? If I remember right, a lot of people didn't care much for it at the start either due to the past Star Wars series blunders.
I just saw this with my wife last week. It was not bad, but it was not great either. It's just "OK". Hardly memorable at best.
I have not watched Rebel Moon so I haven't visited that thread. Should I? :lol