He is the MOST TRAGIC charachter in ANDOR

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  • Опубліковано 23 вер 2024
  • #andor #starwars
    This moment broke my heart and made me think about about one of the most horrific tragedies of our history
    TAGS: Star Wars,Andor,Andor episode 10,Kino Loy,Andy Serkis,World War 2,Sad moments,Star Wars Andor

КОМЕНТАРІ • 17

  • @gunnargjermundsen3200
    @gunnargjermundsen3200 Рік тому +8

    Beautiful reflection on a difficult topic.

  • @Alex-se3uy
    @Alex-se3uy Рік тому +7

    Loved your insight. You gained a follower.

  • @Nandrall18-25
    @Nandrall18-25 Рік тому +10

    Kino might not have escaped but his legacy did. Without his help Cassian wouldn't have escaped, and without Cassian the Death Star plans would never have gotten into Rebel hands. The Alliance would have been destroyed and the Empire would never have been defeated. Kino might not have gotten free but he helped free the galaxy.

  • @JeanKirks
    @JeanKirks Рік тому +6

    Beautiful video my brother...

  • @mattgilbert7347
    @mattgilbert7347 2 місяці тому +1

    The institutionalized man finally freed but he never learned how to "swim" - his prison was internalized. Tragic.
    But at least he helped free everyone else.
    Andor is the best Marxist show in decades.

  • @cyberneticbeast
    @cyberneticbeast Рік тому +1

    Замечательный обзор.

  • @andersfrieden567
    @andersfrieden567 Рік тому

    Yes this was a truly heartbreaking moment. In our modern times we tend to view every death at the war as a tragedy, because of significantly lower tolerance to violence, than before. But the deaths that seem the most unfair also hit us more than others hit us more. And it doesn't have anything to do with the genes, it's because of the strong cultural influence.

  • @thataussieguy4770
    @thataussieguy4770 Рік тому +2

    this video is fairly accurate but the reference to Russia's march to berlin and starvation is misplaced most soldiers who made the march to berlin where notorious war criminals with commanding officers supporting assault/murder against German civilians as revenge against the Germans who did the same on the march to Stalingrad
    [there are exceptions to this some officers held a firm grip on how their men acted and we only know all this info because of Russians soldiers and officers who describe this time period accurately for the history books] some youtube interviews still exist but i wont link dump
    furthermore the only reason so many Russians died a horrible death taking berlin is because high command made them continuously attack so they could take berlin before the western powers
    the number of Germans who ran west to the allies was astounding because nobody wanted to get assaulted and murdered going east
    [of course western powers did this but as far as i am aware war crime tribunals where held for those accused exception was made with urban combat deaths of civilians in some cases like berlin easier to toss a nade down a cellar than check if its 20 german troops or a family ]
    the starting heist group mimics a polish partisan militia hiding in the woods avoiding recon aircraft from the empire-germans
    and the prison seems to heavily pull from north Korean workcamps plus Russian gulags and nazi death camps they did a really good job of pulling from all these messed up systems but not being disrespectful
    from what they show the people who designed the idea of the prison probably had to do some messed up research this might be why the show seems a lot more serious its quite confronting stuff because i assume their research has been quite disturbing given the real life comparisons to the topics they confront

    • @andersfrieden567
      @andersfrieden567 Рік тому

      I mostly agree with you, but with a couple of nuances. It's very hard to verify the exact percentage of war criminals among millions of Soviet soldiers, lets say it was significant enough. Even though, try to look at it from their point of view. A lot of them went through probably the most brutal war in history and to die just like that before the victory is still a tragedy, regardless if the soldier was an honourable man, or not. And I don't get, what's wrong with the comparison to starving prisoners of the concentration camps?

    • @thataussieguy4770
      @thataussieguy4770 Рік тому +1

      @@andersfrieden567 oh yes we are not in disagreement but i was approaching it from the mentality of if the show runners have done their research then pulling from the soviets in that time is a poisoned well scenario given the use of gulags and labor camps not to mention countries like Poland falling under the iron curtain
      there are plenty of soviet heroes and what they where called to sacrifice was daunting zhukov was responsible for the successful defence and protection of at least 5 key soviet cities
      and to anyone oppressed by the nazis they actually treated quite well they tended not to harm children who had been conscripted
      when interrogated a lot of people would tell them the officers made them stay and defend given most of them where teenagers and the officers SS easy to say who the soviets believed

    • @andersfrieden567
      @andersfrieden567 Рік тому

      @@thataussieguy4770 I see what you mean, comparison with the Polish Resistance movement is on point.

    • @thataussieguy4770
      @thataussieguy4770 Рік тому +1

      @@andersfrieden567 hey man to add to that a guy on reddit found a really good comparison to the parallels between the prison in andor and the concentration camp in i think sobibor if i got the name correct its a interesting comparison i think he put it on the andor reddit

    • @andersfrieden567
      @andersfrieden567 Рік тому

      @@thataussieguy4770 the show does really well adapting the darkest episodes of human history to Star Wars lore.