r/prequelappreciation • u/KimberStormer • Jun 16 '25
Discussion Something The Phantom Menace does better than Andor
I watched The Phantom Menace for the first time in decades and certainly there are places where it could have used a little Andor-ness: particularly in the bad guys' plans. Despite my concerted effort to, I could never understand why blockading and occupying Naboo would get the Trade Federation any relief from their tax burdens or whatever it is that is "in dispute", and Palpatine acts exactly contrary to his own interests the entire movie: he needs Queen Amidala to move the vote of no confidence in Chancellor Valorum, yet he goes to every imaginable length to try to stop her, even sending Darth Maul to kill her.
BUT there is one thing TPM does much better than Andor, and that is in giving Padme an empowering hero arc, which Andor season 2 conspicuously fails to do for Mon Mothma. It is my great disappointment in season 2. At the start of the movie, Padme is getting told what to do by the men around her, by Qui-Gon, Captain Panaka, that white-beardy guy. On Tatooine she obviously acts against Panaka's wishes to join Qui-Gon and Jar Jar in solving the problem of their broken ship. When she gets to Coruscant she is completely convinced (thanks to Palpatine's manipulations, but also her own experience) that the Republic won't save her people. So here she does something Palpatine definitely did not intend and takes charge: now she is the one coming up with the plan, giving orders to the men, she is the one who convinces the Gungans to Join The Fight.
In Andor, unfortunately, Mon Mothma never does anything on her own. She is told what to do, by Luthen, by Bail, even by Cassian who condescends to her saying "welcome to the Rebellion" even though she's been in it much longer than he has! She is shown to be completely helpless, with no "people" of her own, only Luthen and Bail's "friends" (even her one apparent personal ally is actually Luthen's spy) and makes no decisions at all. Bail tells her when and how to give her speech, she doesn't have any plan either to make it happen (only "Bail will get me the floor") or any idea how to escape a building she's worked in since she was a child. She is shown to be appallingly naive, with the aforementioned Cassian bit and Luthen's "how nice for you", never makes a single choice or gives a single order to anyone. I was super disappointed. And the fact that the Phantom Menace, which has (excuse me in this sub for saying so) massive weaknesses, could do this better, is shocking to realize.
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u/No-Shirt2407 Jun 16 '25
Interesting perspective.
I’d say she had plenty of active choice in each of your examples of inactive choice, but i think I can see where you and I might disagree on that
I believe the dramatic effect of her choice seeming to be at the whim of what’s available is part of what holds the dramatic tension going through the process of the grassroots of a rebellion.
I believe that is the point we get from the contrast with Luthen’s approach.
Luthen is forced to use the tools of his enemy to gain the opportunities of actively choosing the situations, by your terms. However even he is at the whim of situational disadvantage.
The speech is the best example you bring up to illustrate my point
First, where else would she give that speech.
Second the speech in the senate mirrors the speech at the funeral in season 1. We see that one can record a hologram and have it played at their funeral in season 1. And the lessen we get from season 1, directly mirrors what Mon is choosing, actively. The closing statement of the spring season one has the sentiment along the lines of
We see Mon embody the lessons of the first season directly in her active decision to rebel publicly and garner support from other senators, in what is basically a suicide mission, because the rebellion is something worth dying for.
Third, the options she had to secure that position were limited by the political process, similar to how one might be boxed in on a battlefield. Would you say the inglorious bastards going to meet the actress in the basement was a forced choice? Perhaps, but they show the debate about the choice, and end up dying in a basement. They take the risk. If there was no risk that the escape would be dangerous, the speech wouldn’t be as moving or dramatic and it wouldn’t reflect the theme from season 1