[ad_1]
“It’s your classic ‘Lord of the Flies’ scenario, so they have this wild, primitive, feral kind of feel to it,” Wilkinson said of the costumes. “And maybe that explains a little bit of older Cassian’s innate wildness and rebellion.”
If you rewatch the scenes on Kenari, you can see that some of the clothing was clearly made for older people, and some of it is cut and belted on. It also appears that the children have been left alone for a long time. Cassian, who was called Kassa back then (played by Antonio Viña), appears to be around nine years old, so he (and the other children) have likely been living with no adult supervision for quite a while when the ship crashes and he’s adopted by Maarva and Clem Andor (Fiona Shaw and Gary Beadle, respectively).
The StarWars.com article went on to explain that Wilkinson imagined that the children developed their clothing based on the remnants of what was around them, including things from their previous lives. “We figured the kids would’ve used the uniforms of the adults to sort of chop up and repurpose,” Wilkinson said. “It had this primitive mix with work wear that they’d customized with feathers and beads and trinkets and stolen or foraged elements from the urban world that they used to live in, a mixture of modern industrial mixed with organic jungle textures.”
Since Cassian began the series by searching for the little sister he left behind on Kenari when Maarva and Clem found him, it’s possible that we’ll see more flashbacks to Kenari in the second season of the series.
Season 1 of “Andor” is currently streaming on Disney+.
[ad_2]
Source link
Comments are closed.