![]() ![]() However, once Cassian Andor arrives and starts questioning everything, Kino is confronted by the mounting evidence that the Empire’s sentences are meaningless. It's punishment or reward and the rewards are meager.” And if you're not, then you get electrocuted. The way that the floor is run, it's about beating other people. “He's a task master and is quite unforgiving and shuts people down and is almost a bully, in a way. He's direct and actually he's hardened, I think, by the harsh treatment that he's received on Narkina 5,” Serkis says. In his own way, Loy shows his compassion for his men by trying to keep them in line to avoid punishment. And he just suddenly finds himself in a world where he has to keep his head down, not speak his truth, and just try and get through his sentence believing that he's going be freed.” “He's used to working on the factory floor and standing up for workers' rights,” Serkis says. ![]() In Serkis’ mind, it seemed clear that his take on Loy would have put him in the job of shop steward or foreman before his incarceration. “I was such a huge fan of Rogue One, which I absolutely adored and when we met and we talked about, I really just fell in love with the character.”īetween Gilroy’s pitch and Serkis reading the scripts for the three-episode arc, the actor began to construct a detailed biography for Loy, a regular practice for the artist. Serkis was already a fan of Gilroy’s work. “‘Is this Snoke? Has he come back?’” But his worries subsided as soon as he met with Andor creator Tony Gilroy to discuss the character. “I was slightly trepidatious because when I came into it I was thinking, ‘Oh no, no, the Snoke theories are just going to go crazy!’” Serkis tells about his reaction to early conversations about the role. ![]()
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