
'ANDOR' Showrunner Tony Gilroy Does Not Think Much of Marvel's Playbook
The second season of Andor has fans and critics raving, but it wasn't always smooth sailing. In a candid Zoom chat with /Film's Ben Pearson, showrunner Tony Gilroy spilled the tea on how Andor dodged a bullet by avoiding the same storytelling traps that have tripped up Marvel.
An Early Misstep Almost Derailed Andor
Picture this: Andor was originally pitched as a buddy-cop romp featuring Diego Luna's Cassian Andor and Alan Tudyk's snarky droid K-2SO. Think Star Wars meets Bad Boys—all action, quips, and maybe a few explosions. It could've been a blast, but Gilroy wasn't sold.
'In the show, it's perfect. [K-2SO's late introduction was] something I always intended. The versions that they had of the show prior, they were slick and they were interesting. They were not bad, but they had a fatal flaw, it seemed to me, which is if that's your show, that we're going to storm the Citadel in the pilot, what are you going to do in episode 9? What do you do? You're just going to keep getting the disc?'
Gilroy, who's penned gritty hits like Michael Clayton and the Bourne trilogy, knew better. He scrapped the buddy-cop vibe and turned Andor into a tense, character-driven spy thriller. K-2SO's big entrance got pushed back, letting Cassian's journey from petty crook to rebel hero take center stage. The result feels less like a popcorn flick and more like a novel you can't put down.
Marvel's Tesseract Trouble
Gilroy didn't just critique Andor's early drafts—he took a swing at the MCU's playbook, too. He zeroed in on what he calls 'Tesseract-chasing.' Remember 2012's The Avengers? The whole plot revolves around the Tesseract, a glowing cube everyone's fighting over.
'Trying to get the, what do they call it? I can't remember the name of the box. What the f*** is the name of the box in 'The Avengers'? What the f*** are they going for? […] The Tesseract! That's why all those Marvel movies are all — that's why they fail. You're just constantly … if that's all you're doing, then all you're doing is just trying to get the Tesseract.'
He's got a point. The MCU built its empire on MacGuffins—those plot-driving objects like the Tesseract (later revealed as an Infinity Stone), the Orb in Guardians of the Galaxy, or the Time Stone in Doctor Strange. The formula was gold for a while: heroes chase the shiny thing, bad guys get in the way, cue the epic battle. But as the MCU ballooned, this rinse-and-repeat approach started to feel stale. Vanity Fair has pointed out how Marvel's obsession with interconnected plots and spectacle has left its stories feeling hollow.
How Andor Got It Right
Andor could've gone the same route, churning out forgettable heist-of-the-week episodes. Instead, Gilroy bet on substance over flash. He wove a story rich with political intrigue and moral gray areas, making Cassian's transformation feel real and earned. The show's been compared to The Wire for its depth, a far cry from the MCU's splashy CGI slugfests.
Gilroy's no rookie when it comes to fixing messes. He helped turn Rogue One from a troubled production into a fan favorite, and Andor proves he's still got the magic touch. Meanwhile, Marvel's recent flops, like Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (Rotten Tomatoes), show what happens when you lean too hard on formula over heart.
What Blockbusters Can Learn
Gilroy's take boils down to a simple truth: MacGuffins like the Tesseract or the Ark of the Covenant in Raiders of the Lost Ark can kickstart a story, but they can't carry it. When franchises like the MCU—or Andor's early drafts—bank everything on chasing the next big plot device, they lose what makes stories stick: characters we root for and stakes that hit home.
Andor proves you can tell bold, meaningful stories within a giant franchise. As Star Wars gears up for new films like James Mangold's project (StarWars.com) and the MCU aims to bounce back with Avengers: Secret Wars, they'd be smart to take notes from Gilroy. Forget the Tesseract. Tell a story that matters.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
16 minutes ago
- Buzz Feed
Real Breakup Stories From Celebrity Ex-Partners
Model Gigi Paris broke up with Glen Powell after three years together, during which his profile skyrocketed due to dating rumors between the actor and his Anyone But You co-star, Sydney Sweeney. Gigi said that Glen agreed to lean into the speculation for PR purposes, despite her discomfort, saying, "It was just, 'This is what I have to do for my job.' I had two options. I could either pretend like I was going along with everything and have everyone wonder, like, 'Are they hooking up? Are they not hooking up? Is she okay with this? What the fuck?' Or stand up for myself." "I just wanted respect, especially if it's gonna be public. Like, don't make an ass out of me. Like, just don't make a fool out of someone you've been with for over three years, talking about forever with. Just have some decency," she continued. "And at the end of the day, it was like, 'Well, work comes first.' And if that's the case, power to you, that's your priority. I gotta walk away. What sucked was how it was handled. I felt like I was just fed to the dogs." Before he dated his Wicked costar Ariana Grande, Ethan Slater was in a relationship with his high school sweetheart, psychologist Lily Jay. After their divorce, she wrote an essay for the Cut where she said, "I really never thought I would get divorced. Especially not just after giving birth to my first child and especially not in the shadow of my husband's new relationship with a celebrity. In this season of shock and mourning, over a year after the end of my marriage was made public, I deeply miss the life of invisibility I created for myself as a psychologist specializing in women's mental health." "It was a tenuous balance — my profession, which requires privacy, and his, which is measured in applause — but it worked well while life was unfolding according to our plans," she continued, adding, "Days when I can't escape the promotion of a movie associated with the saddest days of my life are darker." Chelsea Winstanley is a successful Māori film producer, writer, and director in her own right. However, when her ex-husband Taika Waititi began hitting the Marvel big-time, things changed in their relationship. "I didn't want to be the dutiful wife and race over to the Gold Coast [in Australia], where he was making Thor, and sit in an apartment all day long, fucking twiddling my thumbs, and bring the kids out," she previously explained in 2024. "That probably was the beginning of the unraveling because I wasn't that pandering, dutiful, get on my knees and whatever you want.' Someone else was, though," she added, seemingly confirming cheating speculation. "I didn't know that until many years later." There's been ample speculation that Chris Pratt's sudden rise to mega-fame played a part in his 2017 split from Anna Faris, who was previously the more well-known one in the relationship. In her memoir, Unqualified, she wrote about the strain of his success in a segment addressed to Chris: "I'm thrilled and grateful that you are doing the things you are, and I have crazy pride in the fact that your talents are recognized, but it can be hard not to have a moment of self-doubt when my husband is acting with young women in big movies and I'm playing a role in Mom that, while I love it, is completely unsexy." Elsewhere in her memoir, she wrote, "A while back, Chris asked me if I felt a lot of pressure from being in a high-profile relationship and I told him that I did — it was an odd circumstance. That he was asking that question made me think he probably felt that way, too." When author Justine Musk started dating her ex-husband, Elon Musk, they were both students. As she later wrote of his rising business profile in 2010, "Although I'd been dating a struggling 20-something entrepreneur, I was now engaged to a wealthy one." Justine said that Elon's South African upbringing and "he vast economic imbalance between us" resulted in a "certain dynamic" between them. "Elon's judgment overruled mine, and he was constantly remarking on the ways he found me lacking. 'I am your wife,' I told him repeatedly, 'not your employee,'" she wrote. "'If you were my employee,' he said just as often, 'I would fire you.'" He would go on to get engaged to actor Talulah Riley six weeks after their split. Cynthia Lennon gave birth to her child with then-husband John Lennon, right around the same time that Beatlemania began to take over the world. In her 2005 memoir, John, she wrote that she was told to "stay away" and even blocked entrance into a hotel John was staying in as security thought that she was a fan. John would go on to admit to numerous affairs following his fame, with their relationship ending shortly after she walked in on him and Yoko Ono sitting in robes. She wrote in her memoir, "The truth is that if I'd known as a teenager what falling for John would lead to, I would have turned round right then and walked away." Finally, Tom Cruise's first marriage, prior to his Top Gun success, was to actor Mimi Rogers. He would go on to initiate their divorce shortly before filming Days of Thunder, where he fell in love with his second wife, Nicole Kidman. In an interview in 2001, she said she didn't mind being the less famous one in their relationship, explaining, "I was doing the work that I wanted to do, and if I didn't have the commercial success that Tom had well, that's just the luck of the draw. When I met him, his career was just beginning to take off, and neither of us could imagine that he would become such a big star in such a short time." "But the stardom wasn't really a problem. What did annoy me, though, was the age thing," she said of their age gap. "Some of the tabloids brought it up all the time, and exaggerated the gap between Tom and me. Every six months they seemed to add a year to my age. If Tom and I were still married, the tabloids would probably have me in my sixties by now." Do any other high-profile examples come to mind? LMK in the comments!
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Hawkeye Season 2: Jeremy Renner on Show's Future, More MCU Projects
Jeremy Renner is 'sure' that Season 2 will happen. Renner has played Clint Barton/Hawkeye in the MCU since 2011's Thor. In 2021, the character got his own Disney+ show that sees Renner reprise his role alongside Hailee Steinfeld's Kate Bishop, Tony Dalton's Jack Duquesne, Florence Pugh's Yelena Belova, and Vincent D'Onofrio's Wilson Fisk/Kingpin. What did Jeremy Renner say about Hawkeye Season 2? While there was some doubt that Hawkeye Season 2 would ever happen following salary disputes and Renner's snowplow accident, the actor told Empire Magazine he's quite sure they'll 'end up doing Season 2, and do other [Marvel Studios] things.' 'I'm always happy to be in that world, man,' he said. 'I love all those guys, I love the character…And I'm happy to do it. My body's getting ready for something like that. I don't know if anybody wants to see me in tights, but my body will look good in the tights.' Renner further said he's now 'more than 150 per cent' of where he was physically prior to the snowplow incident. He continued, 'Having health and wellness be such a central part of my life, that's what's gotten me back. And even as I age, I just feel stronger than I've been. I have some issues, and tendon issues and certain limitations of flexibility and mobility, but I spent a lot of time on getting better and stronger, and I wouldn't if I didn't get crushed.' There has been no official word about Hawkeye being renewed for a second season from Marvel at this time. It's also not clear if Renner will appear in any of the forthcoming Avengers movies — Avengers: Doomsday and Avengers: Secret Wars — as he has not been part of the announced cast up until now. The first season of Marvel Television's Hawkeye is available to stream on Disney+. Originally reported by Brandon Schreur at SuperHeroHype. The post Hawkeye Season 2: Jeremy Renner on Show's Future, More MCU Projects appeared first on - Movie Trailers, TV & Streaming News, and More. Solve the daily Crossword
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Eyes of Wakanda' Trailer: Black Panther's Ancient History Told in Animated Series From Ryan Coogler
The first trailer for 'Eyes of Wakanda,' a four-episode limited animated series executive produced by 'Black Panther' director Ryan Coogler, has been released. It will release on Disney+ on Aug. 1. The upcoming show will be set in Wakanda, the home of the Black Panther that was extensively explored in Coogler's two Marvel movies. The show will follow 'the adventures of brave Wakandan warriors throughout history. In this globe-trotting adventure, the heroes must carry-out dangerous missions to retrieve Vibranium artifacts from the enemies of Wakanda. They are the Hatut Zaraze and this is their story.' More from Variety Ryan Coogler, Dominique Thorne and the 'Ironheart' Team on Introducing [SPOILER] Via That Surprise Cameo and Setting Up Riri Williams' Future in the MCU 'Ironheart' Star Dominique Thorne on Reintroducing Riri Williams With a New 'Ingenious' Iron Suit and the MCU Show's 'Heavier Emotions' 'Sinners' Sets Max Streaming Release Date The voice cast includes Winnie Harlow, Cress Williams, Patricia Belcher, Larry Herron, Adam Gold, Lynn Whitfield, Jacques Colimon, Jona Xiao, Isaac Robinson-Smith, Gary Anthony Williams, Zeke Alton, Steve Toussaint and Anika Noni Rose. The last time fans saw Wakanda was in 2022's 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever,' the sequel to Marvel's 2018 best picture nominee. That movie introduced the underwater world of Atlantis and featured the returns of Letitia Wright, Lupita Nyong'o, Angela Bassett, Winston Duke, Danai Gurira and Martin Freeman. Wakandans have popped up in other places in the MCU, including an appearance by Ayo, played by Florence Kasumba, in the Disney+ series 'The Falcon and The Winter Soldier.' The second-in-command of the Dora Milaje, Ayo first appeared in 'Captain America: Civil War.' The 'Wakanda' series is the first in a multi-year overall TV deal with Coogler's Proximity production company and The Walt Disney Company, with other TV projects in currently in development for the MCU. 'Eyes of Wakanda' is helmed by director/executive producer Todd Harris, who was first a storyboard artist on 'Black Panther' and 'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever' then as an illustrator on 'Sinners' before directing 'Eyes of Wakanda.' The show is executive produced by Coogler, Brad Winderbaum, Kevin Feige, Louis D'Esposito and Dana Vasquez-Eberhardt. Watch the trailer below. Best of Variety New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week 'Harry Potter' TV Show Cast Guide: Who's Who in Hogwarts? Final Emmy Predictions: Talk Series and Scripted Variety - New Blood Looks to Tackle Late Night Staples Solve the daily Crossword