
It might be set a very long time in the past in a galaxy far, far-off, however Tony Gilroy’s Star Wars collection takes a key plot from an actual theft masterminded by Stalin in an Imperial Russian metropolis. And Andor has as a lot to do with our world because it has with Stalin’s.
It has all of the makings of the proper heist.
The scheme takes place removed from the imperial seat of energy, on the wild fringes of an empire virtually too huge to understand. Fuelled with revolutionary zeal, the plotters are a rag-tag outfit of women and men that features thieves, murderers and turncoats. Their prize? A treasure chest of money that may fund ever-more-ambitious missions towards the hated ruling elite.
Should you watched the primary season of the Star Wars spin-off TV collection Andor, you may recognise this plot as one of many excessive factors. Over three episodes, anti-hero Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) and his band of accomplices disguise out in mountain passes on the planet Aldhani, fine-tuning an audacious smash-and-grab from an Imperial garrison which is storing the wages of a whole sector.Â
The true-life theft that impressed it was additionally a protracted, very long time in the past, simply not fairly so far-off.

It occurred in Yerevan Sq. in what was then the imperial Russian metropolis of Tiflis, now the Georgian capital Tblisi, on 26 June 1907. A cargo of money for the town’s Russian state financial institution department, amounting to some 300,000 roubles ($1m on the time), was stolen by a gang of robbers linked to the Bolshevik revolutionary motion. Utilizing bombs and weapons, the gang left a scene of utter devastation of their wake; some 40 individuals had been killed and dozens extra injured. The information of the brazen daylight assault made headlines the world over.
The heist was the brainchild of a charismatic cobbler’s son-turned-revolutionary referred to as Ioseb Besarionis dze Jughashvili. He was a gifted public speaker, an ex-seminary scholar, a romantic poet rumoured to have left a string of damaged hearts in his rakish wake. He typically glided by the title “Soso” (which he had used when writing poems for native publications), although in years to come back he would develop into far better-known – and feared – as Joseph Stalin.Â
Sure, the troubled outlaw beloved by Star Wars followers in every single place relies partly on one in all historical past’s most infamous mass murderers, because the collection’ creator, Tony Gilroy, has acknowledged. “Should you take a look at an image of younger Stalin, isn’t he glamorous,” Gilroy mentioned in an interview in Rolling Stone in 2022. “He seems like Diego!”

Stalin took Russia from its war-ravaged imperial decline to a nuclear-armed superpower in simply three many years, but additionally presided over a reign of authoritarian terror that starved, executed or imprisoned tens of millions of its personal residents. Numerous books had been written on his merciless years in energy, however little or no on his early years. Author Simon Sebag Montefiore noticed a niche, and commenced rifling by way of archives in post-Soviet nations to attempt to separate the reality from fantasy, and inform the little-known story of Stalin’s adolescence.
A gangster and a killer
In 2007 – a century after the notorious heist in Tiflis – Younger Stalin was printed. It delved into the early lifetime of the Soviet Union’s dictatorial chief. “Ought to the lifetime of a black-hearted ogre, a mass assassin who was the wickedest of the Twentieth-Century’s monsters, be fairly so entertaining,” requested a evaluate in The Observer on the time.
One one that learn Younger Stalin was Gilroy. The author and producer, who had scripted the primary 4 Bourne movies and the Andor-precursor movie, Rogue One, was planning a TV collection that will discover Cassian Andor’s journey from informal thief to rebellious figurehead. The true story of a revolutionary motion on the far fringes of an actual empire gave Gilroy his supply materials. “Actually, I’m the basic outdated white man who simply can’t get sufficient historical past,” Gilroy mentioned in Rolling Stone. “The final 15 years, I’ve been studying all non-fiction.” He added that Younger Stalin was “an incredible e-book” and that its account of the Tiflis financial institution theft was an “unbelievable film sequence”.
Did Sebag Montefiore ever suppose to himself, ‘This is the proper setting for a Star Wars spin-off,’ when he was researching his e-book? “No, I did not ever suppose that after I was toiling within the archives in Moscow and Tbilisi,” he tells the BBC. “However I did suppose that there was one thing fairly elemental in regards to the lifetime of Stalin, particularly earlier than 1917. It was a captivating story, partly as a result of nobody knew about it.”
The Tiflis heist was reported all over the world and funded the revolutionaries’ motion for years, says Sebag Montefiore. “Lenin and the entire Bolshevik Celebration lived off that cash till the [1917] revolution.”

Sebag Montefiore says that the younger Stalin and the troubled Andor bear placing similarities: “A younger man from nowhere with a revolutionary ideology, and a combat towards an enormous empire,” the author says. “I did suppose there was one thing attention-grabbing in regards to the secret life of somebody in that state of affairs. That is principally what Tony Gilroy has centered on in Andor.”
Stalin was, in fact, not the one determine fomenting turmoil in Tsarist Russia, and Andor fleshes out different characters with attributes from the younger Georgian’s contemporaries. Amongst Andor’s co-conspirators within the Aldanhi heist is Karis Nemik (Alex Lawther), an idealist writing a high-minded manifesto for the rising resistance, just like Bolshevik Leon Trotsky’s polemics amid the opulent decline of Romanov rule.
Stellan SkarsgÃ¥rd’s character, Luthen Rael, is an analogue for Vladimir Lenin, the Bolshevik chief who was in a position to kind a strong motion from unlikely bedfellows. A rich artwork collector, Luthen’s exact manners in entrance of his gilded clients disguise an uncompromising hatred of the empire and a stressed want to fund a rising resistance. In Cassian’s proficient, taciturn thief he sees a useful gizmo; Lenin noticed the identical in Stalin. “In 1911, individuals mentioned to Lenin, ‘Why are you utilizing this man? He is a gangster. He is had individuals killed. He was concerned in all these financial institution robberies,'” says Sebag Montefiore. “And Lenin replies, ‘He is precisely the sort we’d like.’ Stalin may edit a paper. He may write and will learn. And he was additionally somebody who may organize a success on any person and organize a financial institution theft. That was what Lenin talked about: some individuals had been tea drinkers, and different individuals had been thugs, Stalin may do each, and that is why Stalin received in the long run.”Â
The beginning of an empire
The analysis into historic rebellions – Gilroy has mentioned he studied different revolutions whereas writing Andor, as nicely – has little doubt helped create the present’s oddly practical really feel. Andor feels extra all the way down to earth than something the Star Wars universe has proven us earlier than, in the event you’ll excuse the occasional spaceship roaring overhead, or an alien or two sitting within the native bar. There are flashes of mundane element hardly ever scene in big-budget sci-fi. Individuals complain that Andor’s mom Maarva’s (Fiona Shaw) home is all the time too chilly. Safety officer Syril Karn’s (Kyle Soller) petulant depth even extends to tailoring his uniform to make him look smarter than his contemporaries. The Imperial Safety Bureau hoping to root out the rising revolt is a nest of competing ambitions that feels as actual as something in a historic drama – or in on a regular basis workplace politik. There are fewer blaster-toting Stormtroopers than there are within the Star Wars movies, and extra sadistic, trenchcoated officers who would have been proper at residence within the Tsarist secret police, the Okhrana, or its Soviet substitute, the Cheka.
“Up to now, Star Wars motion pictures drop us in at a really huge second,” says Walter Marsh, an Australian author who praised Andor’s grown-up worldview in The Guardian in 2022. “There’s the massive climactic battle, or Luke Skywalker’s heroic journey, they usually’re these huge themes of fine versus evil. However as any historian will let you know, wars and empires and revolutions do not begin and finish in a single day, and there is all the time this larger backstory. There’s this kind of lengthy tail. It takes years for that sort of colonial rot, these techniques of management, to set in.”
Andor reveals the corruption and brutal entitlement discovered at each layer of autocratic regimes: the guards ingesting in a brothel whereas they’re purported to be on obligation (and ready to shake down anybody they do not just like the look of); the jail industrial system that requires fixed additions even when the brand new prisoners have finished nothing flawed; the delicate sabotage of ethnic pilgrimages to sacred land that’s earmarked for imperial improvement. And with authoritarianism on the rise across the globe, Andor has as a lot to say about in the present day’s world because it does about Stalin’s.Â
“When the present got here out I believe I used to be pleasantly shocked to see a narrative in that universe that was acquainted, however which additionally approached this query of empire that is been so central to the entire franchise, however was by no means truly tackled in a extremely nuanced and human character-driven manner,” Marsh tells the BBC. “It is all nicely and good to have a giant, evil Sith Lord obtain international, common domination. However how does energy assert itself on the road stage, from one human to a different?

“The Empire is that this big grinding, unthinking machine, nevertheless it’s additionally a really human factor,” Marsh continues. “Who’re the those who discover a place and thrive in these techniques?” He remarks that within the unique movies the Imperials had been little greater than blank-and-you-miss-them pantomime villains: “British guys in fits getting choked by Darth Vader in some unspecified time in the future, who’re simply fidgeting with buttons within the background.”
Andor’s power is its “three-episode arcs that confirmed us the sort of demise by a thousand cuts that it takes to realize this kind of social, political and financial dominance”, says Marsh. “The converse of that’s it reveals all of the methods by which that sort of oppression evokes pushback and resistance in all types of various methods.”
From hero to villain?
The brand new season, which begins on Tuesday 22 April, will develop the revolt’s story because it rushes in direction of the occasions seen in Rogue One: the scenes of brutal Imperial reactions to an illustration proven within the trailer evoke the Tsarist crackdown on a St Petersburg march in 1905, which was a slow-burning contributor to the Bolshevik revolution.
“The scavenger who turns into a passionate revolutionary chief is sort of fascinating,” says Sebag Montefiore of the troubled Cassian Andor. “That is an excellent trajectory, as a result of that is precisely what Stalin did. And it will be attention-grabbing to see how deep Gilroy makes use of that – how far he goes to create a personality with each heroic and villainous options.”
George Lucas’s unique movie trilogy rooted the revolt within the basic good-guys-versus-bad-guys dynamic of numerous Saturday matinee cliffhangers, the resistance modelled after anti-Nazi opposition in occupied Europe. The rebels of Andor inhabit a way more compromised actuality; like real-life revolutionary actions, they’re much extra sophisticated than those we often see on display screen. Luthen, Andor’s Lenin proxy, considers it with chilling deliberation in one of many first season’s standout scenes: “I am condemned to make use of the instruments of my enemy to defeat them. I burn my decency for another person’s future. I burn my life to make a dawn that I do know I’ll by no means see.”
As Sebag Montefiore notes, the revolutionaries themselves knew deep down that in the event that they took energy, they themselves must use repression as a device; they might develop into what they as soon as despised. “Lenin himself mentioned: ‘A revolution with out firing squads is meaningless.'”Â
Andor season two is out there on Disney+ from 22 April.