Filming for Second Season of Diego Luna’s “Star Wars” Prequel “Andor” to Begin in Late November

Diego Luna is back at War

Andor, the Star Wars prequel starring the 42-year-old Mexican actor and producer, has already set the start of filming for its second season with creator Tony Gilroy revealing the date.

Diego LunaEarlier this year, Gilroy confirmed that the second season of Andor would start shooting in November.

Eager fans had been anxious to find out when that would be and Gilroy recently told Collider in an interview that the Disney+ series would start shooting “the Monday before Thanksgiving,” which is November 21.

The show was planned out as a two-season adventure with the second season leading up to the events in Rogue One: A Star Wars Story where audiences were first introduced to Luna’s Cassian Andor character. Each season would consist of 12 episodes for a total of 24 episodes.

Gilroy had previously said the first season would consist of one year presented throughout 12 episodes. The second season would be broken into “four blocks of three [episodes]” with “each block” representing “another year closer.”

“We really get to take the formative forging of Cassian Andor in the first 12 episodes and then we get to take that organism that we’ve built up and run it through the next four years in a really exciting narrative fashion,” he added.

Gilroy hinted that the last season of Episode 24 would “walk the audience directly into the first scenes of Rogue One.”

Andor explores a new perspective from the Star Wars galaxy, focusing on Cassian Andor’s journey to discover the difference he can make. The series brings forward the tale of the burgeoning rebellion against the Empire and how people and planets became involved. It’s an era filled with danger, deception and intrigue where Cassian embarks on the path that is destined to turn him into a rebel hero.

Rodriguez’s Comic “Federal Bureau Of Physics” to Get Film Adaptation

Robbi Rodriguez’s popular comic will be brought to life in the near future…

Justin Marks is joining forces with producer David Goyer to adapt Vertigo ComicsFederal Bureau Of Physics, which was created by the Latino comic book artist and Simon Oliver.

Robbi Rodriguez

Marks is penning the screenplay based on a treatment by Oliver.

The comic series, which was previously titled Collider before its name-change last year, centers on the FBP, or the Federal Bureau of Physics, a group formed in a world where quantum disturbances happen all the time and must be dealt with.

Federal Bureau Of Physics,

Rodriguez is also known as the co-creator of Image ComicsHero Camp with Greg Thompson and Russ Lowery and Oni PressMaintenance with Jim Massey. He was also the artist on Images Comics’ Night Club and Hazed.