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  2. Even a senate in peacetime is guarded. And it really didn’t seem like peacetime with all the rebel threats going around.
  3. Good Lord! I’m off customizing more and you guys are over here hitting out of the park with some amazing 3D work, model, and figure painting. Great work everyone! Do You Remember this scene. JF for comparison. Note anything different??
  4. Today
  5. Looks good @Apok451.
  6. https://hobby-genki.com/en/sentinel/46301-riobot-armored-genesis-climber-mospeada-148-afc-01h-regios-eta-reissue-4571335887995.html
  7. https://www.kcrw.com/sponsored/kcrw-partner-screening-andor-season-2-episodes-8-9 There's a screening of episode 8 and 9 on the Disney lot today. If I had known about it earlier I would have tried to RSVP. Pretty cool to watch some episodes on the big screen.
  8. https://www.target.com/p/star-wars-a-long-long-time-ago-9-34-vehicle-and-figure-target-exclusive/-/A-94177501
  9. Yesterday
  10. They do have security at the entrances. We see it in the episode. They have rows of some kind of metal detector equivalent and security personnel checking IDs at the building's entrances. What they don't have is loads of armed guards on the grounds. Why would they? Like Cassian noted back in season one, the Empire is so arrogant and so self-satisfied that they never even consider possibilities like this. The Empire's whole schtick is presenting a picture of stability and safety. That the new government has everything under control. The Senate we see in Andor is the very picture of a government building in peacetime. They have security at the doors and at key points to keep the public out of areas that they're not meant to access, but it's all kept deliberately low key to project a sense of confidence and control. If the halls of the Imperial capital aren't a supremely safe place, the Empire's public image as a "safe and secure society" is at risk. Putting a huge number of soldiers in or around the building at all times to lock it down on a moment's notice would be a very visible contradiction in the Empire's messaging to the galaxy. Proactively preventing threats to maintain that air of control is the ISB's job, but as we saw they're as overconfident as any other Imperial bureau and dropped the ball.
  11. oh. i manage to get 3d model .thanks
  12. It's still listed on D4Toys, but the actual shipping cost will probably be a mystery until you get the bill. https://www.d4toys.com/index.php?route=product/product&product_id=1275
  13. And that would be the perfect reason to upgrade security. If they don’t have security at each entrance, then that’s just poor writing all around.
  14. Kathleen Kennedy really does need to fly that AC130 out to Tony Gilroy's house and beg him to replace Dave Filoni. The difference is so huge it crosses the line twice and is actually pretty funny.
  15. Eh... clearly it is that hard. Not just because we clearly see Imperial stormtroopers fail to lock down the building and catch the escaping Mon Mothma in Andor, but because this is not even close to the worst security failure we see happen on the Senate's premises. In The Clone Wars, a group of bounty hunters led by Cad Bane were able to break into the Senate offices and take a group of ten senators (incl. Padma Amidala and Bail Organa) hostage and would have killed all ten with a bomb to cover their escape if not for Jedi intervention. Several senators were also murdered in their own offices during that same period. The Supreme Chancellor's office was also broken into three times in quick succession around the events of Revenge of the Sith. Once by General Grievous to abduct the chancellor, once by Mace Windu and three other Jedi to assassinate Palpatine, and once by Yoda to assassinate Palpatine. That's just the short list that I can remember offhand. There are more. Like Cassian noted way back in season one, the Empire's biggest problem is overconfidence. Cassian was able to rob the Imperial naval yard at Steergard with a pure Bavarian fire drill. Just put on a uniform and acted like had every right to be there, and nobody even questioned it. He does the same in "Welcome to the Rebellion".
  16. His Obi-Wan Kenobi film cut (the fan edit that put him on the map) ALMOST redeems that whole mess... and (as with the Patterson Cut of Ahsoka) characters don't survive being skewered by a lightsaber. It improved the content far more than I could've imagined, thanks to a lot of judicious editing (and some subtle VFX changes). The biggest improvement he made to Book of Boba Fett, on the other hand, was simply re-ordering scenes so that Boba doesn't get completely sidelined by Din Djarin... oh, and desaturating the bikes ridden by the Mods of Mos Espa. An admittedly minor (but most welcome) improvement. ☺️
  17. Awesome, it is a solid valk.
  18. That is so awesome. Sadly, we live in the age of short term gains and private equity where once great companies get hollowed out and stripped of everything so a few rich a-holes can get richer. Hmmm that sure sounds familiar... oh well, that's a discussion for a different forum.
  19. I suppose an argument could be made that there have been a number of real world examples where security services have been caught with their, er, Stormtrooper armour down.
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