Wild Star Wars theory could reveal Snoke’s unlikely origins

Back in 2020, Inverse asked over 1,200 readers for their best Supreme Leader Snoke theories. The villain of The Force Awakens and The Last Jedi was granted little character development before being unceremoniously knocked off, while his clones floated in perpetuity in Palpatine’s Exegol lair with no plans to avenge their brother. Those readers could have never guessed what some are speculating now: Supreme Leader Snoke is actually the beloved Andor character Kino Loy. Both Snoke and Kino are portrayed by Andy Serkis. Do the similarities between them stop there?

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Andor Season 1 follows Cassian Andor (Diego Luna) about five years before the Rogue One crew’s heroic act of martyrdom to aid the overthrow of Emperor Palpatine. During his many misadventures, Cassian is jailed at the Narkina 5 prison facility, where he experiences the inhumane treatment of the Empire’s prisoners. Cassian’s tough shift manager, Kino Loy (Andy Serkis), is desperately trying to keep his head down and get through the last year of his sentence. He runs a tight ship, but the exploitation of his fellow prisoners trumps his good-faith attempts at ensuring his team survives their harrowing penal servitude. After a man in his unit is euthanized and rumors about a new policy of lifetime incarceration begin making the rounds, Kino and Cassian devise an escape plan.

The prisoners are triumphant and leap into the facility’s surrounding waters, but Kino backs away from the edge and tells Cassian he can’t swim. Cassian is toppled into the sea by an eager inmate, and the last we see of Kino he’s apparently sacrificed himself for the greater good.

Does Kino Loy survive?

Things may look bleak for Kino by the end of Andor Episode 10, but Andor creator Tony Gilroy was recently interviewed by The Hollywood Reporter and confirmed that Kino may not be dead yet. When asked, “‘I can’t swim’ is such a heroically tragic moment since Kino (Andy Serkis) led his fellow prisoners to freedom knowing full well that he wasn’t going to make it out. Do you presume Kino was executed shortly thereafter?” Gilroy responded, “I don’t know. He’s not dead. Is he dead? I don’t see him dying [in Episode 10].”

That’s somewhat promising, but it doesn’t mean Kino gets his happily ever after. Some fans think Kino Loy is the origin story for Supreme Leader Snoke, a villain voiced by Serkis in the sequel trilogy. Could this wild theory be true?

Andor is streaming on Disney+.

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