The Batman 2 Just Nabbed Award-Winning Andor Talent—Gotham Levels Up
The Batman Part 2 taps Emmy-winning Andor and Chernobyl production designer Luke Hull, bringing Star Wars–honed worldbuilding to Gotham.
File this under: excellent hire. Matt Reeves just pulled in a heavy hitter for The Batman: Part 2, and it comes straight from a galaxy not so far away. Emmy-winning production designer Luke Hull, whose work helped make Andor look and feel so lived-in, is joining the sequel. That alone tells me Gotham is about to get even moodier and more tactile in all the right ways.
Why Luke Hull is a big deal
Hull is the production design brain behind Andor and HBO's Chernobyl, two shows that do not mess around when it comes to world-building. His calling card is building large-scale, practical environments that sell the story's weight without screaming for attention.
On Chernobyl, Hull oversaw the recreation of an entire nuclear power plant to communicate the scope of that catastrophe. For Andor, he carved out layered, grounded spaces across the galaxy, including Mon Mothma's homeworld, Chandrila — which he once described as a mash-up of feudal Japanese influences, Scandinavian minimalism, and Scottish castle bones. The guy is not just dressing sets; he is telling the story with architecture.
"Impact isn't just about size; it's about explaining the scale of the disaster... the scale of the effect on the people."
That philosophy lines up neatly with Reeves' Gotham, which is supposed to feel like a pressure cooker that shapes every character inside it.
Gotham as a character (and how Hull fits)
In this corner of the DC universe, Gotham is not just a backdrop — it is the problem Bruce keeps trying (and failing) to solve. Batman's mission is welded to the city's rot, which is why the environments matter so much. Bringing in someone like Hull, who builds spaces that echo theme and psyche, is a smart, almost obvious move. Expect less glossy set dressing and more oppressive, story-first design that pushes on the characters instead of just framing them.
The road to Part 2
- Luke Hull (Andor, Chernobyl) boards as production designer, per the trades.
- Robert Pattinson returns as Bruce Wayne/Batman, alongside Colin Farrell, Jeffrey Wright, and Andy Serkis.
- The sequel picks up shortly after the events of The Penguin series.
- The Batman: Part 2 is dated for October 1, 2027.
We are a ways out from release, but this is the kind of behind-the-scenes upgrade that usually pays off on screen. If Hull brings the same 'build the world, feel the weight' approach he used on Andor and Chernobyl, Gotham is about to feel even more like a character that can punch back.