“Black Panther” No Ordinary Superhero movie
“Black
Panther” No O The Black Panther first entered the Marvel Cinematic Universe
back in 2016 in Captain America: Civil War.
Now he's got
his own film, which goes way beyond the usual expectations of fantasy, fight
scenes and romance.
Having a
plot based around a black superhero with a predominantly black cast is a first
for Marvel, but the film builds on this concept in a massive way.
Directed by
Creed's Ryan Coogler, it is set in the mythical country of Wakanda: a hidden
African kingdom with incredible technological power, due to its reserves of the
world's most useful precious metal.
Chadwick
Boseman, who plays its king T'Challa and (more importantly) the Black Panther,
tells the BBC that getting Wakanda right was the most important thing.
"This
is fantasy and we have to create a culture," he says. "It's not
necessarily because it's the first time we're seeing a black superhero; I think
it's because we have to define what Wakanda is.
"It
can't be some generalised version of what the country is or the accent.
"It
can't be generalised in why we wear certain clothing or why we have the number
of tribes we have - what are those tribes?
"We
have a river tribe and a border tribe for example."
This is
echoed by his co-star Lupita Nyong'o, who plays Nakia in the film - his love
interest and moral compass rolled into one.
The
Oscar-winning actress tells the BBC: "We're in Africa and we meet an
entirely new nation that the world has never been to, and it delivers on
feeling like another part of the world.
"This
is a nation that is highly developed, and they are so because they didn't get
interrupted by or assaulted by colonialism."
Boseman says
both he and Coogler were concerned with how the Black Panther character would
deal with conflict in the film, as his life is essentially well protected.
"He has
superpowers, he has a suit that's bulletproof and some nearly unstoppable
soldiers around him," says the 41-year-old actor.
"He's in
a country which people don't know exists in this way, so no one can get to him.
We were trying to figure out what would make this the most real."
This the
essence of the film - it tussles with the dilemmas of a man who is ignorant to
the suffering the rest of the world faces.
It comes to
a head with the introduction of the villain, Erik Killmonger, played by Michael
B Jordan.
Half
American, half Wakandan, Erik comes to the kingdom on a mission to help
oppressed Africans suffering around the world after experiencing it first hand.
"The
arguments of all the characters in this film are so valid, so well thought-out,
and that's what creates such a unique tension," says Nyong'o, star of 12
Years a Slave.
"The
fact that in this film you meet a villain and you see where he's coming from,
he's so empathetic, it can hopefully spark a really robust debate in the real
world."
Nyong'o
hopes that the film not only "brings people together to experience
something mythological and folkloric" but also allows them to "reflect
on some really deep and important issues".
Her co-star
Danai Gurira - who plays Wakanda's military leader Okoye - says the film also
addresses the importance of having well-rounded female characters, as opposed
to just "strong" women.
It comes at
a time when inspirational female superhero films are thin on the ground.
Marvel's
rival, DC Comics, may have brought out Wonder Woman last year, but the former's
female-led Captain Marvel film is not due for release until 2019.
There was
also criticism of Marvel's Iron Man 3 in 2013, after it scrapped the idea of
having actress Rebecca Hall play a villain.
Instead it
brought in a male villain, played by Guy Pearce, and reduced Hall's role to one
of much less significance.
Gurira says
"strong is definitely great, but it's a component - we want a fuller
picture.
"Its
about [having] a more complex and consistently complex narrative around the
female contribution to the story."
Gurira, best
known for playing Michonne in The Walking Dead, says that when she writes
plays, she wants to write characters "where the actor gets a full work-out
when they step into a role".
"It is
about being fully human and being allowed to be a stakeholder in a narrative.
It's about being allowed to be complex, to have dimension and to play a
character," says the author of Eclipsed (2009).
Nyong'o says
part of Black Panther's significance comes from the way it shows how developing
the harmonious world of Wakanda allows its "citizens to realise their
fullest potential".
"You
see women alongside men sitting in their power and making a different to the
future of their nation in a very exemplary manner," she continues.
FROM .bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts
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