Friday, March 2, 2018

Black Panther - Movie Review

Starring Chadwick Boseman, Michael B. Jordan, Lupita Nyong'o, Danai Gurira, Angela Bassett, Martin Freeman, Letitia Wright, Andy Serkis, Forest Whitaker, Daniel Kaluuya, Winston Duke and Sterling K. Brown.
Written by Ryan Coogler & Joe Robert Cole.
Directed by Ryan Coogler.

★★★½

I'm a big fan of the Marvel Cinematic Universe movies. Even the worst one, I'd still give a thumbs-sideways to. Even so, lately we've had some really good ones. Black Panther did not disappoint.

After stealing the show in Captain America: Civil War, T'Challa (Chadwick Boseman) is back with his own movie, in his own country. Wakanda has been a secret country in Africa for thousands of years, highly advanced thanks to a special alien metal called vibranium. While Wakanda has flourished, the rest of the world has gone through the wars and social upheavals of real history. Eric Killonger (Michael B. Jordan) is a villain ready to topple King T'Challa and use Wakanda's powers for some world disruption/domination. His plan may be similar to most supervillains ("I will rule this world!"), but he has one of the better backstories, and combined with MBJ's performance, Killmonger winds up being one of the most compelling MCU villains.

I liked watching a movie full of mythic black empowerment imagery - Wakanda's like the African answer to the Hogwarts, Middle Earth, Westeros worlds we've been getting the last couple decades - and I liked a Marvel movie with so many strong female characters. A few years ago, General Okoye (Walking Dead's Danai Gurira) probably would have been a man, and Queen Ramonda (Angela Bassett) would only have a handful of lines. They're great, and we also get good performances from T'Challa's gizmoduck of a sister Shuri (Letitia Wright) and his love-interest Nakia (Lupita Nyong'o, in her best role since winning the Oscar for 12 Years a Slave), who has her own subplot and isn't just there to react to what T'Challa's doing.

The Tolkein white guys Martin Freeman and Andy Serkis are fun in their roles. Freeman's got that jittery Dr. Watson energy he has as Agent Ross when he was introduced in Captain America: Civil War, and Serkis is in full "Wee! I'm a comic book villain!" mode.

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