Since its debut, the movie Black Panther, has been getting tons of applause and of course deservedly so. The movie is awe-inspiring and is one of the greatest film offerings; an absolute game changer.
For a movie to be as great as this, there has to be a disciplined, clear-cut and simple script serving as a guiding tool for the director. You can tell from Ryan Coogler’s direction that there had been no misunderstandings between him and the writing team; it helps a whole lot that he was part of the scriptwriting panel for this movie. To be able to bring ideas on paper to life as grandly and effortlessly as this you’d have to have had a ceremonious, unstaggering script. Coogler has been afforded the rare chance to both work on and translate a story on screen, which is what has helped him seamlessly achieve this high-standard direction; for a filmmaker with only just two other feature films (Fruitvale Station, Creed) under his belt.
Thematically, this movie is as daring and seasoned as a Disney/Marvel movie is not so very
often allowed to be. Lupita Nyong’o herself has expressed how taken aback she was at how strong the core narrative of this story is. The film is peppered with conversation around African diaspora and the ills that have forever plagued the black community. It doesn’t shy away from calling out white people and colonisers and the darkness they let rip upon black lives for many years. It touches on sore subjects such as the war against guns, black-on-black violence and poverty while also addressing betrayal and internal conflict. This is a movie that knows where it stands and so embraces its themes.
Characters
Remarkably, the characters in the movie are well developed. The movie embraces all of its characters equally no matter how much screen-time they’re afforded. Take M’baku (leader of the Jabari tribe) for instance, he’s woven into the story with such care that the full extent of his charisma and dynamism is felt with as much intensity as the writers intended. Athandwa Kani’s depiction of the young King T’Chaka is one of the most arresting performances on screen, regardless of the fact that his role is in the form of flashbacks. Supporting characters such as Shuri, Okoye, and Lupita’s Nakia were as much crucial and at the heart of the story as Chadwick Boseman’s T’Challa, the Black Panther himself. Their individual motivation and character traits were customised and spotlighted so much that it made us as the audience feel as though we’ve known them for way longer than the two hours the movie lasts. Shuri is an intelligent, gqom-listening tech-genius who knows herself and her worth enough to know that she’s much more forward-thinking than her brother. Nakia as the love interest is her own person with her own aspirations and isn’t made to live in the shadows of T’Challa. Okoye is a self-confident, pure-hearted and brave warrior who doesn’t succumb to pressure from anyone, and always stands her ground no matter who’s at the opposite end.
In this movie, we get to experience a variety of different personalities, so much so, that we’re afforded a completely new perspective of black people, outside of what we’ve been offered for many years in film; black people as slaves, black people as thugs, black people living in poverty, basically black people in pain. Fair representation really does matter, and with the pride, this movie has embedded into a lot of black people’s heart, black stories showing us all forms of blackness are direly needed.
African pride Projected
Afrofuturism, Afrofeminism, and African pride are at the fore of Black Panther. We’re afforded a movie that embraces all aspects of being black all over the globe without overwhelming itself. Technically, this is a visually and sonically enthralling cinematic offering that will for years be hailed as one of its kind; as an apt template for storytellers, especially for filmmakers of colour. Coogler doesn’t leave for amateurism here, as this is just his third feature film, and instead marks himself as an auteur and a filmmaker worthy of a seat next to the greats. The movie is conscious and enchanting. Everyone who hasn’t done so as yet should go watch this very important moment in history.