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Marvel films, it's time for a Black female lead

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There's no reason she couldn't still do that as Black Panther.
Here's Riri Williams
She sounds intresting from what I read in the link. It also made me wonder about something. We have had stuff set in the past,present and space. I wonder if we stuff set in both the near and distant future. She could be future Iron Man. Not mention a good place to bring in the X-Men. Jason
 
The way I could see them going to the future is if it's so far ahead it won't effect future movies, or if they go to some kind of alternate future. They aren't going to want to tie anybody's hands by doing something that could interfere with a future movie.
The only way I could maybe see them doing something like that is if it's done specifically as a preview for another movie, with that movie's creative team's input.
 
Because of the continuing Batmans and Spideys, no doubt there will be another Iron film of some sort. BLACK PANTHER's success could influence them to use her. T'Challa wasn't the biggest cut-up either. It's harder to believe now, but his comics kept cancelling in the earlier days of Marvel. Doctor Strange's too.

Eventually, yes. In the MCU? Maybe. In the MCU sometime soon? Eh... Questionable. Being seen as 'replacing' RDJ could be a huge risk.

I'm only passingly familiar with the X-People - could they plausibly tie the story line of her movie into the Wakanda characters and background? One of the delightful things about Black Panther, for me, was seeing the whole New York-centric The West Is The Whole Enchilada milieu of the MCU (honestly, of most popular movies) just sent to the bench for a couple of hours. Let her go somewhere and do something important that most of the usual suspects are just not part of.

She was married to Black Panther for a while in the comics, and she hung out with him some years before she joined the X-Men. But I think the better option would be for her story to take place almost entirely in Africa and not be mostly in Wakanda (there could be a Wakanda cameo, maybe) - her origin story is all about Cairo and Kenya, so you could expand the world of the MCU even more.
 
For all the problems with the most recent FF movie, Michael B Jordan was not one of them. It really showed how a character could be played easily by someone with a different genetic make-up than people's perceived version and still remain true to the spirit of the character. For what its worth, I actually liked all of the cast in that movie.
 
For all the problems with the most recent FF movie, Michael B Jordan was not one of them. It really showed how a character could be played easily by someone with a different genetic make-up than people's perceived version and still remain true to the spirit of the character. For what its worth, I actually liked all of the cast in that movie.
The cast was the least of that movie's problems.
 
For all the problems with the most recent FF movie, Michael B Jordan was not one of them. It really showed how a character could be played easily by someone with a different genetic make-up than people's perceived version and still remain true to the spirit of the character. For what its worth, I actually liked all of the cast in that movie.

In the two movies before that, the Invisible Girl was Mexican (American, French and Danish).
 
The new Invisible Woman comic is good.

In her pare time, since the beginning, Susan has been an Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. and the story seems to be a mixture of flashbacks and modern day while she's doing cloak and dagger oddjobs for Nick Fury.
 
Alban was fine as Sue Storm. Way better than the fans who bitched at the time deserved.

Apparently the key to getting a good part in the MCU is to play Johnny in an FF movie.
 
The cast was the least of that movie's problems.

I still wonder why Billy Elliott was chosen for Ben Grimm.....

It is pretty bad when you have an ensemble of award winning/nominated actors and can't pull off a decent movie.

They're acting, not directing. Bad direction, actors look bad in turn.

Fuck Josh Trank.

No thanks.

Apparently the key to getting a good part in the MCU is to play Johnny in an FF movie.

Excellent point.
 
I'm not sure if you are serious. Samantha Wilson, a black woman who can kick all our asses, has been Captain America since the 1940s in the the Spider-Gwen universe.

That's why I need to keep up more on curent Marvel, but there's just so many titles. I was serious but ill-informed. However, she cannot kick all our asses. She's fictional.:borg:
 
For all the problems with the most recent FF movie, Michael B Jordan was not one of them. It really showed how a character could be played easily by someone with a different genetic make-up than people's perceived version and still remain true to the spirit of the character. For what its worth, I actually liked all of the cast in that movie.

The film was completely mishandled, and was "FF in name only, just to be different than the Evans-starred crappers, while not taking any opportunity to get the FF story right--but hey, there's that MCU thing, and we have to keep shit on the screen.."

It is pretty bad when you have an ensemble of award winning/nominated actors and can't pull off a decent movie.

Really? Its quite common, as "award winning/nominated actors" are no guarantee of enhancing and/or saving a project--particularly fantasy projects--that were doomed at the germ of an idea.

Examples:

Dick Tracy (Touchstone, 1990) - from its star/director Warren Beatty, to Al Pacino, Michael J. Pollard, Kathy Bates, Charles Durning, Dustin Hoffman and James Caan. Overloaded with Academy Award winning or nominated actors, and they could not save a bloated production that was creatively exploitative / bankrupt from the start.

Flash Gordon (Universal, 1980) Here,, you had AA nominee (Chaim) Topol, and Golden Globe nominee Max von Sydow...and everyone knows what a crapstorm that De Laurentis "epic" turned out to be.

How about The Black Hole (Disney, 1979). This expensive (non) event film had AA & Golden Globe winner Ernest Borgnine, Golden Globe winning Anthony Perkins, and Golden Globe winner Joseph Bottoms. The point is when the project is just a creatively bankrupt mess, all of the acting firepower in the world won't make a difference. In some cases, it makes it worse, as some directors and producers lean to heavily on whatever kind of aura or performance which earned the actor his or her award, and that's often out of place in the role they were hired to play.
 
Flash Gordon (Universal, 1980) Here,, you had AA nominee (Chaim) Topol, and Golden Globe nominee Max von Sydow...and everyone knows what a crapstorm that De Laurentis "epic" turned out to be.

No. No! Bad, poster, BAD!

Flash Gordon is an amazingly fun adventure with the best fucking soundtrack on Earth. It is amazingly quotable, it is visually dazzling, and fucking Brian Blessed is in it.

Now, sit in the corner, you can come out when you realize how wrong you are.
 
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