Black Panther - Review
GOOD:
Above all else, the principals owned their characters throughout the film, selling them as being more than what was merely hinted at in
Captain America: Civil War, by having each feel as if they are disconnected from the world at large, with no actors slipping into natural behavior or using Western behavior / reactions when they are not supposed to have that as a cultural experience.
The joking was held to a bare minimum--which was fantastic, as this origin film (and the MCU in general) needs to drop the
Power Rangers / Transformers kind of kiddie schlock that has hurt several of its entries (the
Avengers movies
, Guardians films & third
Thor film). The film was dealing with--in its own way--some very serious issues centered on racial identity and its place in the world, or choices to either embrace it for personal enrichment, or use it as a literal weapon by calling an oppressed people to arms. Not the average MCU film by a long shot.
Another refreshing element was the depth, class and strengths of the film's sets of romantic relationships (T'Challa & Nakia / Okoye & W'Kabi), though troubled--and in one set, violent-- were still based on respect, instead of the 25 year trend of most TV and film relationships being as inherently dysfunctional as the entertainment industry would have you believe they are. It says much that W'Kabi was ready to slay all on behalf of Killmonger's attempted race war, but literally stopped in his tracks rather than fight or harm Okoye. Any other film would have had W'Kabi either pretend to stand down, then kill his one and only, or W'Kabi actually surrender, but Okoye cut him down in some last, petty act of revenge.
MESSAGES:
The most sensitive issue of the film centered on the differing views of race and its place as a point of identify, and/or the need to use it--with ideological and physical force--as a liberating tool. I've seen endless reactions, articles and commentary from every conceivable side of the sociopolitical spectrum, all arguing tis, or claiming that about the messages in
Black Panther, and unfortunately most are too into pushing their own agenda(s) instead of seeing the film for what it was. For example:
- Right Wingers (of every level) argue that the film is pushing a black nationalist platform, as if it was actually more about making Killmonger's various speeches about the state of (as he put it) "2 billion people who look like" him / revenge more forceful and attractive than anything coming from T'Challa. Others argue the film is selling some halcyonic fantasy of black kingdoms that "never were" (a deliberately sweeping, racist propaganda-bleeding statement),
- Left Wingers (of every level) have taken the film on their shoulders, trying to sell it as some sort of positive self-esteem-filled, messianic tale "black people" have been "waiting for." Its the same old reaction: the same thing was said about other black-themed productions, such as In the Heat of the Night in the 60s, the 70s with Roots, the 80s with Do the Right Thing, etc. Usually, it is self righteous, "caring" faction of white modern liberalism that appoints themselves to speak for others in such an assured manner, always telling black people when their "time has come" or what they should praise as some cultural breakthrough.
Both sides are--of course--wrong; the Right's neverending attempt to erase the fact that African kingdoms (of various sizes, areas of control, etc.) existed from one end of the continent to the other. Obviously, there was no Wakanda with the magical metal space rock fueling technological development, but African nations date back before standard recorded history. It did not all begin with the damnable colonialism, the Middle Passage or anything else concocted to continue to force feed the false idea of inferiority.
The Left is not much better, with many of their over-the-moon
Black Panther praise sessions being nothing more than using the film (as the filmmakers did to a degree) to serve their thinly veiled rants about completely unrelated subjects (e.g. T'Challa's post credits UN scene being--in reality--all about the entertainment industry's obsession with DACA, Trump and the U.S. border wall). The message was supposed to be about (more than anything else) letting go of Killmonnger's divisive rhetoric that would turn historic tables on white populations, but the second the T'Challa speech moved past the greeting, it was all about the entertainment industry's obsession with/hatred of Trump.
Misguided, topical soapboxes do not help the longevity of what is--at the end of it all--entertainment property. The race conflicts were the heart of the screenplay, and the focus should have remained there.
Black Panther succeeded because of its questioning a long-lived issue with many faces neither the Left or Right attempting to control the message (and basic entertainment value) understand, as it simply does not fit their ready-made, "this is not anything for black people to celebrate" / "get-the-enemy" narratives.
BAD:
The aforementioned shoehorning of anti-Trump agenda when that is was not the point of the story.
Marvel seems to be running thin on new origin story ideas, as this film was so patterned on
Thor (2011), from the reveal of an isolated, mythical kingdom on the eve of destruction and/or a hostile takeover, along with said mythical kingdom's detachment (and dislike) of the outside world, to a "fallen" son (Killmonger/Loki) fighting the hero for the crown, right down to the hero being defeated and stripped of his powers, only to regain them (right at the most critical point of the conflict) and save the day. Like
Dr. Strange was based so much on
Iron Man's origin film template (which in turn, took more than anyone would admit from Nolan's
Batman Begins),
Black Panther and
Thor could swap any number of characters and almost end up the same way, sans BP's racial identity framework.
NOTES:
Guessing everyone now knows about the final post credits scene involving Shuri, I can say that I suspected she would represent a different course for Wakanda, not only in her being less traditional than her brother, but she speaks about "white boys" in a sense free of insult or judgement. I will go ahead and predict Shuri will likely have some sort of relationship with you-know-who. That would be interesting.
GRADE:
B+.