Paging Batmon - Black Panther film
Duderonomy
Haut de la Garenne 7,794 Posts
Kendrick Lamar OST, some decent early reviews... wut sayest thou?
Comments
Same as SoulOnIce.
MANY ARE CALLED...
Well shit, it looks interesting (Black Panther). I loved the last Thor flick (although too much Hulk dialogue), and so far not bored with Marvel films yet, even if I should be. DC films... well, Wonderwoman was good enough that I forgot it was in the DC universe.
When you diss the Strut, you diss yourself
Heard it was the most legit "Africa" film since "The Royal Penis Is Clean". (The bar being so low that a rattlesnake couldn't limbo under it). Cosine on Thor, way better than the sum of it's parts.
That was a pretty legit film tbf; Reverend Brown FTW.
Strongest Female Characters in an action movie.
Movie stealing Villain with clear motivations.
The hidden country of Wakanda was fucking dope.
A triumph for black film making. Really dope to see a place for black film makers in the MCU.
Starring James Brown.
GAME OVER.
- spidey
Are they right this time? Will somebody like this who has never liked even the "THIS ONE IS THE ONE" superhero movies of the past? BP is different because I want to give it a chance but I also don't want assbrun of old.
Haven't seen it yet. I'm usually on ur side, but the sound-track is en fuego and the political context cannot be ignored. I think those two could easily elevate it among the rest. I have high hopes! I'll try to post back here when I see it.
I'm partial to this song from the soundtrack. This beat has got some nice boom to it.
If you're going to be old at least try not to be so crotchety..
- spidey
Easier said than done - while I commute my thoughts are increasingly narky. Not sure whether to put it down to winter blues, commuting, or age. I take a crumb of comfort from the fact that I’m aware enough to try and stop it when I notice I’m running through a mental check-list of things that piss me off though.
1. Guardians of teh Galaxy - for the unique approach to blending music with imagery, lots of gags, reminded the rest of the Marvel universe that these films can be lighthearted as apposed to the routinely grim X-Men films. That said...
2. Logan - suffering/declining heros are always a good film subject, this was like a western, and finally he got to show his teeth (well, claws) and we got the blood and gore a Wolverine film deserves.
3. Thor Ragnarok - psychedelic! Less so than Dr Strange, but better music and better jokes.
4. First Avengers film - Loki stole every scene he was in. Even when it involved him being smacked around like a rag doll by Hulk.
5. Black Panther?
I stay mentally young, physically healthy, happy and relate more with people who are younger than me. I like to steal some of their energy. Your own mind can really repress you from being the best version of who you are. You have to be more positive to yourself so you can be more positive to life and the world around you.
- Damo
IMHO, of course...
GJ
Have to say it lived up to them. It wasn't perfect but it was damn fine.
The whole look of it was spectacular to start with and I felt that almost all the characters were interesting in themselves and well rounded.
Great bunch of properly strong female characters and an excellent villain. I was actually on Killmonger's side until the last part.
I thought they managed to weave the political aspect in there without it feel too heavy handed.
Also, while the banter heavy style has been entertaining, it was nice to have a film that didn't exist purely on quips again and actually went for a bit more gravitas.
Thought there would be more of the Kendrick soundtrack in there but still a plus point that I'm pretty sure this must be the first superhero film with a Too Short track on it.
I randomly ended up in some special screening that was introduced by all those strong female character actors (and chadwick was on the phone).
**SPOILERS**
I was a little disappointed that the hero didn't try harder not kill his actual kin who was actually wronged but just sort of went with maintaining the family line for most of the movie. Vaguely alluded to the reality of tribal politics in some African countries but not in a terribly heroic way. Beyond the morality of it, it would have made for some nice future tension if a reformed Killmonger was still around (Michael B. Jordan was typically great in this).
Lost interest about halfway.
Way too serious. But then I’ve only enjoyed the irreverent examples of the ouvre previously.
I have to agree with this. It's not easy getting the balance right and I've also enjoyed the ones that are just... funnier. The rhino stopping was the only thing that got a good laugh in the cinema when I watched it. I think if you want to do it serious, it needs to be *serious*, which is why I rank Logan so high. But most of this franchise is about money, and if they make a cert. 18 (not even sure what you call it in the States) they lose a huge chunk of cinema goers. Ah, for the '80s, where the hero would routinely shoot another guy in the face and we'd see his head explode.
It was great to watch though, and some good acting. Serkis without CGI!
Oh wait, the arm.
Yeah I was disappointed that he wasn't kept in the picture though I guess they've already gone that route with Loki to ever diminishing returns.
He was just a much more interesting character than T'Challa who suffered from a lack of inner doubt or conflict.
Yeah I felt that they got the balance about right though, at least people actually smiled in this compared to the grimace/constipated grumpiness of the DC movies.
As much as I enjoyed them I felt a bit quipped out after the last Thor and Guardians movie, Not everyone has to be Tony Stark.
there are also many interesting critiques about the film as it pertains to the continent and the diaspora too. i don't buy them all, all the way (lots of other ways to interpret plot points), but it's definitely making people respond out there.
i largely enjoyed the movie, but like i said above, the morality of the film was off.
:ducks:
*SPOILERS*
EDIT: I give up trying to embed Tweets
the user is Leslie Lee III @leslieleeiii and here are some of his remarks...
Nothing and no one can explain away why a movie called "Black Panther" made black liberation the central evil plot and had a CIA agent as a hero.
#Whiteousindignation
That is some seriously flawed critique, bordering on hyperbolated BS of the highest order. No critique could be more off-the-mark, in the history of misguided misunderstandings of characters, plot, and source material. See? Everyone can play.
The hero is not the CIA agent. He is an add-on.
My sister, 8 years my senior and now pushing... Well, a venerable age, is a recent turn-on to the MCU via Netflix and the movies. She never understood my comic reading and collecting before, even though she is a great visual artist. Anyway, we got into a bit of a discussion where I explained the importance of the source material and I still don't think she got it. Kind of a typical noob response. Almost like looking for "black liberation" from a fantasy film about an African super hero.
BTW, Stan Lee was doing "black liberation" when naysaying revolutionaries where in cotton diapers. Just go see the movie.
GJ
...but I agree, watching the female vs male Watangans fighting each other was dubious. It didn’t feel like one side was fighting to save white people though, I thought it was about loyalty as much as the competing ideologies. Would they have actually killed each other? Just Shoehorning another fight scene in that should’ve been between the two panthers.
Can you ELI5 the importance of the source material?
Location potential (for me).
He's a pretty clear about using his art to promote discussion and social change. I wouldn't expect he's trying to put one over on people of African descent. I think even my problem with it is subject to interpretation - you could say that it's very human to be conflicted about how to wield and maintain your power, but he turned the corner by the time the credits rolled.