Black Panther: Cinematic Review
Black Panther, directed by Ryan Coogler, is a lightening rod of a film, and one that successfully creates and maintains stunning visuals, heroic characters, and a timely message, which challenges the superhero genre as a whole. Black Panther, however, is not a perfect film, and it often struggles in terms of story-telling and character development. However, the visuals and imagination of the film, along with its social significance, mean that the film can be forgiven for its weaknesses in plot and script.
Black Panther immediately distinguishes itself from all other superhero movies in that it discards all the tired clichés and derivative concepts that so closely define most superhero films. Most superhero films created by major studios force you to watch through unoriginal storylines and predictable endings. Black Panther creates an intricate mythology around its characters and builds an entirely new imagined nation called Wakanda, an African paradise. The development of Wakanda is one of the major strengths of the film as it has detailed historical and aesthetic significance connected to real African tribes and cultures, in a manner that is thoughtful, rather than one which just goes for predictable branding, like so many other studio-driven comic book movies.
The mythology at the heart of Black Panther is key to its successful storytelling: the nation is an independent paradise because a meteor full of a substance...
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