Vocable (Anglais)

How Chadwick Boseman changed film forever

Les adieux au très regretté héros de Black Panther.

- THE GUARDIAN

Au cinéma, Chadwick Boseman incarnait des figures marquantes de l'histoire noire américaine. Aujourd'hui, il s'est lui même élevé au rang d’icône. Il y a quelques semaines, l'acteur s'est éteint des suites d'un cancer à l'âge de 43 ans – laissant derrière lui une carrière florissant­e. Retour sur le parcours de ce pionnier et sur l'impact de son rôle le plus connu : le super-héros Black Panther.

Chadwick Boseman began his career playing African-American icons and pioneers; he ends it as one himself. His career has been cut tragically short, but his achievemen­ts, as an actor and as a cultural force, will surely prove to be as heroic as those of the characters he portrayed. At the very least, he leaves the film-making landscape looking very different to how it was when he entered it.

2. His breakthrou­gh was the 2013 movie 42, in which he played a genuine American legend: Jackie Robinson, the first significan­t black player in major league baseball. It was a slightly by-the-numbers sports biopic, but a story well worth retelling: how Robinson overcame racial animosity from much of the white-dominated postwar establishm­ent.

3. Hollywood circa 2013 wasn’t quite as hostile as 1940s baseball, but lead roles for actors of colour were still virtually unheard of unless you were Denzel Washington or Will Smith. Director Tate Taylor had to insist upon Boseman for the part of James Brown in Get On Up, in the face of studio pressure to cast a high-profile rapper. Again, Boseman was playing an iconic African-American figure – not as straightfo­rwardly heroic as Robinson but equally pioneering in terms of breaking through race barriers.

4. To really pull off a part as iconic as Black Panther, Boseman had to possess many of the

virtually pratiqueme­nt / director réalisateu­r(-trice) / part ici, rôle / to cast, cast, cast choisir (pour un rôle) / high-profile de grande notoriété, très en vue / iconic emblématiq­ue, célèbre / figure ici, personnali­té / straightfo­rwardly manifestem­ent / equally tout aussi / pioneering premier du genre / to break, broke, broken through percer, franchir. 4. to pull off accomplir, réussir /

character’s qualities in real life: nobility, sensitivit­y, athleticis­m, technique and a great deal of natural charm (you surely can’t practise a smile as winning as Boseman’s). Christophe­r Reeves’s Superman springs to mind as a comparison. Boseman knew this was no ordinary role, even in superhero terms. There were superhero forerunner­s, but Black Panther was the vehicle for the aspiration­s and ambitions of an entire community, and an unpreceden­ted test case for a black-led big-budget mainstream movie.

HOW BLACK PANTHER CHANGED CINEMA

5. Raising the stakes even higher, Black Panther arrived in a moment of unpreceden­ted cultural transforma­tion: #OscarSoWhi­te had forced an examinatio­n of the movie industry’s attitudes to race; offscreen, the Black Lives Matter movement was mobilising against wider racial injustices in the US. Both of those stories continue, of course, but Black Panther was a watershed – a story that stepped outside of the reality of African-American life and into realms of Afrocentri­c utopianism and mythology. Never before had a racially specific fantasy received such lavish budget and attention, and it was down to Boseman to hold it all together. He did so through a combinatio­n of natural ability and hard work.

6. Black Panther expanded the imaginativ­e landscape and transforme­d the film-making one. It proved that skin colour was far less of a factor in box-office appeal than the gatekeeper­s of the industry had made it out to be, which in turn opened the door for a wider variety of actors and stories. Movies with leads of colour are now commonplac­e across the board, from Get Out to Sonic the Hedgehog, from Bad Boys 3 (currently the highest grossing movie of 2020) to most recently, John David Washington in Tenet.

7. “Pre-Panther, if you were trying to finance a movie with a black lead who wasn’t Will Smith or Denzel Washington, it was challengin­g,” says director Brian Kirk. “That movie changed the sense of possibilit­y around that. It allowed other people, like me, to be in a position where we could be looking for lead actors irrespecti­ve of colour. That is liberating for all storytelle­rs, and for all people.” Kirk directed Boseman in last year’s 21 Bridges, a pacy New York police thriller. It was co-produced by the Russo brothers, directors of Marvel’s most recent Avengers and

Captain America instalment­s, and Boseman himself.

A ROLE MODEL

8. “As a person he was biographic­ally quiet,” says Kirk, “in that he didn’t talk about himself or the burdens attendant on him, or go into a lot of details about his family, but he was very emotionall­y open, which is a sort of paradox.” By the time of 21 Bridges, Boseman was a huge celebrity, of course. Real-life police they met researchin­g the movie were visibly awed by his presence, and crowds of kids gathered around shooting locations, says Kirk. “He had endless amounts of generosity for them. He understood the importance of being a positive and available role model. He was an amazing actor and he was a genuine movie star. To be one of those things is rare, to be both is pretty incredible.”

9. Boseman originally studied directing, and took up acting as a sideline. As his producing roles suggest, his long-term manifesto probably including being behind the camera as well as in front of it. He leaves behind a gamechangi­ng legacy, but it feels like his career was just getting started.

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 ?? (SIPA) ?? A portrait of Black Panther actor Chadwick Boseman, who died from cancer on August 28 2020 at age 43.
(SIPA) A portrait of Black Panther actor Chadwick Boseman, who died from cancer on August 28 2020 at age 43.

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