The Borneo Post

‘Black Panther’ director ‘never imagined’ being alive at 30

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CANNES, France: AfricanAme­rican director Ryan Coogler said on Thursday he “never imagined” living long enough to make his groundbrea­king superhero smash-hit “Black Panther”, having grown up in one of the most violent cities in the US.

In Oakland, “death is constantly around us to the point where we are comfortabl­e with it,” the star fi lmmaker — who celebrates his 32nd birthday this month — said at the fi lm festival in Cannes where he received a standing ovation.

“When I turned 30, I almost had a crisis because I never imagined myself being that age... 25 is the magic number — you’re either dead or in jail by that time.

“I saw a lot of evidence of good people who didn’t make it past that age, whether they went to prison or got murdered,” he told a packed audience, which included Haitian fi lmmaker Raoul Peck whose documentar­y “I’m not Your Negro” was nominated for an Oscar last year.

Coogler’s blockbuste­r features an almost exclusivel­y black cast led by actor Chadwick Boseman as the fi rst non-white superhero to get his own standalone movie.

The Marvel action blockbuste­r — which was screened on the beach in Cannes this week — has already earned over a billion dollars at the global box office, making it one of top 10 highest grossing fi lms of all time.

“I grew tired of reading comic books about white superheroe­s and the black people stood just on the side,” said Coogler of Boseman’s character who rules over the fictional African nation of Wakanda.

The country also subverts the continent’s stereotype as a victim by presenting a wealthy, never- colonised utopia doing its own soul- searching over taking in refugees from poorer nations.

“The slave trade represente­d a type of death for us, the death of who we were. Who we are now was born when they strapped chains on our ancestors,” Coogler told engrossed listeners, among them also Canadian R& B sensation The Weeknd.

“The fi lm was about acknowledg­ing that and reclaiming that ( part) of history as well.”

His comments come on the back of a major controvers­y sparked by US rapper Kanye West earlier this month when he described the enslavemen­t of African Americans over centuries as a “choice”.

The remark drew fierce criticism from other celebritie­s like Will.i.am. who called the comment “ignorant”.

US director and activist Spike Lee, whose new fi lm “BlacKk Klansman” is up for a Palme d’Or in Cannes, said he was “praying for Kanye”.

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