Chattanooga Times Free Press

African fashion on display at showings of ‘Black Panther’

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The vibrant African fashion of “Black Panther” was on display at multiplexe­s around the country Thursday as moviegoers flocked to the first showings of Marvel’s latest superhero blockbuste­r in traditiona­l African shirts, dresses, head wraps and more.

Some opted to make their own clothes to celebrate the arrival of a superhero many black moviegoers said provided an opportunit­y for them to celebrate their heritage in a way they haven’t been able to before.

“We’re excited because we get representa­tion in a film that’s not about slavery, that’s not about trials and tribulatio­ns, but about a powerful African empire, which is where we come from in the first place,” said tattoo artist Elisheba Mrozik, who attended one of the first showings of the film in Nashville.

She wore a flowing shoulderle­ss black gown broken up by patterns of purple and yellow designs she said was made in Nigeria and she bought for the film’s release and Black History Month.

“Somebody that looks like me is a superhero and nobody is whitewashi­ng it. And it’s beautiful,” she said.

In the nearly 10 years since Marvel’s “Iron Man” sparked sprawling film superhero universes, there have been plenty of chances for fans to wear clothes that pay homage to favorites such as Spider-Man, Batman, the Hulk and more.

But “Black Panther” has sparked something different — an opportunit­y for black moviegoers to watch a superhero who not only looks like them, but also introduces a different view of Africa than has been seen at theaters. Set in the fictional nation of Wakanda, a technologi­cally advanced oasis that has never been colonized, the film has been praised for its vision of Afrofuturi­sm, strong and smart female characters and a story that shatters stereotype­s about the continent and its people.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS ?? Many attendees of early showings of “Black Panther” have used the fictional African country Wakanda for fashion inspiratio­n. Shayna Waites, left, and Ibrahim Al-Amin were among the Silver Spring, Md., viewers to do so.
ASSOCIATED PRESS PHOTOS Many attendees of early showings of “Black Panther” have used the fictional African country Wakanda for fashion inspiratio­n. Shayna Waites, left, and Ibrahim Al-Amin were among the Silver Spring, Md., viewers to do so.

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