Boston Herald

‘Black Panther’ brings super power to Oscars

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The February weekend that “Black Panther” opened and rewrote box office history, writer-director Ryan Coogler and the man who hired him, Marvel executive Nate Moore, pingponged text messages to each other, sharing images of moviegoers dressed in dashikis, pounding drums, dancing in the lobbies, celebratin­g a deeply felt connection to a movie many had been waiting their whole lives to see. At the same time in Los Angeles, actors Chadwick Boseman and Michael B. Jordan, rivals in the film, celebrated by sitting courtside at the Staples Center for the NBA All-Star game, enjoying the moment and feeling completely floored that players kept approachin­g them, wanting to talk about “Black Panther.” “Magic Johnson’s standing on the court being honored and he looks over at me and Michael, and says, ‘I’m proud of y’all,’ ” Boseman remembered. “That … that’s just crazy.” But there’s never been anything ordinary about “Black Panther,” the Marvel blockbuste­r that became the third-highest-grossing movie ever in the U.S. and brought in $1.35 billion worldwide. The box office reveals just a sliver of the phenomenon that engulfed worldwide culture. In telling the story of Boseman’s T’Challa, the heir to the throne of Wakanda, a fictional African nation, “Black Panther” was a superhero movie that put black women and men at the center of the story that took place in a thriving African homeland not corrupted by colonialis­ts. The Wakanda seen in the film is a place of aspiration, a land offering the possibilit­y of healing and wholeness. Its very existence forced a reckoning with the costs of slavery on the black consciousn­ess. “It had the fun and fighting and things blowing up, but it also told truths about father-son relationsh­ips, about a fatherless child, about young, independen­t, strong, brilliant women and their place in the world with them standing in their truths and in their purpose,” said Angela Bassett, who played Queen Ramonda, T’Challa’s mother and adviser. “And,” Bassett continued, “think of when (Jordan’s character) Killmonger says, ‘Bury me in the ocean with my ancestors because freedom is more desirable than bondage.’ If you’re black in America and have read history, you unpack that. It’s more than one sentence. It’s a whole history lesson.” “Black Panther” is aiming to make more history of its own and become the first superhero movie to earn an Oscar nomination for best picture. To make that happen, Disney hired veteran Oscar strategist Cynthia Swartz to orchestrat­e a campaign, bolstering the move with a significan­t budget that Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige says will eclipse any previous awards-season push Disney has made. “We’re all in on this,” Feige said during a lavish kickoff party held recently at the London, a luxury hotel in West Hollywood. Actress Danai Gurira knew the attention was coming, in part, she says, because “Black Panther” was a story she had always yearned to see. When people went crazy for the trailer, she understood. When a mixed-race woman approached her at the London premiere and started to tremble and cry, telling Gurira the movie awakened a part of her she had never explored, she knew the power in that reclaiming. “There’s a sense of shame in people thinking about the fact that they’re the ‘other’ because that’s what they’re being told,” says Gurira, who grew up in Zimbabwe. “I’ve witnessed that from people who come from the continent or are descendant­s of people from the continent. So to see people respond to the movie and its celebratio­n of all the powerful and beautiful things that come from the continent really affected me. It was very deep for me.”

 ??  ?? PRIDE OF AFRICA: Chadwick Boseman, center, stars as T’Challa, heir to the throne of the fictional African nation of Wakanda, in ‘Black Panther.’
PRIDE OF AFRICA: Chadwick Boseman, center, stars as T’Challa, heir to the throne of the fictional African nation of Wakanda, in ‘Black Panther.’

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