The Zimbabwe Independent

‘Wakanda Forever’ review: Film overshadow­ed by loss

-

ChadwiCk Boseman was one of Hollywood’s most important actors. as the titular star of Marvel’s Black Panther (2018), he helped to prove, in the face of long-held industry prejudices, that a film with a black superhero and an entirely black cast could be a colossal hit. Both the actor and the character of T’Challa, the king of wakanda, were hailed as inspiring role models.

Tragically, Boseman died of cancer 2020.

as well as being a heartbreak­ing loss, his death put Marvel in a horrible position. he was too closely associated with the part of T’Challa for the role to be recast so soon, but how could the studio make another Black Panther film without him? how do you make a Superman film that doesn’t have Superman in it?

One answer is to kill off the main character — and that’s what Ryan Coogler, the director and co-writer, does in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. T’Challa dies of an undisclose­d illness, off screen, before the opening titles. But as his death can’t help but remind audiences of Boseman’s, that still leaves the question of how a rip-roaring action movie can carry on without being dragged down by grief.

in a way, the whole film is about wakanda getting over the loss of its beloved king. his regal mother (angela Bassett) has to convince the rest of the world that her country can stand up for itself without its legendary protector.

his tech-genius sister, Shuri (Letitia wright), is too upset to follow wakanda’s sacred rites and traditions. and his girlfriend Nakia (Lupita Nyong’o) has to decide whether she wants a life in wakanda at all. But Coogler and his co-writer, Joe Robert Cole, dispense with the initial mournful tone within a few scenes.

There is a royal funeral sequence that looks like a fabulous street carnival, and then the film jumps to a year later when wakanda has other problems to contend with.

The nation’s power rests on its sole possession of a metal called vibranium. (Two films into the series, and i still don’t understand what’s so special about vibranium, but never mind.) The trouble is that americans have discovered another lode of vibranium at the bottom of the atlantic Ocean.

But when they investigat­e, their vessel is stormed by a regiment of mysterious merpeople: this attack is the film’s most thrilling sequence, an eerie set piece straight from an alien invasion horror movie. it turns out that wakanda is not the only futuristic hidden nation in the world. There in is also the undersea Mesoameric­an kingdom of Talokan, ruled by the pointy-eared Namor (Tenoch huerta). and he blames wakanda for bringing american forces too close to his country for comfort.

in fact, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is superior in nearly every respect to most superhero blockbuste­rs. The dialogue is polished and intelligen­t.

what is lacking is a plot that will grip anyone who isn’t already deeply invested in the geopolitic­s of the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

without one central character to follow, it roams all over the place without picking up the breakneck momentum that the best superhero blockbuste­rs have. it pauses for long discussion­s about the future of wakanda and the history of Talokan. it checks in on old characters, such as Martin Freeman and Julia Louis-dreyfus’s Cia agents.

and it spends plenty of time introducin­g new characters, such as a teenage iron Man wannabe played by dominique Thorne, and a wakandan warrior played by Michaela Coel, the creator of the hit BBC series I May Destroy You.

all four of those characters could have been edited out without much difficulty. an over-stuffed soap opera that lasts almost three hours, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever might have worked better if it had been turned into a six-part series for disney Plus.

One issue is that, after a couple of scenes set on US soil in the first half, the world as we know it is largely forgotten.

Everything leads to a battle between wakanda and Talokan — and as both countries are invented, and both seem like wonderful places to be, it’s hard to root for a victory on either side.

You can sit back and admire the tremendous craftsmans­hip involved, but don’t expect to be drawn into the story.

The hole left by Boseman hasn’t been filled.

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is on general release from today. — BBC Culture. quite

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe