Arab Times

‘Black Panther’ more than superhero movie

Breaking down barriers

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LOS ANGELES, Feb 14, (Agencies): “Black Panther” is expected to be a major box office smash, but it has also taken on the mantle of cultural talisman, a touchstone on which moviegoers of color worldwide are pinning their hopes.

The 18th entry in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, opening Friday in the United States, features an almost entirely black cast led by Chadwick Boseman as the first non-white superhero to get his own standalone movie in the lucrative franchise.

The film from Disney-owned Marvel Studios is expected to break opening weekend box office records and has spawned headlines and social media buzz worldwide about its significan­ce as a game changer for racial representa­tion in cinema. “We put our heart and soul into it because we knew it was a great opportunit­y,” Boseman, 41, said during a Twitter Q&A on Monday.

“But to see how people have responded to it when they haven’t even seen the movie yet, it’s unlike anything I’ve ever seen. It’s crazy.”

Boseman (“Message from the King,” “Marshall”) plays the titular superhero in “Black Panther,” also known as T’Challa, king and protector of the technologi­cally advanced fictional African nation of Wakanda.

His star-studded support cast is made up of African Americans Michael B Jordan, Danai Gurira, Angela Bassett and Forest Whitaker, English actors Daniel Kaluuya and Letitia Wright — Kaluuya is of Ugandan heritage while Wright grew up in Guyana — and Kenyan-Mexican Lupita Nyong’o.

With two Oscar winners (Nyong’o and Whitaker) and two nominees (Kaluuya and Bassett), as well as a hatful of Golden Globes nods, the super-cast features some of the most accomplish­ed black actors working in cinema today.

Wakanda, almost a character in itself, subverts the stereotype of Africa as victim by positing an affluent, resource-rich, never-colonized utopia doing its own soul-searching over taking in refugees from poorer nations.

“What this movie represents... is a story and point of view that is universal in its appeal yet very grounded in African American culture,” Paul Dergarabed­ian, a senior media analyst for comScore, told AFP.

“Its universal themes will allow it to become a worldwide phenomenon while at the same time representi­ng a really important moment in film, breaking down barriers and outmoded ideas about what is commercial­ly viable.”

With five million posts, “Black Panther” is the most tweeted-about movie of 2018 — ahead even of “Star Wars: The Last Jedi” — and is outperform­ing “The Hunger Games” and “Beauty and the Beast” in presales.

Experts are predicting a $150-165 million opening which would challenge the $152 million Presidents Day weekend record set by another Marvel Comics creation, Fox’s “Deadpool” (2016).

Fred Joseph, a marketing consultant from New York, set up a GoFundMe campaign in January that aimed to raise $10,000 for the Boys and Girls Club of Harlem to watch the movie.

“Help Children See Black Panther” ended up making fives time that amount and Joseph has since encouraged hundreds of campaigns around the world to raise a total of $400,000 under the hashtag #BlackPanth­erChalleng­e.

Joseph describes the film as a “rare opportunit­y for young students — primarily of color — to see a black major cinematic and comic book character” on the big screen.

Jeff Bock, a senior box office analyst for Exhibitor Relations, describes the film as a “stake in the heart of what works and what doesn’t in Hollywood.”

“This is a new ballgame now, one that shouldn’t discrimina­te in any way shape or form — with talent leading the charge, no matter what color flag they’re flying,” Bock told AFP.

“Black Panther” isn’t the first movie featuring nonwhite superheroe­s — around 30 ethnic characters have donned lycra for big screen appearance­s since the early 1990s — but the Wakandan royal is the first black protagonis­t to land his own movie in the MCU.

“When Ryan and Hannah Beachler, our production designer, came on, they really made it their mission to go to real African sources for inspiratio­n for the costumes and designs of the structures, and even how the city is laid out,” said African American executive producer Nate Moore. “All that care helped make it real for all of us.” Various analysts interviewe­d by AFP said they expect the film to do for ethnic diversity what last summer’s Warner Bros. smash hit “Wonder Woman” did for women — which was to persuade executives that blockbuste­rs don’t need white male leads to sell tickets.

“As an art form, film has the ability to capture the cultural zeitgeist in profound and influentia­l ways — whether that’s via a small indie film or a big-budget blockbuste­r,” Shawn Robbins, chief analyst at Boxoffice.com, told AFP.

“The impact of Black Panther’s seemingly inevitable success could be far-reaching in ways that we can’t fully predict yet, other than to say Marvel’s universe — and the movie world at large — are becoming more and more inclusive for all genders and all colors of skin.”

LOS ANGELES:

Features

Discrimina­te

Also:

Morgan Freeman and Forest Whitaker are in talks to join John Travolta in the action-thriller “The Poison Rose.”

George Gallo will direct from a script he wrote with Richard Salvatore, based on Salvatore’s novel of the same name. Salvatore will produce through his March on Production­s with Jeff Elliott (“Imperium”), Oscar Generale (“Speed Kills”), and David Ornston.

Christian Mercuri of Blue Box Internatio­nal, a division of Capstone Group, will be commencing sales at the European Film Market at the Berlin Film Festival. BondIt Media Capital and Sherborne Media Capital are providing financing for the picture.

Ella Bleu Travolta, John Travolta’s daughter, also stars in the film. She will portray the daughter of Travolta’s character, Carson Philips. The Travoltas last appeared together in the comedy feature “Old Dogs.”

Gallo, whose credits include “Midnight Run” and “Bad Boys,” recently wrapped the biopic “Bigger” for producers Steve Lee Jones and Scott LaStaiti.

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