
At 161 minutes, Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is one of the longest Super-Hero movies ever. Director Ryan Coogler tries to solve the problem of continuing the Black Panther series after his star, Chadwick Boseman, died unexpectedly. Coogler includes numerous tributes to Boseman in the film which helps to explain the extraordinary length of the movie.
In the first Black Panther movie, the villain was the scary Michael B. Jordan as Killmonger. In Wakanda Forever the villain is the undersea Namor (Tenoch Huerta), king of the ancient underwater world of Talokan. Sure, Namor has super strength, but he also has silly wings on his ankles which allow him–somehow–to fly.
Both Wakanda and Talokan find themselves threatened because the rest of the world wants their precious Vibranium. A meteorite made of vibranium, one of the most powerful metals in the universe, crashed in Wakanda which allowed the hidden African country to develop advance technologies. The same scenario happened in Talokan under the ocean. Another meteorite of vibranium landed in their area and the quasi-Aztecs developed astonishing technology, too.
You would think that two threatened countries would become allies to resist their common enemies. Wakanda Forever shows you would be wrong. Plenty of fighting and destruction result. Martin Freeman and Julia Louis-Dreyfus find themselves thrown into the mix for no particular reason.
Although our showing of Wakanda Forever was packed (and Diane and I were the only ones wearing N95 masks) I suspect attendance will dip sharply after this opening weekend. GRADE: B-











