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Tag: Letitia Wright

  • Black Panther Teams With the Fantastic Four in Latest ‘Avengers: Doomsday’ Teaser

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    The Fantastic Four make their introductions with the leaders of Wakanda in the latest teaser trailer for Marvel StudiosAvengers: Doomsday.

    Disney is set to release directors Anthony Russo and Joe Russo‘s feature theatrically on Dec. 18. The film will include a lengthy list of Marvel superheroes facing off against Doctor Doom, played by returning Marvel Cinematic Universe stalwart Robert Downey Jr.

    The movie’s footage was released online Tuesday and features voiceover from Shuri (Letitia Wright), who took up the mantle of Black Panther in 2022’s Wakanda Forever following the death of brother T’Challa (Chadwick Boseman).

    “I’ve lost everyone that matters to me,” Wright says in the new trailer. “A king has his duties to prepare our people for the afterlife. I have mine.”

    The teaser also shows M’Baku (Winston Duke) introducing himself as the King of Wakanda, after Shuri opted not to challenge him for the throne in Wakanda Forever. That film also included the MCU debut of Namor (Tenoch Huerta), who appears in the trailer for Avengers: Doomsday.

    “King M’Baku of Wakanda,” Duke tells Ben Grimm, aka The Thing (Ebon Moss-Bachrach). The Fantastic Four member responds, “Ben, Yancy Street between Broome and Grand.”

    The rest of the MCU’s Fantastic Four — Mr. Fantastic (Pedro Pascal), the Invisible Woman (Vanessa Kirby) and the Human Torch (Joseph Quinn) — will also appear in Doomsday after debuting in last summer’s 1960s-set The Fantastic Four: First Steps.

    This is the fourth teaser that Marvel has shared online for the forthcoming film. The previous clips focused on scenes with Captain America (Chris Evans), Thor (Chris Hemsworth) and the X-Men’s Cyclops (James Marsden).

    Marvel Studios revealed an extensive list of castmembers from the film in March during a lengthy livestream. The centerpiece of the project is Downey, who previously starred as the MCU’s Iron Man before the character died in the most recent Avengers movie, 2019’s Avengers: Endgame.

    Doomsday will be followed by sequel Avengers: Secret Wars a year later.

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    Ryan Gajewski

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  • Letitia Wright, Aneil Karia to Receive HollyShorts London Honors

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    HollyShorts London, the U.K. edition of the HollyShorts Film Festival, will honor BAFTA-winning actress and filmmaker Letitia Wright and Academy Award-winning director Aneil Karia with its Trailblazer Award during the festival’s second annual edition for “their outstanding contributions to cinema.”

    Letitia Wright, globally known for her role as Shuri in Marvel’s Black Panther franchise, has emerged as a powerful creative force behind the camera,” organizers said. “Her directorial debut, Highway to the Moon, premiered at HollyShorts Los Angeles to critical acclaim and will screen again at HollyShorts London. The film marks a significant new chapter in Wright’s career, showcasing her emotional and culturally nuanced storytelling.”

    The short unravels the mysterious aftermath of young boys whose lives have been abruptly taken. “Inspired by the real-life tragedy of a close friend’s family member who was killed in a knife attack, Wright transforms personal grief into a layered exploration of violence, memory, and spiritual resilience,” HollyShorts said.

    Beyond Marvel Cinematic Universe, Wright has been shining with performances in Black MirrorSmall Axe: Mangrove, and Aisha. In 2019, she won the BAFTA Rising Star Award.

    “Thank you, HollyShorts, for this beautiful award,” the star said. “This film was birthed from a place of love and a strong desire to see unity amongst our young boys. This film is my love letter to them. This journey has been a challenge but incredibly rewarding. Thank you for the opportunity to share this story with you!”

    Karia is the other Trailblazer honoree at HollyShorts London 2025. “Celebrated for his bold, emotionally resonant storytelling across film and television, in 2022, Karia’s Oscar-winning short The Long Goodbye, co-created with Riz Ahmed, gained international acclaim after winning the Grand Prix at HollyShorts Los Angeles,” organizers highlighted. “The film also received a BIFA and the London Critics’ Circle Award for best short film. Karia has recently completed his second feature, a modern adaptation of Hamlet, starring Riz Ahmed, Morfydd Clark, Joe Alwyn, and Tim Spall, which premiered at Telluride before screening at Toronto and London Film Festivals. His debut feature Surge, starring Ben Whishaw, premiered at Sundance, where Whishaw won the special jury prize for acting.”

    Karia’s TV work includes directing duties on Netflix’s Top Boy and the BBC/Paramount+ series The Gold. In 2026, he will begin production on The Ministry of Time, a new series written by Alice Birch and produced by A24. He has also made a name for himself with his work on commercials and music videos.

    “I owe a huge debt of gratitude to HollyShorts,” said Karia. “Their recognition of The Long Goodbye in 2021 played a key part in its journey and ultimately its Oscar win, but more importantly, they’ve built a festival that consistently spotlights bold, original voices and gives new filmmakers genuine visibility. It’s an honor to be acknowledged by a team that keeps pushing short film culture forward.”

    Wright and Karia join such past honorees as David Oyelowo, Jared Hess, Alden Ehrenreich, Catherine Hardwicke, and Tom Skerritt.

    The HollyShorts London festival runs Nov. 13-16, with screenings taking place at Vue Cinemas in Leicester Square.

    Check out the HollyShorts London 2025 lineup below.

    A Death in the Family — Yasmin Hafesji 

    A Friend of Dorothy — Lee Knight 

    A Good Death — Kaz PS 

    Ado — Sam Henderson 

    All Beauty Queens Have Broken Bones — Max C Tullio 

    Back of the Net — Klara Kaliger 

    Beauty Sleep — Jasmine De Silva 

    Bile Bile — Rango Mugo 

    Blue Violet — Josie Charles 

    Bluff — Naomi Wright 

    Borscht — Vika Evdokimenko 

    Boyfighter — Julia Weisberg Cortés 

    Bullet Time — Eddie Alcazar 

    Bury Your Gays — Charlotte Serena Cooper 

    Busy — Jane Moriarty 

    Care — Stef O’Driscoll 

    Chasers — Erin Brown Thomas 

    Chivalry — Charlotte Yang 

    Dating in Your 20s — Lily Rutterford, Lucy Minderides 

    Egg Timer — Rosie May Bird Smith 

    Everyone Does It — Craig Ainsley 

    Fenced — Richey Beckett 

    Fighting Demons — Simon Stock 

    First Timer — Hannah Kathryn Kelso 

    G.S.W. — Jonny Durgan 

    Goodnight Ladies — Alex Matraxia 

    Hat Trick — Tess Lafia, Noah Deats 

    Highway To The Moon — Letitia Wright 

    Hotel Fantasma — Martin Aleman 

    Hugel – The Entourage — Ludovic Genco, Hugo Lucas Pompier 

    Humantis — Paris Baillie 

    Imperfect Cadence — Ewan S. Henry 

    In Foreign — Didi Beck 

    Largo — Salvatore Scarpa, Max Burgoyne-Moore 

    Love & Loss — Mike Upson 

    Magid / Zafar — Luís Hindman 

    Naked Lights — Jeda de Brí 

    Night Terrors — Ben Hector 

    Nothing but the End — Tanguy Pichon 

    OK/NOTOK — Pardeep Sahota 

    Overcomer — Olawale Adetula 

    Paranoia — Alina Bichieva 

    Pearls — Alastair Train 

    Plastic Surgery — Guy Trevellyan 

    Rise — Jessica J. Rowlands 

    Rock Paper Scissors — Franz Böhm 

    Rocket Fuel — Jordon Scott Kennedy 

    Running against time — Alex Lockett 

    Satomi — Rayner Wang 

    Secret Level New World – The once & Future King — Maxime Luère 

    Set Pace — Daisy Ifama 

    Snipped — Alexander Saul 

    Spoken In Plain Sight — Ilya Wray, Ariel de la Garza Davidoff 

    Stomach Bug — Matty Crawford 

    The Beneath — Lisette Vlassak 

    The Bunker — Ian Killick 

    The Dartmoor Cowboy — Wij Travers 

    The Errand — Hayley Marie Norman 

    The Last Dance — Hayden Mclean 

    The Last Dumpling — Jadey Duffield 

    The Lone Piper — Matthew Kravchuk 

    The Mediator — Dean Leon Anderson 

    The Morning After — Zak Harney 

    The Painting & The Statue — Freddie Fox 

    The Pearl Comb — Ali Cook 

    The Professional Parent — Erik Jasaň 

    The Second Time Around — Jack Howard 

    The Secret Assistants — Katey Lee Carson 

    The Singers — Sam Davis 

    The Woman in the Wardrobe — Ruby Phelan 

    There’s a Robbery in Progress — Morgan Miller 

    Two Black Boys in Paradise — Baz Sells 

    Two People Exchanging Saliva — Alexandre Singh, Natalie Musteata 

    Umbra — Seb Gillmore 

    Victory — Meji Alabi 

    Wavelength — Kate Auster 

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    Georg Szalai

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  • ‘Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trot’ Review: Inspirational Drama Looks to Faith as a Healing Force for Foster Care

    ‘Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trot’ Review: Inspirational Drama Looks to Faith as a Healing Force for Foster Care

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    The East Texas town of Possum Trot received national notice in 2008 when ABC News, followed by “Oprah” and a slew of television shows that knew a heart-warmer when they saw it, sang the deserved praises of Rev. W.C. Martin and Donna Martin. The couple are the real-life basis of the faith-infused drama “Sound of Hope: The Story of Possum Trot,” opening July 4 after a Juneteenth sneak nationwide.

    The minster, now a bishop, and the first lady of the Bennett Chapel Missionary Baptist Church in that piquantly named town of 600 were the leaders of an adoption crusade in the mid-’90s that changed the lives of more than 70 children who seemingly had been condemned to the foster care system. The children were among the hardest to place for various reasons, most of them speaking to the cruelty that people who have been wounded in their own lives, people who are trapped in addition inflict on the most powerless people in their own lives, their children. Who wouldn’t see the possibilities of an uplifting message movie in that saga?

    Actor and executive producer Letitia Wright (“Black Panther”) uses her super-humane powers to ensure the story of the Martins, their congregation and the community inspire even more people. Her company, 3.16 Prods., along with “Sound of Freedom” creators Angel Studios, have made a film that is likely to find an avid audience in non-denominational church folk but perhaps miss an opportunity to promote love as its more persuasive throughline.

    Nika King portrays the dynamic Donna, who is more force than mere helpmate. King’s honeyed voiceover begins the film with a kind of sentimentalism about childhood and its innocence. A camera flies low over the rust-colored dirt roads, green hills and woods of “Deep East Texas 1996.” If that label doesn’t make a claim on the southern roots of the people, the opening gospel song will.

    “You shine with something you will never have again: innocence,” says the narrator. This line turns out to be more complicated than it sounds because the children who figure so prominently in this tale of rescue never got to claim a sense of innocence. And Donna, the owner of those halcyon reminiscences, will have her own naiveté about childhood tested.

    Demetrius Grosse wears the sharp and colorful vestments of W.C., and he does a sweet job of conveying a muscular kindness. Together Donna and W.C. make a loving team, but it’s her point of view, her parable of parenting. There’s a bit of gentle comedy in that it is Donna, not the reverend, who begins investigating adoption.

    After her mother, a matriarch to so many, passes, Donna falls into despair. “My anchor was gone,” she says. For a spell she is unmoored. When it comes, her epiphany unfolds somewhat hurriedly. A teary beseeching is disrupted by children playing in a field. That vision leads her to straighten her backbone with a determination wrought of faith. King and Grosse bring a believable warmth to their characters’ spirit-led marriage. Still, the beautiful work of adoption can be challenging under far easier conditions.

    Through the character of Susan (Elizabeth Mitchell), a stalwart champion working in the state’s child protective agency, the film makes clear what upheaval the children have experienced in their young lives. That violence — hinted at and depicted — trends toward the harder edge of the movie’s PG-13 rating. There is no splatter, but domestic terror unfolds during a 6-year-old girl’s 911 call to report her mother in danger. Mercedes (Aria Pullam) and brother Tyler (Asher Clay) are in the house as the harrowing confrontation unfolds with the operator trying her best to grasp the situation while keeping Mercedes safe.

    It’s Donna’s sibling Diann (Jillian Reeves) who adopts a child first. Then Donna and W.C. make a home for Tyler and Mercedes. Other families follow. The way Donna welcomes her sister’s son is not entirely comfortable: “Our God is a good god,” she says, making an object of the little guy. Is it spectacle, a bold gesture of deep gratitude or both?

    There were 22 families who made homes for 77 kids in Possum Trot. And though we don’t see all the families, the early adopters in this melodrama understand the stakes. When the Martins begin adopting children, they already have two. Princeton (Taj Johnson) has a learning disability due to lack of oxygen, while daughter Ladonna (Kaysi J. Bradley) increasingly struggles with the arrival of these new siblings who demand her parents’ attention.

    The most demanding of the new arrivals is Teri (Diaana Babnicova). Susan is initially wary of placing the 12-year-old with the Martins. She doesn’t want to set them up to fail. And the tween has behavioral issues that include pretending to be a cat, as well as a vexed relationship to intimacy due to sexual assault. Babnicova gives a thoughtfully quiet performance as a girl who is emotionally shut down but also bristling with need.

    The scenes of W.C. calling Teri out on her feline impersonation may satisfy moviegoers seeking quick, seemingly sensible interventions: If she’s going be a cat, then she’ll be fed like a cat. But these scenes, which add a kind of levity to the situation, also elide the deeply traumatized handful Teri is. To the filmmakers’ credit, the movie delves more deeply into her confusion, recoil and unhealthy decisions.

    It’s the leads’ personable chemistry that helps tamp down the more proselytizing qualities of the script, which Weigel co-wrote with his wife, Rebekah. From the time of the Civil Rights Movement, the Black Church has often been more generous-hearted and justice-tilted than its white evangelical counterparts.

    The director cast himself as the white pastor of a well-heeled church amid its $1 million capital campaign. He has little time for the kind of compassion-led ministry the Martins and the Bennett congregation are engaged in. It’s a telling dig at megachurches and their gospel of prosperity that often leaves behind not just those in dire need, but also those most willing to walk the walk.

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    Peter Debruge

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  • The 16 Best Dressed Celebrities at the Golden Globes 2023

    The 16 Best Dressed Celebrities at the Golden Globes 2023

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    If the 2023 Golden Globes tell us anything about the fashion we’ll be seeing on the red carpet this awards season, we’re in for a treat.

    The first big ceremony of the circuit kicked off with a parade of standout looks. Among our favorites: Sheryl Lee Ralph’s embellished purple Aliétte number, Seth Rogen’s delightfully pink Dior Men suit, Britt Lower’s sculptural Bach Mai gown.

    Catch all the best dressed celebrities from the 2023 Golden Globes below. 

    Britt Lower Bach Mai Golden Globes 2023 Photo by Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Michaela Jae Rodriguez Balmain Golden Globes 2023  Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Michelle Williams Gucci Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Michelle Yeoh Armani Privé Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Nicole Byer Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Margot Robbie Chanel Haute Couture Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Tyler James Williams Amiri Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Hannah Einbinder Carolina Herrera Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Letitia Wright Prada Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Jenna Ortega Gucci Golden Globes 2023  Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Jessica Chastain Oscar de la Renta Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images
    Seth Rogen Dior Men Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Laverne Cox vintage John Galliano Golden Globes 2023 Photo by Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Megan Stalter vintage Versace Golden Globes 2023 Amy Sussman:Getty Images
    Jenny Slate Rodarte Golden Globes 2023 Jon Kopaloff:Getty Images

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    Ana Colón

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  • The 11 Best Beauty Looks From the 2023 Golden Globes

    The 11 Best Beauty Looks From the 2023 Golden Globes

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    On Jan. 10, celebrities from film and television gathered in Los Angeles for the 2023 Golden Globe Awards. But the occasion wasn’t merely an opportunity for actors to receive awards — it was also a chance for them to don some memorable fashion and beauty looks.

    Shoulder-skimming hairstyles were a dominant beauty trend of the night: Jenna Ortega’s shaggy crop is sure to rocket straight to the top of the list of most-requested salon looks for 2023, while Lily James and Angela Bassett both wore vintage-y bobs for a touch of Old Hollywood glam. 

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    Stephanie Saltzman

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  • Letitia Wright Says THR Will Not Apologize to Her

    Letitia Wright Says THR Will Not Apologize to Her

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    The saga of The Hollywood Reporter‘s bizarrely disparaging remarks about Letitia Wright continues as the publication has reportedly chosen to act like it’s done nothing wrong.

    Letitia Wright continues to fight back, as she should, at The Hollywood Reporter for including her in what is essentially a hit piece. Our Princess Weekes broke it down earlier this week but essentially, the article equates Letitia Wright—who shared an anti-vaxx video but deleted it and apologized for it before going silent on social media until the release of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever)—to actual sexual offenders and creatives like Mel Gibson, Bryan Singer, Harvey Weinstein, Roman Polanski, and more.

    The point I guess the article was making was the same tired argument for separating art from the artist when it comes to the award season. But putting Wright in any category with men with the legacy of Harvey Weinstein is absolutely baffling.

    And now, according to Wright, the publication and the piece’s author, Scott Feinberg, are refusing to apologize to Wright or take her name out of the piece. That’s certainly a hill to die on …

    Moreover, Feinberg himself has said that the valid criticism of his article is just an internet “pile-on.”

    What does a piece like this say about your publication?

    The fact that The Hollywood Reporter ran it in the first place says a lot about them. Equating Wright—and Smith—to the list of white men that have been blacklisted for crimes like sexual abuse is a gross overreach, putting them in the same category as actual predators.

    The fact that Feinberg is DMing women journalists who are rightfully angry about the piece and then taking their apologies without ever issuing his own? Makes it very obvious what Feinberg seems “important” in his journalistic take.

    The piece as a whole is bad and Letitia Wright being included in the first place was horrid. But now that Wright has said The Hollywood Reporter refuses to apologize? Shame on the publication for not owning up to the mistake.

    (image: Agustin Cuevas/Getty Images for Disney)

    The Mary Sue has a strict comment policy that forbids, but is not limited to, personal insults toward anyone, hate speech, and trolling.—

    Have a tip we should know? [email protected]

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    Rachel Leishman

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  • ‘Wakanda Forever’ extends reign, ‘She Said’ struggles

    ‘Wakanda Forever’ extends reign, ‘She Said’ struggles

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    “Black Panther: Wakanda Forever” pulled in $67 million in its second weekend.

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  • Xbox And Marvel Center Careers In STEM With ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’

    Xbox And Marvel Center Careers In STEM With ‘Black Panther: Wakanda Forever’

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    The highly anticipated Marvel Studios release Black Panther: Wakanda Forever sees Letitia Wright’s tech genius Shuri take center stage. And as young women and other STEM hopefuls look up to this new role model, Microsoft and Marvel Studios have joined forces to push the power of her example even further.

    On November 3rd, the two companies invited journalists, creators, and community leaders to the Microsoft Experience Center in New York to reflect over Shuri’s example and celebrate the real world efforts of women in tech.

    The evening began with a special video from Letitia Wright herself emphasizing the power of the Black Panther story to inspire. After this, Editor-at-Large at PEOPLE
    PEOPLE
    Janine Rubenstein took the stage and introduced the panelists: Microsoft’s Q Muhaimin, Product Manager for Xbox Experiences and educator Erica Buddington, founder of Langston League and champion for culturally relevant and identity-affirming educational programs.

    Rubenstein guided the panelists through reflections on each of their journeys into the tech world, and the identify-based struggles that involved. The women brought up their successes, their challenges, and the role models that lifted them up throughout, much like Shuri would be able to do, now, for so many.

    Additionally, as Rubenstein called out, Microsoft and Marvel Studios’ efforts around maximizing the impact of the new film would not end here. The layered collaboration also includes community theater buyouts with local content creators in order to bring the film to under-resourced communities, a dazzling drone performance in the night sky, the first ever “Wakandan HBCU Lecture” delivered by Professor Jacoby DuBose at Howard University, and a new, easy to follow coding curriculum teaching youth powerful tech skills via making their very own Black Panther video game.

    But of course, the star of the event sat on its pedestal to the left of Rubenstein: a custom designed Xbox Series X stylized with patterns, controllers, and charging stations all crafted to evoke the iconic Black Panther Wakandan salute. The set itself is both part and exemplary of this entire initiative and the power sitting behind the Black Panther symbol. And so that is why Microsoft and Marvel Studios plan to hand it over to a few lucky winners via a special Twitter giveaway.

    The first Black Panther film met not only critical and commercial success, but set off a cultural wave that reverberates throughout the world still today. And now, the sequel is poised to expand that impact even further, this time shining an even brighter light on women of color who wish to become tech leaders and warriors in their own ways.

    This collaboration then, hopes to just nudge all that along.

    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is now playing in theaters. The film stars Letitia Wright, Tenoch Huerta, and Angela Bassett and is directed by Ryan Coogler.

    Microsoft’s giveaway contest for the custom Black Panther Xbox Series X is now active and ends on December 1st. See here for details on how to submit via Twitter for a chance to win.

    For more on movies and TV shows, follow my page on Forbes. You can also find me on Twitter, Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok.

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    Anhar Karim, Contributor

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  • 2019 Oscars: Black Panther is the first superhero movie to be nominated for an Academy Award; Gets 7 nominations today

    2019 Oscars: Black Panther is the first superhero movie to be nominated for an Academy Award; Gets 7 nominations today

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    Black Panther,” which struck a cultural chord for having a predominantly black cast, is now an Oscar nominee for best picture, making it the first comic book adaptation to be recognized for the category by the Academy. Directed by Ryan Coogler, the film also racked up six other nominations, including best original score and several other technical awards Tuesday. 

    The Marvel hit follows T’Challa (Chadwick Boseman) as he returns home to take his place as leader of the fictional African country Wakanda, following the death of this father. Wakanda is wealthy, technologically advanced and one that has never been colonized.

    The film made its mark for being the first mega-budget movie to feature a black lead character, a black director, black writers and mostly black cast. Fans in Africa also lauded “Black Panther” for its positive portrayal of the continent

    “I remember being young and watching, consumed with pop culture,” Coogler told “CBS This Morning” co-host Gayle King. “What I noticed was none of their worlds like my world. When I was growing up in the East Bay area in Oakland, my family, my friends, everyone was black. What I longed for was stories that looked to be my world.” 


    Director Ryan Coogler discusses blockbuster hit “Black Panther”

    02:49

    Despite sky-high expectations, Coogler said his first priority was to make a good movie. “First things first, it’s got to work as a movie,” he said.

    And that it did. Black Panther is one of the highest-grossing movies of all-time, accumulating $1.3 billion worldwide and plans for a sequel are already underway. 

    Lupita Nyong’o was among the cast members who celebrated the nominations on Twitter.

    But does it actually have a chance to win best picture? CNET’s Richard Trenholm argues it has a legitimate shot.

    “Like BlacKkKlansman and Green Book, it tackles timely and relevant questions of race and prejudice. Where those other films examine the subject through a historical lens, Black Panther looks at the here and now,” Trenholm writes. 

    “So if Academy voters want timely subtext and positive representation as well as a thrilling story and cinematic verve, it’s all there between the punches and one-liners.”

    In addition to best picture, Coogler’s movie was nominated for best costume design, original score, original song, production design, sound edition and sound mixing. 

    The 91st Academy Awards will air live on Sunday, February 24.

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  • Letitia Wright Pays Tribute to Chadwick Boseman on ‘Wakanda Forever’ Red Carpet

    Letitia Wright Pays Tribute to Chadwick Boseman on ‘Wakanda Forever’ Red Carpet

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    Of course, the premiere of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever would end up being an emotional event. But Letitia Wright’s tribute to her late co-star took things to a whole new level.

    Wright plays Shuri, T’Challa’s younger sister and the princess of Wakanda in the Black Panther film series. Observers noted that Wright’s ensemble at the Black Panther: Wakanda Forever premiere yesterday in Los Angeles bore a striking resemblance to the one that Chadwick Boseman wore to the Oscars in 2018, the year the first Black Panther opened in theaters.

    The Wakanda Forever premiere event was extremely reverent, and multiple people came out to do their best to pay tribute to their lost friend. Tons of fans also appeared at the premiere, most of them dressing in their favorite Marvel cosplay. The whole premiere was beautiful, but at the same time, it must have been extremely bittersweet.

    On the red carpet, Wright said it was “emotional” to be at the premiere without Boseman, who died in the summer of 2020. She added, “I’m bracing .. I’ve seen some member’s of Chad’s team. When we lock eyes, we know how this feels. We have to take a step away. I see my aunt locking my eyes with me, she’s very proud. I have to take a step away… We’re trying to hold it together.”

    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever was directed by Ryan Coogler, who previously directed the first Black Panther as well as the original Creed. In addition to Wright, the cast also includes Lupita Nyong’o, Danai Gurira, Winston Duke, Martin Freeman, and Angela Bassett all returning from the first film. New characters in this sequel include Dominique Thorne as Riri Williams, who will soon be spun off into her own Marvel series as the hero Ironheart, and Tenoch Huerta as Namor, the king of the undersea civilization Talocan.

    Black Panther: Wakanda Forever
    Marvel

    Reviews out of the premiere were extremely positive, with several critics saying Wakanda Forever is the best movie in all of Phase Four of the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Black Panther: Wakanda Forever is scheduled to open in theaters on November 11.

    The Correct Viewing Order of Marvel Movies

    Here’s the MCU movies you need to watch — and the best order to view them in.

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    Cody Mcintosh

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