

You come to the States, and a whole section in the supermarket is dedicated to sugars. “In Kenya, sugar was sugar, it was brown or it was white. “I think to be culturally prosperous, to be artistically prosperous as a people, is to have options,” she added. Is you being moved by this thing less important than me being moved by Picasso?” she said. “I believe that art plays a role in moving the people that experience it, and a lot of people are moved by Marvel.

Movies ‘Black Panther’ fans implore Marvel to #RecastTChalla after Chadwick Boseman’s deathĮmmanuel Noisette, creator of the #RecastTChalla campaign, explains why it’s important to preserve the legacy of Chadwick Boseman’s ‘Black Panther’ character. I don’t have the presence of mind, or I don’t have the objectivity to argue with that. I know that there are all sorts of reasons why people want him to be recast, but I don’t have the patience. “It’s laying to rest and allowing for real life to inform the story of the movies. “That is not the death of the Black Panther, that’s the whole point,” Nyong’o said. #RecastTchalla and #SaveTchalla movements emerged - one such campaign even got a nod from Boseman’s brother - arguing that losing the MCU’s King of Wakanda would hurt audiences, including Black boys and men who saw themselves in the character. So when Marvel decided against re-casting T’Challa with another actor to “honor the legacy” that Boseman built, a debate began about losing the character who had become a significant pop culture symbol. Coogler described it as “a character study that delved deeply into his psyche and situation.” At the time of Boseman’s death, “Black Panther” writer and director Ryan Coogler and his co-writer Joe Robert Cole had a script for the Oscar-nominated film’s sequel that centered on Boseman’s King T’Challa’s evolution as a leader and that was rooted in his perspective.
