Record-Breaking Box Office, Traditional African Garb as ?Black Panther? Fever Takes Over LA

Published February 19, 2018 by TNJ Staff
Arts & Entertainment
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?Black Panther? fever took over Los Angeles and beyond this weekend as the highly anticipated Disney film opened to the kind of fervor typically reserved for the latest offering in the ?Star Wars? franchise.

The Marvel Entertainment release took in an estimated $192 million over the weekend domestically, making it the highest February film debut ever. Its fortunes are expected to rise to $218 million through the Presidents Day holiday, according to figures from measurement firm comScore, which would make it one of the top five opening weekends of all time. The previous February record had been held by ?Deadpool,? which grossed $152.2 million over the long Presidents Day weekend in 2016.

Internationally the movie has already grossed $169 million among 69 percent of the market reporting, for an estimated global debut of $361 million. That figure is poised to climb dramatically when the picture is released in China, Japan and Russia ? major film markets.

With an A-plus rating from audiences on CinemaScore and a 97 percent ?fresh? rating on review aggregation site Rotten Tomatoes, it currently stands as the most well-received superhero film ever, Marvel or otherwise. And audiences are visibly showing their support.

In lieu of the traditional cosplay of capes and Spandex, moviegoers this weekend evoked the spirit of Wakanda by wearing colorful African-inspired dashikis to the theater.

?This is the first time. I never dress up,? said New York native Christian Prince. In town for the NBA?s All-Star weekend, he went to see the film at Rave Cinemas Baldwin Hills with his friend Michael Cutrer on Friday afternoon.

?I just felt the spirit and the energy,? Prince said. ?People were joking around like, ?Are we going to dress up to go see it?? And I was like, ?Yeah, why not? It?ll be fun ? We asked his parents if they had kente cloth and they had some.?

Nakiah Cherry Chinchilla and her son, August, of Westchester, who had already seen the film twice by Friday afternoon, got their dashikis specially made by an Inglewood-based West African designer. They plan to see the movie four times in four different theaters.

?We have four different African-inspired outfits for each showing,? Nakiah Chinchilla noted. ?We really just went out of our way to make sure that we are representing what the movie is about.

?Last night, when we saw it in Culver City, there were so many people there dressed just like us. And even though none of us knew each other, we were all just smiling at each other as if to say, ?Yeah, we all had the same feeling.? It really made me feel good inside.?

?Black Panther? is the 18th consecutive Marvel Cinematic Universe film to debut at No. 1. The movie, starring Chadwick Boseman as King T?Challa, a.k.a. the superhero Black Panther, and Michael B. Jordan as the villain Erik Killmonger, is set in the fictional African land of Wakanda, where a special mineral called vibranium has opened up their world to incredible technological and social advances. The picture, directed by Ryan Coogler, has been heralded as a cultural milestone with its nearly all-black cast and contingent of strong women, and perhaps will put to rest the longstanding Hollywood belief that black-led movies don?t perform at the box office.

Co-star Letitia Wright certainly hopes so. ?It?s going to open up a lot of doors for many more films like this to be made,? she said in a recent Los Angeles Times interview.

For Chinchilla, that positive representation of black characters in an overwhelmingly white comic universe was a crucial draw of the picture.

?Representation matters,? she said. ?Just like when they had the first black stormtrooper in ?Star Wars.? My son really identified with that and ? now he wants to be Black Panther. He wanted to move to Wakanda ? I had to explain to him that it?s not a real place,? she said, looking at him with a smile.

?This movie kind of represents something that?s within us as a people,? said artist Brad Israel. ?But we don?t draw our power from some technology (like the vibranium in the film).

?These kinds of positive and powerful and noble images are something that?s long been needed. A lot of the stuff that (Hollywood has) shown, like Blaxploitation movies, makes a mockery of us as a people. Everyone wants to see themselves in a positive light. But for a long time, certain people have been held back.?

Prince echoed these sentiments and suggested that the onus is now on audiences to prove that black stories do sell.

?We have to support the movie and show that it matters,? he said. ?If we don?t support it, they might not make another movie like this. So I thought it was really important to come out and make sure it makes as much money as possible on the first weekend so (studios) are like, ?Wow, let?s make another one.??

L.A. native Pamela Jackson, who wore a bright red dashiki to the theater, already has plans to see the movie again as well, this time with her 17-year-old son.

?This is the first film like this that I?ve ever seen,? she said. ?And today is my birthday. I?m not going to say how old I am, but in all of my years, I?ve never seen anything like this. I have never seen any black superheroes ? any black characters that are this positive. It was off the map, it really was.?

New York native Mira Gandy also gushed about the film, calling it ?profound? and ?breathtaking.?

?I felt so inspired and on the edge of my seat the whole time,? she said. ?And I just feel really proud.

?It?s so timely. Especially ? (in the post-credits scene) when they were speaking at the United Nations about how we all need to come together and be together as a human race, it?s just profound. I think every child should see this. It?s hopeful and beautiful.?

By Sonaiya Kelley

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TNJ Staff