Bask in the Greatness of EW’s Black Panther Cover Photo

I’m not sure about you, but when Black Panther is released next year, I’ll be at the theater at least five times to watch it. During Spider-Man: Homecoming, the trailer for the Marvel movie aired, and the gasps and applause that came from the theater were amazing. So you can only imagine what’s going to…

I’m not sure about you, but when Black Panther is released next year, I’ll be at the theater at least five times to watch it. During Spider-Man: Homecoming, the trailer for the Marvel movie aired, and the gasps and applause that came from the theater were amazing. So you can only imagine what’s going to happen on opening night.

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Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?
Trump’s Tariffs Might Stick Around. What Should We Buy Now?

On Wednesday, Entertainment Weekly got social media hyped when it posted its cover story for the movie, strategically right before San Diego Comic-Con.

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The Wakanda family-portrait article breaks down each character, and director Ryan Coogler gives insight into the movie and its main character, T’Challa, played by Chadwick Boseman.

“What makes him different from other superheroes first and foremost is he doesn’t see himself as a superhero,” says Coogler. “He sees himself as a politician. That’s the first thing on his mind when he wakes up in the morning: ‘How am I going to fulfill my duties as king of this place?’”

“He has to keep harmony between the tribes within his country, and that means managing expectations and doing things that are unpopular,” Coogler says. “At the same time, he is the protector of that nation.”

Of course, rounding out the cast is Angela Bassett, who plays his mother, Ramonda, once the queen, now the mother of the king; Wakanda’s undercover operative Nakia, played by Lupita Nyong’o; Letitia Wright, who plays T’Challa’s sister Shuri. There’s also Danai Gurira as Okoye, who heads Dora Milaje; Michael B. Jordan, who plays Erik Killmonger, who was known in the comic as N’Jadaka; and, finally, Daniel Kaluuya, who plays T’Challa’s best friend, W’Kabi, as well as Forest Whitaker as Zuri, a shaman and keeper of the Heart-Shaped Herb.

The movie, which doesn’t open until February 2018, is already expected to break box-office numbers and will be the talk of Comic-Con.

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