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[QUOTE=Darthkostis;2132656]There will always be adivide between those who want more of the same and those who want something new. From my experience, you're bound to find something that suits your tastes. Maybe it'll not be your classic favourites, but a newer, or more unknown character, who knows. Sure, it is sad to see the characters without you have books that you "cannot follow", but considering the nature of comic book, sooner or later, you'll find a run that suits you.
[/QUOTE]
Luckily the current era suits me perfectly but it appears to alienate lots of other people. Most especially those that want iconic heroes that remain true to a single vision of character continuity.
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[QUOTE=Rumble;2130579]Come on man... it's only been 3 issues.
And after next month... it'll only be 4 issues.
And after that 6th issue, based on the solicits, it'll [I]only[/I] be 6 issues. And worst case scenario, it's only year 1. ;)
See, glass half full approach. The internet taught me that.:[/QUOTE]
Only Year 1???:confused:
Man, I'll skip the next 9 issues and save $36 to go see "The Birth of a Nation (Nat Turner)" in October.:cool:
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[QUOTE=Yaw;2130415]Man yall got me so scared about reading this month's book. I was planning to go and pick it up today.:([/QUOTE]
I want BP from New Avengers (except that crying part...)
I want BP from the last issue of Secret Wars II.
I want BP from Jason Aaron's "See Wakanda and Die"
I really want Priest's BP.
I had such high hopes after Secret Wars II since BP played such a HUGE role in that finale issue. Finally he's on level and prominent in the final act of a huge story. He's there with Reed Richards and DOOM in the end and in charge of the Infinity Gauntlet ande went toe to toe with DOOM who was wielding the power of the Molecule Man.
I'm hugely disappointed with T'challa's depiction post Secret Wars II. I dont like this BP run at all. I dont like his status in The Ultimates. Characters should be in awe of him as they are Richards, Cap and Stark right now. But Marvel has chosen for that not to happen for some reason.
i wish Jesse Williams was E-I-C. Haha!! :cool:
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[QUOTE=JediKage;2132149]Oh don't worry us Old School Fans pretty much all love the movie version so we can agree on that Zauri.[/QUOTE]
I'm Old School, but I wasnt thrilled with the movie version. The storytelling for T'CHalla was just OK to me. I agree with [URL="lamerciepark.com/wp/?p=481#"]Priest's[/URL] assessment of BP in the movie. Every thing I thought walking out of the theater, Priest picked up on right away as well. Every thing I thought would be portrayed of Wakanda was totally off. I thought T'Chaka was going to be depicted as a great warrior,, not an older fat man who gets knocked off so quickly. I saw pre-release ad clips where T'Challa was going toe-to-toe with Cap and even besting him in raw strength (in a short clip where he was pulling down Cap's shield and Cap couldnt stop him). I thought that fight would be one of the pinnacles of the movie...as it should have been...and it wasn't.
I have high hopes for BP's solo movie. I hope Ryan Coogler does his research and Marvel doesn't water down T'Challa, or Black characters, as they always seem to do in the end. I know Coogler has to follow Disney tho.
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[QUOTE=Ty19;2132775]I'm Old School, but I wasnt thrilled with the movie version. The storytelling for T'CHalla was just OK to me. I agree with [URL="lamerciepark.com/wp/?p=481#"]Priest's[/URL] assessment of BP in the movie. Every thing I thought walking out of the theater, Priest picked up on right away as well. Every thing I thought would be portrayed of Wakanda was totally off. I thought T'Chaka was going to be depicted as a great warrior,, not an older fat man who gets knocked off so quickly. I saw pre-release ad clips where T'Challa was going toe-to-toe with Cap and even besting him in raw strength (in a short clip where he was pulling down Cap's shield and Cap couldnt stop him). I thought that fight would be one of the pinnacles of the movie...as it should have been...and it wasn't.
I have high hopes for BP's solo movie. I hope Ryan Coogler does his research and Marvel doesn't water down T'Challa, or Black characters, as they always seem to do in the end. I know Coogler has to follow Disney tho.[/QUOTE]
Let's be fair, it was Cap's movie not T'Challa's. The plot was about Steve's conflict with Tony over Bucky. There's no reason to think that BP was going to upstage CA. Panther had a good showing in the film so that's a good thing.
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[QUOTE=ed2962;2132824]Let's be fair, it was Cap's movie not T'Challa's. The plot was about Steve's conflict with Tony over Bucky. There's no reason to think that BP was going to upstage CA. Panther had a good showing in the film so that's a good thing.[/QUOTE]
Naw, I didnt expect an upstaging. I "was" looking for a somewhat extended fight scene where in the end, they came to a draw.
Bucky was going blow for blow with Cap in Winter Soldier in their first conflict. I was expecting the same here.
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Well, this makes no sense at all...
[URL="http://www.theatlantic.com/notes/all/2015/12/conceptualizing-the-black-panther/420759/#note-489290"]According to Coates[/URL], Tetu's monologue (the "when I was a tree" thing) is actually a poem called "Rootsong" by a 1950's African-American poet named Henry Dumas.
Because a character who's entire shtick is "the old ways are best" and "Wakanda for Wakandans" would NATURALLY meditate using the words of an outsider. :confused:
(I don't have the book handy... can anyone check if Dumas is even credited in the indica?)
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[QUOTE=Beware Of Geek;2132882]Well, this makes no sense at all...
[URL="http://www.theatlantic.com/notes/all/2015/12/conceptualizing-the-black-panther/420759/#note-489290"]According to Coates[/URL], Tetu's monologue (the "when I was a tree" thing) is actually a poem called "Rootsong" by a 1950's African-American poet named Henry Dumas.
Because a character who's entire shtick is "the old ways are best" and "Wakanda for Wakandans" would NATURALLY meditate using the words of an outsider. :confused:
(I don't have the book handy... can anyone check if Dumas is even credited in the indica?)[/QUOTE]
Dumas (and his estate in particular) was credited in the book.
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[QUOTE=Realdealholy;2132889]Dumas (and his estate in particular) was credited in the book.[/QUOTE]
Well, at least he did the right thing by them. But it still makes little sense, unless he's trying to claim that the poem has a different origin in the Marvel U.
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[QUOTE=Beware Of Geek;2132882]Well, this makes no sense at all...
[URL="http://www.theatlantic.com/notes/all/2015/12/conceptualizing-the-black-panther/420759/#note-489290"]According to Coates[/URL], Tetu's monologue (the "when I was a tree" thing) is actually a poem called "Rootsong" by a 1950's African-American poet named Henry Dumas.
Because a character who's entire shtick is "the old ways are best" and "Wakanda for Wakandans" would NATURALLY meditate using the words of an outsider. :confused:
(I don't have the book handy... can anyone check if Dumas is even credited in the indica?)[/QUOTE]
It's like Khan (from Star Trek) quoting Milton. Or all the Shakespeare quoting in the Trek series in general.
There's no such thing as a bad literary allusion for a literary type writer.
Unless you misquote, then you just look dumb.
And considering Tetu's teacher uses Hobbes' The Leviathan in his lectures, I'd guess it is an aquired habit.
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[QUOTE=Ty19;2132858]Naw, I didnt expect an upstaging. I "was" looking for a somewhat extended fight scene where in the end, they came to a draw.
Bucky was going blow for blow with Cap in Winter Soldier in their first conflict. I was expecting the same here.[/QUOTE]
This was a 6 on 6 fight. Unlike Winter Soldier they're jamming 12 heroes in there. They had to make room for a lot of heroes to get their spot. And considering that Cap wasn't T'Challas actual target, it made sense that the bulk of T'Challas fighting was with Steve instead of him.
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[QUOTE=Ty19;2132740]Only Year 1???:confused:
Man, I'll skip the next 9 issues and save $36 to go see "The Birth of a Nation (Nat Turner)" in October.:cool:[/QUOTE]
hahahahah
[QUOTE=Ty19;2132761][B]I want BP from New Avengers (except that crying part...)
I want BP from the last issue of Secret Wars II.
I want BP from Jason Aaron's "See Wakanda and Die"
I really want Priest's BP.[/B]
[B]I had such high hopes after Secret Wars II since BP played such a HUGE role in that finale issue. [/B]Finally he's on level and prominent in the final act of a huge story. He's there with Reed Richards and DOOM in the end and in charge of the Infinity Gauntlet ande went toe to toe with DOOM who was wielding the power of the Molecule Man.
I'm hugely disappointed with T'challa's depiction post Secret Wars II. I dont like this BP run at all. I dont like his status in The Ultimates. Characters should be in awe of him as they are Richards, Cap and Stark right now. But Marvel has chosen for that not to happen for some reason.[/QUOTE]
Nope. We can't have nice things when it comes to comic BP.
[IMG]https://media.riffsy.com/images/4eb2e68d8b62121290b37d0f0ec468b4/raw[/IMG]
He gon get his ass kicked or talked down to in his 3 pages worth of face time per issue for the next 7 issues and you [I]better[/I] just get with the times! this is the all new all different game of thrones social justice black panther! woohooo!
#glasshalffull4life
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[QUOTE=Vic Vega;2132924]It's like Khan (from Star Trek) quoting Milton. Or all the Shakespeare quoting in the Trek series in general.
There's no such thing as a bad literary allusion for a literary type writer.
Unless you misquote, then you just look dumb.
And considering Tetu's teacher uses Hobbes' The Leviathan in his lectures, I'd guess it is an aquired habit.[/QUOTE]
Still feels a bit off to me. It's like Coates wants to have his cake and eat it too.
"Wakandan ways are best, but in the real world, this is cool." :D
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[QUOTE=HUTHAIFA;2132540]Ehh, I think its more fans not getting the direction they want vs fans who are just enjoying a good story.
Coates does what most BP writers have not done which is build on what the previous writer has done.
This isnt a story where TChalla can be substituted for another character like say in Liss run. The characters sharing the spotlight are just satellites of TChalla.[/QUOTE]
Lmao. This isn't even a Black Panther story. He's a side character. You could change the names easy and add a Image logo and it would be a good comic. In title where the LEAD CHARACTER is relegated to being a support character is bad. This is HIS SOLO BOOK.
No writer has done it like this. Don't say Priest or Ross because Ross whole existence was about T'challa.
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[QUOTE=Rumble;2132991]hahahahah
Nope. We can't have nice things when it comes to comic BP.
[IMG]https://media.riffsy.com/images/4eb2e68d8b62121290b37d0f0ec468b4/raw[/IMG]
He gon get his ass kicked or talked down to in his 3 pages worth of face time per issue for the next 7 issues and you [I]better[/I] just get with the times! this is the all new all different game of thrones social justice black panther! woohooo!
#glasshalffull4life[/QUOTE]
Sad but true..smfh. Can't believe this ****.
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[QUOTE=Ty19;2132858]Naw, I didnt expect an upstaging. I "was" looking for a somewhat extended fight scene where in the end, they came to a draw.
Bucky was going blow for blow with Cap in Winter Soldier in their first conflict. I was expecting the same here.[/QUOTE]
Winter Soldier had a MUCH smaller cast.
Captain America: Civil War had to balance a bunch of heroes in a fight so that everybody got a chance to shine but nobody came out looking bad. I think the Russo's pulled off a near miracle by being able to accomplish that goal. T'Challa holds his own or outdoes everyone he comes across.
It also has to be kept in mind that The Russo's outright said they didn't want to step on Coogler's toes with their portrayal of T'Challa, so much so that they consulted him on certain scenes and lines of dialog. That's why certain elements of the mythos were left vague/undefined, because it'll all be explained and fleshed out in Black Panther's solo film.
I do agree that it was a waste to kill off T'Chaka in someone elses movie, but they did a damn good job of showing the love and respect T'Challa had for his father in a very short amount of time. As for T'Chaka being older and out of shape, it has to be kept in mind that was the oldest we had ever seen T'Chaka. In the comics when T'Chaka dies T'Challa is usually a young child, in Civil War T'Challa was a grown man. So it made sense for T'Chaka to be older, less fit, and way more mellow than we're used to seeing.
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[QUOTE=Kasper Cole;2133184]Winter Soldier had a MUCH smaller cast.
Captain America: Civil War had to balance a bunch of heroes in a fight so that everybody got a chance to shine but nobody came out looking bad. I think the Russo's pulled off a near miracle by being able to accomplish that goal. T'Challa holds his own or outdoes everyone he comes across.
It also has to be kept in mind that The Russo's outright said they didn't want to step on Coogler's toes with their portrayal of T'Challa, so much so that they consulted him on certain scenes and lines of dialog. That's why certain elements of the mythos were left vague/undefined, because it'll all be explained and fleshed out in Black Panther's solo film.
I do agree that it was a waste to kill off T'Chaka in someone elses movie, but they did a damn good job of showing the love and respect T'Challa had for his father in a very short amount of time. As for T'Chaka being older and out of shape, it has to be kept in mind that was the oldest we had ever seen T'Chaka. In the comics when T'Chaka dies T'Challa is usually a young child, in Civil War T'Challa was a grown man. So it made sense for T'Chaka to be older, less fit, and way more mellow than we're used to seeing.[/QUOTE]
Agreed. It also gave T'challa agency and also a mini origin in Billion dollar movie, where he kicked ass. A huge win for Panther.
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Can we please stop acting like multiple Black Panther runs haven't addressed social issues in both heavy handed and subtle ways? I have a lot of problems with Coates Black Panther run so far, but him tackling misogyny and patriarchy aren't on the list.
So all the comments about him having an social justice or feminist agenda with his series needs to stop. That's basically the same BS that was being spewed about Hudlin and Priest's runs on the tile, only the complaints about about misogyny instead of racism.
The problem isn't that Coates is addressing these issues, the problem is that he's doing so while making T'Challa a supporting character in his own book, showing him as incompetent/ineffective, and painting him as the antagonist of the story.
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[QUOTE=Kasper Cole;2133233]Can we please stop acting like multiple Black Panther runs haven't addressed social issues in both heavy handed and subtle ways? I have a lot of problems with Coates Black Panther run so far, but him tackling misogyny and patriarchy aren't on the list.
So all the comments about him having an social justice or feminist agent with his series needs to stop. That's basically the same BS that was being spewed about Hudlin and Priest's runs on the tile, only the complaints about about misogyny instead of racism.
The problem isn't that Coates is addressing these issues, the problem is that he's doing so while making T'Challa a supporting character in his own book, showing him as incompetent/ineffective, and painting him as the antagonist of the story.[/QUOTE]
Yup.That's my issue. Its his book. He's a support character in it.
The one thing is I do have a issue with how that aspect of the story is being handled and T'challa and the royals inaction and indifference as written by Coates.
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[QUOTE=Kasper Cole;2133233]Can we please stop acting like multiple Black Panther runs haven't addressed social issues in both heavy handed and subtle ways? I have a lot of problems with Coates Black Panther run so far, but him tackling misogyny and patriarchy aren't on the list.
[B]So all the comments about him having an social justice or feminist agent with his series needs to stop. [/B]That's basically the same BS that was being spewed about Hudlin and Priest's runs on the tile, only the complaints about about misogyny instead of racism.
The problem isn't that Coates is addressing these issues, the problem is that he's doing so while making T'Challa a supporting character in his own book, showing him as incompetent/ineffective, and painting him as the antagonist of the story.[/QUOTE]
Nah, i'ma keep on commenting on it. Mainly b/c i've been adamant for months now that i have no problem with social justice agendas (no more so than i have a problem with game of thrones) but that it is alllll in the execution.
My broken record for months on here: "we should be able to empower black women and welcome renegade lgbt vigilantes in our books without making black panther an incompetent bitch and Wakandan men serial rapists".
Granted, I may not have said incompetent bitch in previous iterations. I may have said "Doom's bitch" in relation to him getting burnt alive to open the doors for certain changes. Execution execution execution
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[QUOTE=Victor Freeman;2133296]Yup.That's my issue. Its his book. He's a support character in it.
The one thing is I do have a issue with how that aspect of the story is being handled and [B]T'challa and the royals inaction and indifference as written by Coates.[/B][/QUOTE]
Yup, as someone mentioned a week or so ago, we saw T'Challa fly all the way to the U.S. because a young girl he briefly met was murdered, but we're supposed to buy that he's turning a blind eye to women being abused in his own country? That's wack ,and does a huge disservice to T'Challa as a character. The one constant that has been a part of every Black Panther role is that T'Challa really does strive to be a good/honorable man and seeing how that clashes with his duties as ruler of Wakanda. One of the reasons I had no problem with his breakdown in New Avengers was because it was a culmination of years of sacrifice on his part.
With Coates story that honorable man doesn't seem to exist, he's preoccupied with trying to maintain power and sulking about his sister's condition.
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[QUOTE=Victor Freeman;2133094]Lmao. This isn't even a Black Panther story. He's a side character. You could change the names easy and add a Image logo and it would be a good comic. In title where the LEAD CHARACTER is relegated to being a support character is bad. This is HIS SOLO BOOK.
No writer has done it like this. Don't say Priest or Ross because Ross whole existence was about T'challa.[/QUOTE]
You can argue to a degree Hudlin and Maeberry did it when he pushed Shuri to be the Black Panther.
If you're trying to push new characters, like Shuri or the Midnight Angels, that will come at the expense of panel time. And that panel time will come at the expense of the main character. World building does come at a price.
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[QUOTE=XPac;2133318]You can argue to a degree Hudlin and Maeberry did it when he pushed Shuri to be the Black Panther.
If you're trying to push new characters, like Shuri or the Midnight Angels, that will come at the expense of panel time. And that panel time will come at the expense of the main character. World building does come at a price.[/QUOTE]
No. That's a false equivalent. This IS T'challa's solo. Hudlin second run was about Shuri becoming BP and Maberry had Shuri as the Panther. This is T'challa solo, only he is a supporting character in his own book.
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[QUOTE=Kasper Cole;2133317]Yup, as someone mentioned a week or so ago, we saw T'Challa fly all the way to the U.S. because a young girl he briefly met was murdered, but we're supposed to buy that he's turning a blind eye to women being abused in his own country? That's wack ,and does a huge disservice to T'Challa as a character. The one constant that has been a part of every Black Panther role is that T'Challa really does strive to be a good/honorable man and seeing how that clashes with his duties as ruler of Wakanda. One of the reasons I had no problem with his breakdown in New Avengers was because it was a culmination of years of sacrifice on his part.
With Coates story that honorable man doesn't seem to exist, he's preoccupied with trying to maintain power and sulking about his sister's condition.[/QUOTE]
All of this right here.
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[QUOTE=XPac;2133318]You can argue to a degree Hudlin and Maeberry did it when he pushed Shuri to be the Black Panther.
If you're trying to push new characters, like Shuri or the Midnight Angels, that will come at the expense of panel time. And that panel time will come at the expense of the main character. World building does come at a price.[/QUOTE]
The big difference is the Hudlin/Maberry run was sold and promoted as a story about a new Black Panther.
The title of Coates book isn't "Rise of the Dora Milaje" or even "Tales of Wakanda".
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[QUOTE=Kasper Cole;2133370]The big difference is the Hudlin/Maberry run was sold and promoted as a story about a new Black Panther.
The title of Coates book isn't "Rise of the Dora Milaje" or even "Tales of Wakanda".[/QUOTE]
I think I'm large part Coates story is what he promoted it as being. He said what he was going to do and he's largely doing it. So far at least.
But yeah ... you can justifiably argue that he is losing panel time to build up new characters for his franchise. And it's understandable to not be thrilled about that. But that's w h at you really need to do to build up other characters. You have to give them their own stories to the degree we actually give a damn about them.
Like ShurI or Falcon or War Machine they're ultimately investments in the future of the franchise.
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[QUOTE=XPac;2133414]I think I'm large part Coates story is what he promoted it as being. He said what he was going to do and he's largely doing it. So far at least.
But yeah ... you can justifiably argue that he is losing panel time to build up new characters for his franchise. And it's understandable to not be thrilled about that. But that's w h at you really need to do to build up other characters. You have to give them their own stories to the degree we actually give a damn about them.
Like ShurI or Falcon or War Machine they're ultimately investments in the future of the franchise.[/QUOTE]
No. Its was marketed as a Black Panther book starring T'challa. There is no investment in totally wasting the kind of buzz Black Panther had with a story like this, basically trashing the title character. Enough excuses.
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[QUOTE=Victor Freeman;2133436]No. Its was marketed as a Black Panther book starring T'challa. There is no investment in totally wasting the kind of buzz Black Panther had with a story like this, basically trashing the title character. Enough excuses.[/QUOTE]
[B]Well its all depends on what your going to do, because he kind needed new cast members since W'Kabi, S'Yan, and Zuri were dead. There was no mention of Shuri aftr the reset and T'Challa was king again. So unless new characters are just brought in without any story on them then you do have to give a little. Plus giving them some backstory means they cant be as easily be killed off because there is more investment in the character.
That said, I do think now that MA need to be less of a presence in the story an more focus brought to T'Challa so he can do some sh** and start making a come back. T'Challa and Shuri should be the focus with T'Challa gaining the most panel time[/B]
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[QUOTE=Ezyo1000;2133479][B]Well its all depends on what your going to do, because he kind needed new cast members since W'Kabi, S'Yan, and Zuri were dead. There was no mention of Shuri aftr the reset and T'Challa was king again. So unless new characters are just brought in without any story on them then you do have to give a little. Plus giving them some backstory means they cant be as easily be killed off because there is more investment in the character.
That said, I do think now that MA need to be less of a presence in the story an more focus brought to T'Challa so he can do some sh** and start making a come back. T'Challa and Shuri should be the focus with T'Challa gaining the most panel time[/B][/QUOTE]
I'm sorry. There are writers who wrote with new cast without sideling the main character. Liss basically had a new line up and T'challa was the focus. Coates simply is like every other writer. He gets no pass for the flaws with his book. His book is sadly, seriously flawed in more then one way. Two of them mentioned by Kasper and myself. That's just two. Lol
I agree with the last part. He needs to start now, otherwise there simply not a reason to continue reading for me.
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[QUOTE=Rumble;2133312]Nah, i'ma keep on commenting on it. Mainly b/c i've been adamant for months now that i have no problem with social justice agendas (no more so than i have a problem with game of thrones) but that it is alllll in the execution.
My broken record for months on here: "we should be able to empower black women and welcome renegade lgbt vigilantes in our books without making black panther an incompetent bitch and Wakandan men serial rapists".
Granted, I may not have said incompetent bitch in previous iterations. I may have said "Doom's bitch" in relation to him getting burnt alive to open the doors for certain changes. Execution execution execution[/QUOTE]
Can't be better said...
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[QUOTE=JKtheMac;2132655]It is no coincidence that Panther's Rage keeps comming up. For a start it has recently been digitised so people can now read it easily after years of it hiding in back issue bins in an obscure title.[/QUOTE]
It's online somewhere? That's great news. Back when I read it, I had to read the Essential version for $50 and the Marvel Masterworks (hard copy) was selling for over a hundred.
[QUOTE=Beware Of Geek;2132882]Well, this makes no sense at all...
[URL="http://www.theatlantic.com/notes/all/2015/12/conceptualizing-the-black-panther/420759/#note-489290"]According to Coates[/URL], Tetu's monologue (the "when I was a tree" thing) is actually a poem called "Rootsong" by a 1950's African-American poet named Henry Dumas.
Because a character who's entire shtick is "the old ways are best" and "Wakanda for Wakandans" would NATURALLY meditate using the words of an outsider. :confused:[/quote]
That's why I said:
[QUOTE=Mike_Murdock;2131906]I think there's a stronger argument Henry Dumas is the star of last issue than anything else ;)[/QUOTE]
Although were they thought narrations or simply just narration as a framing device? It's done differently than elsewhere in the issue. It's got that jagged edge paper look as opposed to the crisp rectangles elsewhere.
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[QUOTE=Mike_Murdock;2134090]It's online somewhere? That's great news. Back when I read it, I had to read the Essential version for $50 and the Marvel Masterworks (hard copy) was selling for over a hundred.
That's why I said:
Although were they thought narrations or simply just narration as a framing device? It's done differently than elsewhere in the issue. It's got that jagged edge paper look as opposed to the crisp rectangles elsewhere.[/QUOTE]
[B]It made it a little confusing as it was hard to know if Tetu is having an internal monologue or what. I was hoping it would be something Akin to old spirits/gods mad at T'Challa and using Tetu as their avatar (similar to the BP vol 2 mini where T'Challa goes against TPG) and uses that as a way to set up the final battle between the two. [/B]
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[QUOTE=Ezyo1000;2134111][B][U]It made it a little confusing as it was hard to know if Tetu is having an internal monologue or what.[/U] I was hoping it would be something Akin to old spirits/gods mad at T'Challa and using Tetu as their avatar (similar to the BP vol 2 mini where T'Challa goes against TPG) and uses that as a way to set up the final battle between the two. [/B][/QUOTE]
The way I saw it, the poem was simply recited in the page(s), with panels drawn to complement the words of the poem. Didn't think it was Tetu having an internal monologue.
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[QUOTE=HUTHAIFA;2132540]Ehh, I think its more fans not getting the direction they want vs fans who are just enjoying a good story.
Coates does what most BP writers have not done which is build on what the previous writer has done.
This isnt a story where TChalla can be substituted for another character like say in Liss run. The characters sharing the spotlight are just satellites of TChalla.[/QUOTE]
[IMG]http://i63.tinypic.com/2s1u1yg.jpg[/IMG]
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[QUOTE=Mr MajestiK;2134219][IMG]http://i63.tinypic.com/2s1u1yg.jpg[/IMG][/QUOTE]
[IMG]https://media.giphy.com/media/LKqDgLlK6SuIM/giphy.gif[/IMG]
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[QUOTE=Victor Freeman;2134248][IMG]https://media.giphy.com/media/LKqDgLlK6SuIM/giphy.gif[/IMG][/QUOTE]
Coates BP be like.....
[IMG]http://i65.tinypic.com/29271a1.jpg[/IMG]
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[QUOTE=Realdealholy;2134198]The way I saw it, the poem was simply recited in the page(s), with panels drawn to complement the words of the poem. Didn't think it was Tetu having an internal monologue.[/QUOTE]
[B]Its too bad, if he was connected somehow to old spirits and they were pissed at him and trying to figure out what to do with T'Challa, Leading to another T'Challa vs god battle. [/B]
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Lol[QUOTE=Mr MajestiK;2134256]Coates BP be like.....
[IMG]http://i65.tinypic.com/29271a1.jpg[/IMG][/QUOTE]
OMG
[Img]http://memesvault.com/wp-content/uploads/Hysterical-Laughing-Gif-13.gif[/img]
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[QUOTE=Ezyo1000;2134285][B]Its too bad, if he was connected somehow to old spirits and they were pissed at him and trying to figure out what to do with T'Challa, Leading to another T'Challa vs god battle. [/B][/QUOTE]
It's possible there are gods involved in all of this. The stuff with Shuri appears to imply something to that effect.
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[QUOTE=Ezyo1000;2134285][B]Its too bad, if he was connected somehow to old spirits and they were pissed at him and trying to figure out what to do with T'Challa, Leading to another T'Challa vs god battle. [/B][/QUOTE]
That could be the case in the end. Was just stating my interpretation of the poem, which could be off.