BP #170 made for a mildly entertaining read due to the fact that I've always been a sucker for "Lord Of The Rings" type end of the world type battles featuring a diverse ensemble brought together to battle a dire threat.
Other than that, it featured T'Challa in his now, all to familiar back of the bus character almost totally reliant on supporting characters to actually do all the heavy lifting whilst T'Challa waxes loquacious whilst flinging spirit spears around occasionally.
Princess Shuri is now for all intents and purposes everything T'Challa should have been as envisioned by Jonathan Hickman.
Her ability to reach back into Wakandan race knowledge/history and draw from the past to invoke spirits of the dead to do battle with threats to Wakanda is what most of us expected from T'Challa as the King Of The dead.
Alas, like many of the attributes various writers have given T'Challa over many decades, the current writer believes that these are better utilsed on every other member of T'Challa's support cast other than himself.
It will be interesting to see whether Coates will have Storm and Steve Rogers buried under a ton of supporting characters when he finally starts penning their respective books in the near future.
Where is Ta-Neh... OOPS I mean Harsh Lesson?
Using my "world's greatest detective" Batman tech... My bad wrong thread I meant using my Shuri Wakanda Design Group "Technology" and all my years of extensive training playing the hit board game Clue I deduced that anyone who joined CBR so recently with so few posts must have a super secret identity they want concealed!
That and the "Harsh" name was a giveaway... This is a comic book based forum where people choose avatar names associated with their favorite characters, movies or video games!
Dude made a beeline straight here and went to work defending Coates at all costs with an unstoppable agenda!
That or he is a really really diehard Coates fan...
If he is not Coates I think Coates himself should start mingling with fans and unfans just for the sake of being a good sport it's only comics after all nothing to get too upset about!
Anyway... A while back I ran into Hudlin at AAU basketball games for small kids and teens he was leaving and I was coming to my son's game so we spoke for a quick second!
I may start TROLLING again at his site if the money is right...
First page of Rise of the Black Panther #3
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/DXDTJIxUQAcz-9M?format=jpg
I see your first page and raise you three more.
https://screenrant.com/black-panther...requel-origin/
Pop Quiz...
Eyes on your own test paper!
http://kakalios.com/the-physics-of-vibranium/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n8dwN4-U1zE
"We live in a world of cowards. We live in a world full of small minds who are afraid. We are ruled by those who refuse to risk anything of their own. Who guard their over bloated paucities of power with money. With false reasoning. With measured hesitance. With prideful, recalcitrant inaction. With hateful invective. With weapons. F@#K these selfish fools and their prevailing world order." Tony Stark
Before the article I held the belief that the film treats its main character as a plot device/prop for world building and the movie is ultimately about the tale of killmonger. T'Challa is given so little depth and spends most of his screentime highlighting the supporting cast to the point that comedic reliefs are more notable than the titular character.
I still hold that belief but the article also tells me that the writers wrote a script that consolidates the crab-in-a-bucket mentality and resentment some viewers may have seeing a fully realized T'Challa who is not African American. No other MCU character is treated this way. And it reinforces the idea that the story is about killmonger/diaspora.
T'Challa may have ended the movie as a better character but he spent the majority of it as a glorified microphone.
Last edited by Pulp Fiction; 03-02-2018 at 07:05 AM.