Her Story | James checking out Paige
Tag: representation matters
“It’s just been a slow come up to this point. Black Panther is huge, and while we celebrate, I think it’s very important to emphasize that we also need more powerful positions behind the scenes. We need more executives, showrunners, writers, directors, getting our Black women in there, specifically. When I say Black women, I mean our brown-skinned Black women, because colorism has become an issue as well, and we need to tackle all of these things. I just think it’s very important for us to represent the world how we see it.”
Took my african dad to see Black Panther
*no spoilers*
He does not like superhero movies and normally he falls asleep in the cinema. But not this time, he was on the edge of his seat and he said that he didn’t wanna miss a single moment. He absolutely loved the movie, the first thing he did when we got home was to call his african friend, yelling at him to go watch it as soon as possible. The second thing he did was ask me when the sequel will be out.
I asked my dad what he liked about the movie and he said everything. He loved that almost everyone was black and that they spoke Xhosa. He was so happy that they captured what life is actually like in many african cities in those scenes when they were walking around in wakanda. Seeing the people sit in cafes, buying food from food stands, kids running around with school bags, just people living their everyday life all the while being unapologetically african. He said he felt as if he was back home. And he was so happy that there finally was a movie where africans weren’t starving, or warlords, or dealing drugs. He told me that this is the kind of movie he has wanted to see for years, not alluding to the superhero stuff but the fact that they portray africans the same way that most
if not allmovies portray white people and not criminalize or dehumanize them but uplifting them. He loved every single character and especially M’Baku but his absolute favourite was the Queen mother Ramonda because she was so calm and collected while simultaneously being this strong queen. My dad, coming from a culture that really uplifts and value mothers and holds them above all, felt like the movie really captured that in Ramonda and that’s why he loved her.He loved the soundtrack and how they mixed in djembe drums and traditional african singing with modern western music and he loved the costumes because a lot of the clothes look like the things people are wearing at all the african parties we go to.
The only complaint my dad had was that the sound was to high, which was his own fault for insisting that he sit at the end of the row right next to one of the speakers.
So yeah, representation do matter. I’ve never in my life seen him so happy about a movie. And he wanted to talk about it after it had ended which never happens normally. We joked around with the idea of him being a wakandan wardog stationed here and we did Shuris and T’Challas little handshake saying that is the only way we will now greet other africans. This movie gave my dad pure joy and happiness and it gave us a bonding opportunity because we finally have something that we both could geek out about.
UPDATE
I didn’t expect this to blow up, but I’ve been reading y’alls comments and I’m moved to tears. I also read them out loud to my dad and he is so happy that so many people feel like him and share our experience. This movie and everyone of you who gave this post notes have gotten him excited about the future of africa and how the world will view his beautiful continent. He also told me he wants to go watch it again with all of his african friends. He sends his love
[In Black Panther] different women occupy the different space and be their full selves, interacting with each other not with competition, but with agency, and their personal motivations being what that leads them forward. They are not there to be eye candy, although we do look pretty damn fly, I must say.
— Lupita Nyong’o, Women of Black Panther for EW.
I wonder if people realize how IMPOSSIBLE it is that Black Panther beat out The Last Jedi in four-day domestic openings. BP had a February release, one of the worst if not the worst time for a blockbuster movie, as opposed to TLJ’s Christmas release. BP is the only movie among the Top 10 domestic opening weekend record holders to be released in February. The previous highest February opening weekend was Deadpool at $130 million, which BP beat by $70 million. BP also opened at 200 fewer theaters than TLJ, 4,020 to TLJ’s 4,232. In fact, BP opened at the fewest number of theaters among the Top 10 highest opening weekend record holders, and you won’t find a comparable number of theaters until number 18, Furious 7, which opened at 4,004 theaters.
In other words, BP had everything going against it compared to TLJ–bad release date, fewer theaters, lesser known characters from a smaller brand, not a main “storyline” movie like TLJ was, saddled with the conventional wisdom that Black-led movies are niche products without wider appeal. Yet BP went out, beat all projections, and smashed records. The scope of its achievement is staggering at every level.
Wait, so you’re telling me that if I make a movie that is about and for a specific minority ethnic group, it’ll beat a multi billion dollar franchise’s most controversially intense movie? That’s cool
GO FOR IT
THIS is why representation is important
tbh i resent when people act like i have to like rose especially because i’m an asian woman like wtf? yes of course i was looking forward to seeing asian representation in star wars, but this movie did not do that well at all, with rose contributing to onscreen violence against a black character. shocking finn with that taser was so unnecessary and awful. i love kelly marie tran, but the way rian johnson wrote her character with that rushed romance was terrible and i refuse to defend it.
My feelings exactly. I don’t want Asian representation to come at the expense of representation for other groups. I just can’t squee about Rose uncritically while disregarding how she treated Finn. And it’s super shitty because this was a first for Star Wars and a lot of us are unable to be celebrate her to the fullest because of Johnston’s terrible decisions.
Representation matters.
Happy Star Trek Day!
LETS HEAR IT FOR LATINA WLW
New Black Panther Poster
In one poster it has more women and diversity than the rest of the entire MCU universe combined