I probably understand why the African-American group is high this time. . .
Regarding the attitude towards this movie, including this Oscar scene, I can feel that this is a "big event" for Hollywood - the superheroes of ethnic minorities are presented in A-level productions, and the only two white supporting roles are cast in the front. On the contrary, they are placed in the setting positions of people of color in the past, which are basically black and white. . .
(The two white characters also completed Bilbo and Groom in the same frame again hahahaha)
Isn't that exciting enough?
The story seems to be a simple variant of "Hamlet", and some viewers will feel like watching "The Lion King", which is not too bad. . .
It's one of the less funny Marvel movies in the past two years. . .
I think it's because it's deliberately not funny, because black comedies have fixed characteristics, such as dialect slang, such as swear words, such as hip-hop, such as some fixed comedy scenes, which do not appear in "Black Panther". . .
Even the accent of all the characters is an African English accent that is very blunt due to the needs of the plot. I listened to it very "deliberately" anyway, and there are obvious traces of "acting". . .
Many years ago, I watched Due Date in a New York movie theater, and it was the opening weekend. When it was full, I was squeezed to the last row. Next to me was a big black man who weighed more than 300 pounds. There were a lot of black people in the audience. Laughs are not generally low. . .
That's why I'm very curious. I can come up with a general idea of the reaction of black audiences watching this movie in the United States, but I can't figure it out. . .
My personal attitude, now I'm getting a little more and more annoyed by the unified style of global entertainment blockbusters like Marvel. Movies are played as blockbuster series, and two or three easter eggs at the end of each episode are standard. . .
But this kind of franchise is the dream model of film companies and investors, but I always feel that everyone will soon tire of seeking new excitement. . .
At the end of the film, the Black Panther gave a speech at the United Nations as the king. It was so "politically correct" that I felt that I had to read the U.S. Constitution. Of course, I can't say it wrong. Same. . .
In the end, what I am most angry about is that, for a movie called "Black Panther", I waited until the end of the subtitles, and I didn't hear "Being Ashamed" as the ending song. It's normal for the domestic box office to be less than a few hundred million. . .
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