BLACK PANTHER: 4 ½ STARS
For those who complain that the recent spate of superhero movies arenât about anything other than bombast and reaching into your wallet, I give you âBlack Panther.â Directed by Ryan Coogler and starring Chadwick Boseman in the title role, itâs a movie that delivers wham-bam action but serves it up with compelling sides of mythology and social awareness.
The film starts with a quick origin story, detailing the introduction of vibranium to the small (fictional) African nation of Wakanda. This mysterious metal is a wonder. Near indestructible, it can absorb kinetic energy and has imbued a Wakandan flower called the Heart-Shaped Herb with a supercharge that gives superpowers when ingested.
Cut to modern day. After his fatherâs death T'Challa (Boseman) is crowned King but just as he is ordained a rare Wakandan artefact made of vibranium is lifted from a London museum by two very bad men, Ulysses Klaue (Andy Serkis) and Erik "Killmonger" Stevens (Michael B. Jordan).
To retrieve the precious metal T'Challa, a.k.a. Black Panther, along with spy Nakia (Lupita Nyong'o) and warrior Okoye (Danai Gurira), travel to Korea where the artefact is about to be sold to CIA agent Everett K. Ross (Martin Freeman).
A wild battle ensues to a power struggle that may not only compromise the throne of Wakanda but also threaten the safety of the world.
âBlack Pantherâ takes place in a couple of time framesâNO SPOILERS HERE!âbut at its heart it is a timely story about social responsibilityâa wealthy nation state confronting its role in the worldâthat pulsates with smart commentary about race and revolution.
âThe world is going to start over,â Killmonger declares, âand this time we are on top!â Itâs the kind of thing movie bad guys have been saying for years but this time around the villain is so multi-layered and interesting it packs an extra punch. Jordan isnât just evilâalthough he is pretty bad; covered in scars for every person heâs ever killedâheâs a villain with a purpose. His motivations are personalâAGAIN: NO SPOILERS HERE!âbut when he suggests arming the, âtwo billion people who look like me all over the world,â with vibranium heâs not just speaking as a revolutionary but as someone hungry for representation and recognition. Itâs a powerful message and Jordan brings it home in a performance that is both intense and very emotional.
Letitia Wright plays T'Challaâs sixteen-year old sister Shuri and steals most every scene she appears in. Imagine James Bondâs Q with a snappier wit and more brains than Tony Stark. She has some of the movieâs best lines and is destined to become a featured player in future instalments.
Boseman has made a career of playing iconic characters on screen. As sports legend Jackie Robinson in â42â or James Brown, the Godfather of Soul, in âGet on Up,â or Thurgood Marshall, the first African-American Supreme Court Justice in âMarshall,â: he has breathed new life into characters we thought we already knew. Here he takes a well-known comic book character, the first black standalone superhero in the Marvel Universe, and delivers a performance ripe with subtext. His Black Panther is not only capable of fighting the bad guys but is also a vessel for the filmâs study of the importance of legacy and identity.
âBlack Pantherâ pushes the Marvel Universe past the typical Avengers style bombast fests like âAge of Ultron.â This is a breath of fresh air, a warm breeze along the lines of âAnt-Manâ or âDoctor Strange,â films that transcend the superhero genre, pushing the form into new, unexplored territory. It may be a tad too long and slightly uneven in itâs first hour but with its strong female charactersâwho work together rather than as opponentsâan Afrocentric story and social commentary it feels like the perfect movie for right now.
EARLY MAN: 3 STARS
The stop-motion geniuses at Aardman Animation are the kings of the underdog. Theyâve given us stories of chickens rebelling against farm owners, a sheep who takes charge and leads the flock to safety and hapless adventurer Wallace. In their latest, âEarly Man,â thereâs a Bronze Age twist to the small fry tale.
A prologue informs us that humans survived the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. (Remember, this is all humour, not history.) What good could come out of that life-changing catastrophe? The invention of football. Using stones for goalposts, the prehistoric humans starting kicking the meteorite around to create the game that would become the world's most popular sport.
Cut to a few ages later, near Manchester, around lunchtime. A Stone Age clan, including a spunky caveman named Dug (voice of Eddie Redmayne) and his sidekick Hognob (Nick Park), find themselves rocked by a new era. Bronze Age villain Lord Nooth (Tom Hiddleston with an exaggerated French accent) has plans to invade Dug and Co.âs comfortable life, seizing their land to turn it into a mine. âThe age of stone is over!â he says. âLong live the age of bronze!â Itâs up to Dug and his people to protect the interest of the tribe against the more sophisticated enemy, but how? By challenging Noothâs best football team, Real Bronzio, to a match, thatâs how.
âEarly Manâ is a romp about football, survival and teamwork. It also features some of the best (read worst) Premier League puns. âTheyâre playing well, early man⌠United,â usually delivered by characters speak English and crack wise like British music hall comedians. Itâs silly stuff, part Flintstones, part kiddie âQuest for Fire,â and while it does contain quite a few laughs it doesnât have the same anarchic spirit of earlier Aardman films. Itâs entertaining, good-natured and I think kids will like itâespecially the T-Rex sized duck who is both a menace and a help to the Brutesâbut it feels like middleweight Aardman.
POOP TALK: 3 STARS
The thing that separates us isnât politics, or religion. No, the thing that divides us is our willingness to share our stories from the most secret room in your houseâthe bathroom. A new documentary, âPoop Talk,â presents a cast of luminaries including Adam Carolla, Rob Corddry, Nikki Glaser, Aisha Tyler, Eric Stonestreet, Dr. Drew Pinsky and Oscar nominee Kumail Nanjiani to talk about the most basic human function.
Director Aaron N. Feldman has made a movie for the kind of people who find Mr. Hankey the Christmas Poo the funniest part of the festival season. Embarrassing stories about getting caught short, blaming accidents on the dog and cultural differences, abound. Nothing is off limits. Constipation, something called âhot baggingâ and what itâs like to be a celebrity and have to go in public are all discussed. Itâs unapologetically gross, often off-putting but occasionally insightful.
âThey say you can judge a society by how it treats its prisoners,â says Corolla, âbut what it s**ts into is probably a better way to do it.â
Pete Holmes, star of HBOs âCrashing,â says he enjoys privacyâthe stall door all the way down to the floorâbut adds that, âwhat makes it better and what is true progress is our ability to talk and even joke about it. Thatâs what I want. Give me the God-given right to say, âWhoa, do not go in there.â
âPoop Talkâsâ subject may be universal but it is probably best suited for those who regard the poop emoji as high art.