The Captain America Trilogy with WS and Civil war being two of the most lauded films in the MCU melded political thriller, brilliantly choreographed action sequences, and great chemistry between Cap and Bucky. With Steve being one of the more developed characters, do you believe that Tchalla is capable of having his character arc divided up into his own respective trilogy? What are some of the moving parts Tchalla would need to make his story work, what potential conflicts as a result of Civil War/Infinity war are potential story arcs, and how much should Wakanda figure into it?
__________________ "Happiness is a lie. Life is horror. The light is always dying all across the universe. The last star will flicker out someday, when it does, all that remains is shadow. And I will be its king!"'-Amahl Farouk
As they can build in some of his back story and base it off of events between each of the main movies and on things to come I think it could do very well. The character seems to have been very well received and the actor gave him good dimension. I think it has the potential to be a stand alone trilogy.
By preachy i mean like what happened when Avery Brooks spun his character Hawk from 'Spenser for Hire'.
He went from kick ass hired muscle with a code to a black power rhetoric spouter. It was pretty boring.
I'm not planning on watching ANY Black Panther movies, but wanted to weigh in on the movie structure itself.
This is Marvel so i really dont see them sacrificing the fun for what i described above, but stranger things have happened.
Iron Man, GOTG, and Avengers are still better than Winter Soldier/Civil War, but that's a personal perference. But yeah, make ten Black Panther movies.
I'd personally like to see one that showed Cap in WW2 working with the previous Panther, but I dunno if you could get a whole trilogy out of Panther without including the other Avengers.
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Wow, I thought I was the only person who still remembers Spenser for Hire and Hawk. BTW, the books are absolutely excellent - Robert B. Parker wrote dozens and I've read all of them more than once. Lots of action and humour.
As for Black Panther - if they manage to get even close to the standard and quality of writing and directing of the 2010 animated series then I will be happy.