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Marvel Studio's Black Panther: Wakanda Forever DVD

£3.495£6.99Clearance
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The Cinemark 20 near me has it on 7 screens. There's a show starting every 20-30 minutes from 3pm to 11:40pm on Nov 10.The Cinema has one Imax, one Dolby Theater and lots of regular screens. Passing the Mantle focuses on the relationship between T’Challa and Shuri, and the ways in which that informed Shuri’s journey in this sequel. The piece also examines Shuri’s other key relationships. Wright, Bassett, Dominique Thorne, and Coogler all weigh in with their thoughts. I mean there's no way that BP at the end is Shuri, right? Even without the actress's antics, I'd think she's way too small in stature. I booked a Friday showing in Dolby at AMC for 6pm and it was already about 80% full. I got front row next to handicap seats.

I know it was culturally important and that’s totally fine but it just didn’t do much for me. Then again I’ve only seen it once in full (when I saw it theatrically).I'm in the same camp although I did like the initial fight between T'Challa/Killmonger. That last fight was a horrible CGI shitfest.

Okoye - To me, she's the obvious choice. She was in both Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, by that time I'd say as a full-on Avenger. We know she can fight, she believes in Wakanda, T'Challa trusted her with his life. Envisioning Two Worlds examines the production design of the expanded world of Wakanda, including places like North Triangle, the Wakandan Navy, the Jabari tribe, Shuri’s laboratory, and obviously Namor’s Mayan-influenced aquatic kingdom of Talokan. Editor’s Note: The film review is by Stephen Bjork. The 4K disc A/V and extras comments are by Bill Hunt.]

Weird how they're scheduling this at my AMC Dolby Theater. It's showing at 1:30, 5:30 & 9:30. Four hours apart seems excessive and means there's no true "evening" showing. It's only on one screen? I liked Boseman in the role and the character as a key player when he was introduced in Civil War, but to be honest I wasn’t that much of a fan of the first film either. Unfortunately, this content material is so light on substance that it’s hard to imagine how the Cinematic Universe Edition label really matters.The movie will be released in theaters nationwide on Nov. 11. Ludwig Goransson is on board as the film’s composer. Culture & Lifestyle Explore the MCU with 'THE MARVEL CINEMATIC UNIVERSE AN OFFICIAL TIMELINE' - Available Now Namor’s single-minded determination sets events into motion that result in Wakanda Forever appearing to devolve into the typical epic CGI-laden battle that concludes far too many Marvel films, but in this case, the battle is necessary to show the consequences of decisions made by the leaders of the rival nations involved. Their refusal to compromise with each other makes conflict inevitable, and to resolve it, those leaders need to resolve their own personal differences. They’ve both been seeking vengeance for legitimate reasons, but that’s a quest that always results in collateral damage and the loss of innocent lives. The only way to stop it is to show real personal strength by finally being able to let go of the past. It’s an appropriate way to end Wakanda Forever, because it brings T’Challa’s journey full circle. When he originally appeared in Captain America: Civil War, he was seeking revenge for the death of his father King T’Chaka, first against a person who was wrongly accused of the crime, but eventually against the person who was truly responsible. Yet at the last moment, he stays his own hand, because he finally recognizes what his quest for revenge has done to him: Wakanda Forever wastes no time in doing just that, with the entire pre-credit sequence being used to establish what happened to T’Challa in-universe, and to bid him a rueful and heartfelt farewell. There’s never been anything else quite like it in the history of cinema: while the characters are mourning the loss of T’Challa, the actors who play them are mourning the loss of Boseman. It’s not so much a funeral as a celebration of life, and it simultaneously honors both the character and the actor. It’s an emotionally powerful opening sequence that sets the tone for the rest of the film, on every possible level. Even the Marvel logos are used to commemorate how much that Boseman meant to the studio, and they’re difficult to watch without shedding a tear not just for Boseman, but also for everyone who loved and admired him.

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