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Black Panther: T’Challa’s Legacy

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“We serve Wakanda. And let us not forget, we also serve each other. Together we will always rise.” 鈥 T’ Challa (Chadwick Boseman) in Black Panther

Since its U.S. theatrical debut on February 16, 2018, has been a pure celebration of Black culture and power, and marked the beginning of a new era for Black superheroes in cinema. This February 14th will be four years since Black Panther鈥檚 release and its second year celebrating its anniversary since the passing of its star, Chadwick Boseman, who played T鈥機halla aka Black Panther.

The movie鈥檚 success wasn鈥檛 limited to its box office numbers. Black Panther has had an expansive, and long overdue, cultural impact by representing, uplifting, and celebrating the kind of Black stories that are often left out of American entertainment properties.

Years after the movie became a major blockbuster, we鈥檙e finally slated to see the release of its sequel , with its current theatrical release scheduled for November 11, 2022 in the United States. But the anticipation for the sequel to one of , has been accompanied by a difficult question: How will the mantle of Black Panther, the movie, and the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) continue on without its beloved star?

In August of 2020 died in his Los Angeles home at the young age of 43. Boseman not only played the role of the Wakandan king and protector, T鈥機halla, but played numerous other roles of incredible Black individuals鈥擩ames Brown, Thurgood Marshall, and the first performance I had the pleasure of seeing Boseman in as Jackie Robinson. Boseman and all of his performances, including as T鈥機halla, were the embodiment of a dream that many Black Americans hold close, to be Black and excellent and represented in the media. His death left a hole in the industry, in my heart, and it especially left a hole in the MCU.

At the time of Boseman鈥檚 passing, T鈥機halla鈥檚 story was far from over鈥攔eally, it had just begun. Maybe it was just a knee-jerk reaction in 2020, but for many, including myself, the thought of . Recasting felt like an erasure of the work Boseman put into the role. At the time, the next logical step for who would take T鈥機halla鈥檚 place as the Black Panther seemed to be Shuri, T鈥機halla鈥檚 sister, played by actor Letitia Wright (a succession we see ).

But after some time has passed since Boseman鈥檚 death, and 鈥檚 anti-vaccination stance has grown, the debate about who will be the next Black Panther, and whether Shuri is the right successor, has returned with force. Some of the many different theories online now include: Michael B. Jordan reprising his role as Killmonger to take on the mantle, Winston Duke鈥檚 M鈥橞aku becoming Black Panther, and Lupita Nyongo鈥檚 Nakia donning the Black Panther garb.

Beyond the speculation on which character might take over as Black Panther, there has also been a resurgence of support for recasting T鈥機halla. Fans have taken to social media with the hashtag and more than 50,000 have in the hopes of urging Marvel to 鈥.鈥

The character of T鈥機halla is more than the king of Wakanda. He is a strong Black man, whose story has resonated with a generation of Black boys and men, who can see themselves in the calm-headed individual, passionate about protecting his people and the dignified regelness he brings to the silver screen. I am not ready to see T鈥機halla鈥檚 story come to an end.

When Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige announced that the character T鈥機halla after Boseman鈥檚 death, I felt like that was the right move. Now I鈥檓 not sure it was. Ending T鈥機halla鈥檚 story would also be deciding to end all of the inspiring stories that were to come. A Black Panther comic was the first I ever picked up when I began reading comic books at 12 years old. T鈥機halla was one of the first times I can remember feeling represented, and the moment he arrives on screen in was revelatory for me. As we grow closer and closer to the release of Black Panther鈥檚 sequel, I鈥檝e had time to challenge my initial reaction and that knee-jerk feeling has now slipped away. When I fell in love with the stories of T鈥機halla, it was because of who he was and what he represented, not because a particular person was playing him.

Boseman brought this character to life, a character that is rarely seen by Black boys and men in America. T鈥機halla is Black history and his story doesn鈥檛鈥攕houldn鈥檛鈥攈ave to end here. In Wakandan culture, “death is not the end. It’s more of a stepping off point.鈥 In , T鈥機halla explains it as, 鈥淵ou reach out with both hands and Bast and Sekhmet, they lead you into the green veld where… you can run forever.” Even in death, T鈥機halla has much story to offer and the more I think about the future of the MCU without T鈥機halla, it just all seems bleak. While this is indeed a nuanced conversation, and there may not be one particular right decision to make鈥擨 can鈥檛 help but feel that not recasting the character would be a wrong one.

T鈥機halla is more than the king of Wakanda. He is a strong Black man, whose story has resonated with a generation of Black boys and men.

T鈥機halla was a role that Boseman and he stood by the fact that . After his death, Boseman鈥檚 said he believes that the character should live on, even without his brother at the helm. So the conversation shouldn鈥檛 be centered around just passing on the Black Panther torch, but preserving the character that is T鈥機halla鈥攁 role that is bigger than any of us. With Ryan Coogler, writer of the first movie, taking the lead on the sequel, I know this movie at its core will still be a celebration of Black and African culture. But I also know without T鈥機halla there will be an emptiness that fills the theater, and long after this sequel hits screens across the world, we鈥檒l still be wondering what was the right decision.

No one person can carry a full ideal, and it will hurt to no longer see Boseman sit on the throne as T鈥機halla, but it may hurt more to never see T鈥機halla on the big screen ever again.

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Black Panther: T’Challa’s Legacy