Those people make me sick
Brock Sampson said:
Biggest faux pas was the Gorilla King saying his people were vegetarians yet one of their fishermen found BP
He didn't know that until the ring came out...Killmonger had a mask on when he freed Klau. Once the ring came out, the tide had already turned in the room against T'Challa. Would have sounded like an excuse at that point.mpl35 said:
My biggest complaint was hoe all T'challa had to say was that Killmonger freed Klau and was working with him to undercut his attempt...yet didn't. Major flaw there.
T'Challa also didn't know at this point in the story about his uncle being a traitor to the country or that he had a son.mpl35 said:
Don't you think W'Kabi would have been more pissed at N'obu for selling out Wakanda and getting his parents killed and Killmonger for helping Klaue, then he would be at T'challa for failing to capture Klaue? W'Kabi (if he had all the facts) siding with Killmonger made absolutely no sense.
Come on. The ring came out during the breakout. He asked the priest about it and got the truth from him. this was BEFORE Killmonger showed up in Wakanda.FTACO97 said:He didn't know that until the ring came out...Killmonger had a mask on when he freed Klau. Once the ring came out, the tide had already turned in the room against T'Challa. Would have sounded like an excuse at that point.mpl35 said:
My biggest complaint was hoe all T'challa had to say was that Killmonger freed Klau and was working with him to undercut his attempt...yet didn't. Major flaw there.
Quote:
After the death of T'Chaka, his son T'Challa must allow for challengers to engage in ritual combat before he can claim the throne for himself - representatives from the four main tribes (and occasionally an appearance from the Jabari tribe) and members of the royal family can all opt to enter the ring. Only M'Baku (of the Jabari) does, and he's soundly defeated - and with no other challengers, T'Challa is crowned king of Wakanda.
...until Erik "Killmonger" Stevens (aka N'Jadaka) shows up and challenges T'Challa for the throne, that is. The weird thing here is that the time for challenges has already expired - Wakanda is no longer in transition, T'Challa is firmly established as the king. The implication is that Killmonger - as a member of the royal family - seemingly has the right to challenge the king for the right to rule whenever he feels like it. Which means...he could have challenged T'Chaka.
T
he ritual combat idea seems to make sense when the king is extremely jacked, youthful Chadwick Boseman (well, sorta - he's actually 41! And wow, he looks better at 41 than I ever have or ever will in my life) - but when you're elderly and a bit heavier, as T'Chaka was before his death, your odds of surviving seem...pretty terrible.
Why didn't Killmonger challenge him for the throne then? Not only would it have been the easiest fight of his life, but T'Chaka is the one Killmonger ACTUALLY has a beef with - he killed his father and was the one responsible for Wakanda's continued isolation in the modern world.
And don't say he was waiting for the transition/challenge time, because he specifically MISSES that window, and just shows up after T'Challa's already on the throne - and no one seems to think it's that weird of a thing to ask. Just saying that - even though Killmonger was an extremely skilled fighter - he would've been better off challenging an old guy past his prime than Chadwick Boseman.
Quote:
Why did Killmonger bother stealing the Wakandan weapon, having Klaue try to sell it, extract Klaue, and THEN kill him? If all he needed to gain entrance to Wakanda was Klaue's corpse, he coulda just done that from the beginning.
As far as I can tell, Killmonger's plan can be broken down into four parts:
[ol]Kill Ulysses Klaue Deliver Klaue's body to Wakanda as a gesture of goodwill to help win people to his cause Beat T'Challa in ritual combat to claim the throne and the mantle of Black Panther Send out Wakandan weapons and tech to people of African-descent across the world to right the wrongs of oppression and slavery and flip the power imbalance [/ol]It's that first part that's confusing me - all he has to do with Klaue is kill him. There's no actual point or thing to be gained in working out an elaborate Vibranium heist with him or having him make a deal in South Korea. Really, from the moment he met Klaue, he should have just killed him then and there, flown to Wakanda, and delivered Andy Serkis' corpse to the first Wakandan he could find. By engaging in a complicated heist with Klaue, he nearly allowed T'Challa to have Klaue for himself, or be the one responsible for killing him.
How do you figure? I didn't get that at all. It seemed the entire time that KM was aimed at Wakanda. He has many avenues to making money/wealth. Yet he picked the one avenue Vibranium and Klaue that was sure to bring Wakanda into the open.MBAR said:
That wasn't the plan at the start. The plan at the start was to get money to keep doing what they'd been doing from the sale of the vibranium. The plan changed when the Wakandans captured Klau.
mpl35 said:Quote:
After the death of T'Chaka, his son T'Challa must allow for challengers to engage in ritual combat before he can claim the throne for himself - representatives from the four main tribes (and occasionally an appearance from the Jabari tribe) and members of the royal family can all opt to enter the ring. Only M'Baku (of the Jabari) does, and he's soundly defeated - and with no other challengers, T'Challa is crowned king of Wakanda.
...until Erik "Killmonger" Stevens (aka N'Jadaka) shows up and challenges T'Challa for the throne, that is. The weird thing here is that the time for challenges has already expired - Wakanda is no longer in transition, T'Challa is firmly established as the king. The implication is that Killmonger - as a member of the royal family - seemingly has the right to challenge the king for the right to rule whenever he feels like it. Which means...he could have challenged T'Chaka.
T
he ritual combat idea seems to make sense when the king is extremely jacked, youthful Chadwick Boseman (well, sorta - he's actually 41! And wow, he looks better at 41 than I ever have or ever will in my life) - but when you're elderly and a bit heavier, as T'Chaka was before his death, your odds of surviving seem...pretty terrible.
Why didn't Killmonger challenge him for the throne then? Not only would it have been the easiest fight of his life, but T'Chaka is the one Killmonger ACTUALLY has a beef with - he killed his father and was the one responsible for Wakanda's continued isolation in the modern world.
And don't say he was waiting for the transition/challenge time, because he specifically MISSES that window, and just shows up after T'Challa's already on the throne - and no one seems to think it's that weird of a thing to ask. Just saying that - even though Killmonger was an extremely skilled fighter - he would've been better off challenging an old guy past his prime than Chadwick Boseman.
You have to make a lot of assumptions that weren't portrayed in the movie. Or consistent with the comics (to my limited understanding). I think the others were willing to allow T'challa to not accept the challenge when they doubted Killmonger's identity as a Wakandan. But T'challa knew he had a legitimate right to challenge so he allowed it to go forward.AliasMan02 said:Quote:
1. It assumes the king must fight, himself, and can't choose a champion. I don't know about Wakanda, but through history, requiring a king to fight for himself is not the norm. You could probably argue that in all likelihood, the Black Panther would be the natural champion of the king, especially since they have special rules about BP fighting.
2. This seems to ignore that T'challa accepts the challenge when others in the room seem to indicate that he didn't have to.
What I'm saying is that in the scene where they freed Klau....Killmonger has a mask on and T'Challa sees the ring around his neck. So he knows this guy has his uncle's ring but he has no idea who he is. Killmonger shows up in the throne room and T'Challa doesn't know who he is. Killmonger reveals his lip tattoo and the ring toward the very end of the conversation in the throne room when challenging T'Challa. Only then does he realize it's the same guy.mpl35 said:Come on. The ring came out during the breakout. He asked the priest about it and got the truth from him. this was BEFORE Killmonger showed up in Wakanda.FTACO97 said:He didn't know that until the ring came out...Killmonger had a mask on when he freed Klau. Once the ring came out, the tide had already turned in the room against T'Challa. Would have sounded like an excuse at that point.mpl35 said:
My biggest complaint was hoe all T'challa had to say was that Killmonger freed Klau and was working with him to undercut his attempt...yet didn't. Major flaw there.
I hate lazy writing that relies on illogical/lack of actual communication to keep the plot going.
In Civil War, T'Challa is already the Black Panther, he just isn't the king yet. So yes, if there had been a challenge, the challenger would definitely face T'Challa.Quote:
Putting aside the need to delve this deeply, this seems to assume a lot of things.
1. It assumes the king must fight, himself, and can't choose a champion. I don't know about Wakanda, but through history, requiring a king to fight for himself is not the norm. You could probably argue that in all likelihood, the Black Panther would be the natural champion of the king, especially since they have special rules about BP fighting.
2. This seems to ignore that T'challa accepts the challenge when others in the room seem to indicate that he didn't have to.
He has had years to challenge...that's the point I think.FTACO97 said:In Civil War, T'Challa is already the Black Panther, he just isn't the king yet. So yes, if there had been a challenge, the challenger would definitely face T'Challa.Quote:
Putting aside the need to delve this deeply, this seems to assume a lot of things.
1. It assumes the king must fight, himself, and can't choose a champion. I don't know about Wakanda, but through history, requiring a king to fight for himself is not the norm. You could probably argue that in all likelihood, the Black Panther would be the natural champion of the king, especially since they have special rules about BP fighting.
2. This seems to ignore that T'challa accepts the challenge when others in the room seem to indicate that he didn't have to.
He saw the ring and talked to the priest guy. So he knew the second he saw the ring who it was - even if he didn't realize the moment he say KM for the first time.FTACO97 said:What I'm saying is that in the scene where they freed Klau....Killmonger has a mask on and T'Challa sees the ring around his neck. So he knows this guy has his uncle's ring but he has no idea who he is. Killmonger shows up in the throne room and T'Challa doesn't know who he is. Killmonger reveals his lip tattoo and the ring toward the very end of the conversation in the throne room when challenging T'Challa. Only then does he realize it's the same guy.mpl35 said:Come on. The ring came out during the breakout. He asked the priest about it and got the truth from him. this was BEFORE Killmonger showed up in Wakanda.FTACO97 said:He didn't know that until the ring came out...Killmonger had a mask on when he freed Klau. Once the ring came out, the tide had already turned in the room against T'Challa. Would have sounded like an excuse at that point.mpl35 said:
My biggest complaint was hoe all T'challa had to say was that Killmonger freed Klau and was working with him to undercut his attempt...yet didn't. Major flaw there.
I hate lazy writing that relies on illogical/lack of actual communication to keep the plot going.
I'm going to have to watch it again before I settle on some of these issues. My initial watch just left me questioning some of the things. Figure this is a good place to hash it out.FTACO97 said:
Right, and he's like in his late 20s at oldest.mpl35 said:He has had years to challenge...that's the point I think.FTACO97 said:In Civil War, T'Challa is already the Black Panther, he just isn't the king yet. So yes, if there had been a challenge, the challenger would definitely face T'Challa.Quote:
Putting aside the need to delve this deeply, this seems to assume a lot of things.
1. It assumes the king must fight, himself, and can't choose a champion. I don't know about Wakanda, but through history, requiring a king to fight for himself is not the norm. You could probably argue that in all likelihood, the Black Panther would be the natural champion of the king, especially since they have special rules about BP fighting.
2. This seems to ignore that T'challa accepts the challenge when others in the room seem to indicate that he didn't have to.
~30+. Kid (10) was playing hoops in 1992. So if modern day is NOW, then he would be a bit older.fig96 said:Right, and he's like in his late 20s at oldest.mpl35 said:He has had years to challenge...that's the point I think.FTACO97 said:In Civil War, T'Challa is already the Black Panther, he just isn't the king yet. So yes, if there had been a challenge, the challenger would definitely face T'Challa.Quote:
Putting aside the need to delve this deeply, this seems to assume a lot of things.
1. It assumes the king must fight, himself, and can't choose a champion. I don't know about Wakanda, but through history, requiring a king to fight for himself is not the norm. You could probably argue that in all likelihood, the Black Panther would be the natural champion of the king, especially since they have special rules about BP fighting.
2. This seems to ignore that T'challa accepts the challenge when others in the room seem to indicate that he didn't have to.
I'd say that it deserves to be in the conversation for costume design. They really did a good job there IMO. But yes, other than that I'd say no.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Collider Movie Talk discussed today the possibility of an Oscar caompaign for Black Panther next year.
Sigh. Give me a ****ing break.
Its the best movie so far of 2018...jtstanley4621 said:I'd say that it deserves to be in the conversation for costume design. They really did a good job there IMO. But yes, other than that I'd say no.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Collider Movie Talk discussed today the possibility of an Oscar caompaign for Black Panther next year.
Sigh. Give me a ****ing break.
Living Legend said:Its the best movie so far of 2018...jtstanley4621 said:I'd say that it deserves to be in the conversation for costume design. They really did a good job there IMO. But yes, other than that I'd say no.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Collider Movie Talk discussed today the possibility of an Oscar caompaign for Black Panther next year.
Sigh. Give me a ****ing break.
jtstanley4621 said:I'd say that it deserves to be in the conversation for costume design. They really did a good job there IMO. But yes, other than that I'd say no.Brian Earl Spilner said:
Collider Movie Talk discussed today the possibility of an Oscar caompaign for Black Panther next year.
Sigh. Give me a ****ing break.
There's some good maps and layout of this in the Art of book, I'll try to snap a few pics this weekend.swimmerbabe11 said:
I really found myself wanting to look at a map of Wakanda. For some reason I struggled conceptualizing the layout of the city-state