Why Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Is A Fitting Ending to Phase 4 of the MCU
“I mean, shooting as much underwater footage as we did was a real challenge. It’s a challenge for the performers, right? They have to learn how to not only hold their breath underwater for minutes at a time but also perform,” Moore said. “And practically, shooting underwater takes more time. You have to build tanks. Like there’s a cost and a logistical challenge to that.”Moore added that filming underwater was an important component to “anchor [the movie] in reality”:
“Without that it can become a little bit too graphic; a little bit too comic-booky, and that’s something we wanted to try and avoid if we could,” he said.The world isn’t the only thing that’s expanded upon in Black Panther: Wakanda Forever. The number of different languages spoken throughout the film is a step above any other Marvel film, with French and Mayan added to the mix alongside Xhosa. According to Moore, this was a conscious choice by director Ryan Coogler to help the film feel “honest”. The producer said they anchored the language of Talokan in Yucatan Mayan and had an interpreter on the set every day to assist the performers.
“Giving Talokan a signature sound was as important to us as giving Wakanda the signature sound of Xhosa,” Moore said.This results in a lot of the dialogue in Wakanda Forever being presented with subtitles. However, it’s something Moore believes audiences are ready for.
“Audiences are in for it. Like audiences want to hear it and it sort of expands your palate, even as a viewer, to hear those things,” he said. “And hopefully it makes the world seem richer.”
“There are real relationships with us and Chadwick, the man beyond the character, and so you do have just an emotional reaction to even the idea of that — and it doesn’t feel good,” Moore explained. “We did want to tell a story about grief and how to overcome grief. And part of that is his absence, to be quite honest. So it would have felt disingenuous both narratively and not great spiritually to do that.”
“Phase 4 for us is a lot about loss and renewal,” Moore said. “If you think about WandaVision and Ms Marvel, and Falcon and Winter Soldier and Black Widow, even, it’s a lot of characters who lose things, but then discover a new thing. And Black Panther felt like an encapsulation of that idea.” “There is a little bit of a weightiness to [Phase 4] for that reason, because it does deal with a lot of themes of loss. But to me, the takeaway is what happens next?” he continued. “It’s how you move forward, and finding joy and finding heroism and finding bravery in spite of that loss.”Black Panther: Wakanda Forever opens in Australian cinemas on November 10.
The post Why Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Is A Fitting Ending to Phase 4 of the MCU appeared first on Kotaku Australia.