Directed by Creed and Fruitvale Station's Ryan Coogler, Black Panther veers from the template established by Marvel's previous 18 films by introducing a complex, charismatic villain, employing
a compelling dramatic conflict, and cutting back on those pesky cameos.
There are hiccups in its ambition, but it's hard not to get swept up in all the technologies, characters, and politics crammed into the movie's
compelling dramatic conflict, which casts the charismatic Michael B. Jordan — the star of Creed and Coogler's debut, Fruitvale Station — as the most complex villain in the post-Dark Knight cycle of superhero blockbusters.
Not exact matches
The
conflicts involved are intense and absorbing, proving that
compelling moral dilemmas make for the most
dramatic cinema.