<P> Patrick Gathara, writing in The Washington Post, described the film as offering a "regressive, neocolonial vision of Africa", which--rather than a "redemptive counter-mythology"--offers "the same destructive myths". Gathara highlighted the Africa that is portrayed, still essentially a European creation, as being divided and tribalized, with Wakanda run by a wealthy and feuding elite that despite its advanced technical abilities does not have a means of succession beyond lethal combat . The Wakandans "still cleanly fit into the Western molds (of) a dark people in a dark continent" according to Gathara, and they "remain so remarkably unsophisticated that a' returning' American can basically stroll in and take over...(The film) should not be mistaken for an attempt at liberating Africa from Europe . Quite the opposite . Its' redemptive counter-mythology' entrenches the tropes that have been used to dehumanize Africans for centuries ." Christopher Lebron, in a piece for Boston Review, called the film "racist" because it depicts black Americans who had been left in poverty and oppression, as exemplified by Killmonger, as still being "relegated to the lowest rung of political regard" in the film, treated as less deserving of empathy and less capable of their acts being deemed heroic, than even Ross' white spy . Lebron felt that T'Challa could have shown himself a good person by understanding how Killmonger was affected by American racism and T'Chaka's "cruelty", and could have agreed that justice sometimes requires violence as a last resort against oppression . He summed up by commenting that "In 2018, a world home to both the Movement for Black Lives and a president (Donald Trump) who identifies white supremacists as fine people, we are given a movie about black empowerment where the only redeemed blacks are African nobles (who) safeguard virtue and goodness against the threat not of white Americans or Europeans, but a black American". </P> <P> Black Panther was nominated for two BET Awards (winning one), one Billboard Music Award, eight Golden Trailer Awards (winning four), seven MTV Movie & TV Awards (winning four), fourteen Saturn Awards (winning five), and eleven Teen Choice Awards . </P> <P> With the release of Black Panther, Feige said "there are many, many stories to tell" about the character, and that he wanted Coogler to return for any potential sequel . Coogler added that he wanted to see how T'Challa would grow as a king in future films, since his reign only began recently in the MCU, while in the comics, he has been king since childhood . In March 2018, Feige added there was "nothing specific to reveal" in terms of a sequel, but that there "absolutely" were "ideas and a pretty solid direction on where we want to head with the second one". </P>

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