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Easier, but still chaotic nonetheless and would inevitably leave Wakanda open to attacks. That's why it's entirely duplicitous.
How so? They can always make more weapons.
Easier, but still chaotic nonetheless and would inevitably leave Wakanda open to attacks. That's why it's entirely duplicitous.
He's talking about racism and the fact even to this day, black people don't have the same opportunities white people do. Arming those with less with higher tech weapons gives them an advantage to take on the people in power (largely better weapons = military advantage and victory historically speaking). As for the other parts of your point, yeah that would be possible, but again, Killmonger is the VILLAIN. He is not entirely right, nor is he entirely wrong. As for why he is giving those away, Killmonger's biggest beef with Wakanda is they had resources to help people with their resources. If he is selling them, that undercuts his entire point. Wakanda is a powerful and rich nation, but Killmonger is trying to create his own vision of a rich world. It's a flawed view of the world, yes. But that is how he saw the world.
I think you missed the point of the film a little.
I know he's the villain but considering people are praising this character so much i would expect a better one. At least a motivation that is completely understandable. Killmonger seems like a watered down version of Magneto.
Yes racism exists but that's not the same as black people being oppressed all around the world, that's stupid. I am a black guy living in Holland, i am not oppressed. Which black people do not have the same opportunities, where exactly and how? Killmonger can't just throw that out there and expect people to buy it. And what about black people who discriminate each other? Also, what about people who are not black? Do they automaticly have everything handed to them their entire lives? Do they never get discriminated against? I think Killmonger confused black people with poor people. Giving them guns would only create more violence, fear and hatred. Those people are not trained soldiers anyway and would most likely be killed by their "oppressers".
So yeah i get that he's a villain but that doesn't mean his motivation can't make any sense. I think he actually is entirely wrong.
Killmonger was a well written villain, but I couldn't get behind MBJ's performance; I found it so incredibly distracting. I'm well aware that I'm firmly in the minority on that one, as even the reviews that lean mixed to negative showered him with praise, but this is genuinely how I feel.
Primarily, it has to do with the way he delivers his lines. It was all very "first take", in the sense that his delivery often felt like he was reciting his lines verbatim directly from the screenplay, as if it were an early rehearsal. It was as if the character was speaking another person's words, rather than his own, and it rarely ever sounded natural to me. As far as physicality and intensity however, he brought the goods full stop. I think it would be a good idea for him to experiment with improvising his lines to better match up with his speech patterns and inflections, because it really felt like he was reading from a script verbatim. Normally when I see things like this I'd say that the actor's range is the issue, but again, he was believably fierce, physical, and intense when he needed to be, so that can't be it. There were just two lines in his entire performance that felt sincere and believable to me:
[BLACKOUT]"The world took everything I ever loved!"[/BLACKOUT]
and
[BLACKOUT]"You believe that? A little kid from Oakland running around believing in fairy tales..."[/BLACKOUT]
Even that much lauded (and justifiably so) last line of his felt very stilted and unnatural.
This may sound like a nitpick to some, and I wish I felt the same way, but it really killed the immersion and believability for me. Felt like instead of seeing 'Erik Killmonger' on the screen, I was watching MBJ audition for the role of Erik Killmonger, and that's an issue. Again, very well written character and he served the story perfectly, but the performance itself was a mixed bag.
Killmonger was a well written villain, but I couldn't get behind MBJ's performance; I found it so incredibly distracting. I'm well aware that I'm firmly in the minority on that one, as even the reviews that lean mixed to negative showered him with praise, but this is genuinely how I feel.
Primarily, it has to do with the way he delivers his lines. It was all very "first take", in the sense that his delivery often felt like he was reciting his lines verbatim directly from the screenplay, as if it were an early rehearsal. It was as if the character was speaking another person's words, rather than his own, and it rarely ever sounded natural to me. As far as physicality and intensity however, he brought the goods full stop. I think it would be a good idea for him to experiment with improvising his lines to better match up with his speech patterns and inflections, because it really felt like he was reading from a script verbatim. Normally when I see things like this I'd say that the actor's range is the issue, but again, he was believably fierce, physical, and intense when he needed to be, so that can't be it. There were just two lines in his entire performance that felt sincere and believable to me:
[BLACKOUT]"The world took everything I ever loved!"[/BLACKOUT]
and
[BLACKOUT]"You believe that? A little kid from Oakland running around believing in fairy tales..."[/BLACKOUT]
Even that much lauded (and justifiably so) last line of his felt very stilted and unnatural.
This may sound like a nitpick to some, and I wish I felt the same way, but it really killed the immersion and believability for me. Felt like instead of seeing 'Erik Killmonger' on the screen, I was watching MBJ audition for the role of Erik Killmonger, and that's an issue. Again, very well written character and he served the story perfectly, but the performance itself was a mixed bag.

I enjoyed the sort of 'street swagger' Killmonger embodied too, it only amplified his displacement and gave his interaction that much more tension with the Wakandan tribes.
I know he's the villain but considering people are praising this character so much i would expect a better one. At least a motivation that is completely understandable. Killmonger seems like a watered down version of Magneto.
Yes racism exists but that's not the same as black people being oppressed all around the world, that's stupid. I am a black guy living in Holland, i am not oppressed. Which black people do not have the same opportunities, where exactly and how? Killmonger can't just throw that out there and expect people to buy it. And what about black people who discriminate each other? Also, what about people who are not black? Do they automaticly have everything handed to them their entire lives? Do they never get discriminated against? I think Killmonger confused black people with poor people. Giving them guns would only create more violence, fear and hatred. Those people are not trained soldiers anyway and would most likely be killed by their "oppressers".
So yeah i get that he's a villain but that doesn't mean his motivation can't make any sense. I think he actually is entirely wrong.
Killmonger was Clubber Lang and had that eye of the tiger while TChalla was Rocky who got complacent as champion.
I don't want to get into anything that might be considered a spoiler, but I disagree. I think there was hesitation based on some combination of decency and/or caring rather than complacency.IIRC, there was a point where I think T'Challa could have taken him out
I don't want to get into anything that might be considered a spoiler, but I disagree. I think there was hesitation based on some combination of decency and/or caring rather than complacency.IIRC, there was a point where I think T'Challa could have taken him out
Fav Killmonger line:
[BLACKOUT]"I killed in America. Afganistan. I-RAQ!"[/BLACKOUT]
Especially the way he venomously barks out that last line.
I was waiting for a moment or flashback where we could witness just a glimpse of all his pain, but unfortunately we didn't really get to see it,