Good news and sad news for fans of the Marvel hit, “Black Panther.”
For the sequel, late star Chadwick Boseman will not appear digitally recreated as T’Challa, the king of Wakanda.
In a Spanish interview with Clarin.com, Marvel’s SVP of Production Victoria Alonso put that rumor to rest. Alonso told the website:
“There’s only one Chadwick, and he’s not with us. Our king, unfortunately, has died in real life, not just in fiction, and we are taking a little time to see how we return to the story and what we do to honor this chapter of what has happened to us that was so unexpected, so painful, so terrible, really. Because Chadwick was not only a marvelous human being every day that we spent together the five years we spent together, but it also seems to me that as a character what he did elevated us as a company, and has left his moment in history.”
Digital recreations became a hot topic in the last couple of years as Carrie Fisher was re-animated as General Leia for “The Last Jedi” after unexpectedly passing away (she is still much missed!) before the last chapter of “Star Wars” could be filmed. But Boseman’s passing is different, and Alonso is completely right.
Meantime, there’s speculation about how Boseman’s departure will be explained in “Black Panther 2” and what director Ryan Coogler and Marvel will do. Some say T’Challa’s sister, played by Letitia Wright, could become the new Black Panther. My guess is that Michael B. Jordan, whose sinister Erik Killmonger, died in “Black Panther,” will be back as his good twin or something. Without Boseman, Coogler must have Jordan in the movie, and this time as a good guy. Maybe the twins can fight each other! In comics, anything can happen!

2000: someone tells me it was 20 years ago, so I must have been 7 or 8 when I received the U2 album, “All That You Can’t Leave Behind.” No seriously, it was October 30th of that year, and the word was this U2 album, the first since 1997’s kind of disappointing “Pop,” produced by Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, was just going to be a like top 40 jukebox. Bono said in interviews that they attempted to make 12 hit singles. “Beautiful Day” was already on the radio, and so catchy it seemed impossible. But U2, then 23 years old (first album 1977) was back with a vengeance.
But you know, the box set rests on the original album, gorgeously remastered and sounding even more shiny and crunchy than it did 30 years ago. After “Beautiful Day” you get “Stuck in a Moment You Can’t Get Out of It,” an anthem for the ages. “Elevation” is the perfect 3rd track: it sounds like a hit single, you’re on your feet dancing to it. “Walk On,” in fourth place, became a standard and showed that Bono was connecting the dots from his previous trip down this aisle, “One.” The album proceeds from there into its all-time hood with “Kite,” and the soaring “When I Look at the World.”