"Even if you know the comics and can quote the movie by heart, there are still going to be some surprises."Ĭonsidering the story of War of Wakanda take place five years after Marvel's Avengers' A-Day event, this story is already in a much different place than the comics or films. "I want to double down on the idea that this is its own iteration of the Black Panther mythos," Narcisse said. To be able to tap into other's frame of reference was really important through a lot of this process."Įvan Narcisse, the writer of Marvel Comics' Rise of the Black Panther and narrative consultant for the War for Wakanda expansion, is also doubling down on the idea that this will be its own iteration of the "Black Panther mythos," and will not try to recreate what has already been done. To have just conversations when conversations were tough, if not impossible to have after some things, uh, was a real lifeline, it really was. The ability to talk to people who I've never met, I've never met them face to face, it's all been over Zoom. "We didn't record the full session because there was so much hurt. We just talked," Judge says of game's crew. ".things had gone on in the country, world, specifically Chadwick's passing. "There were days when…" He goes silent for moment. On his performance, Judge shared that, during recordings, there were things "going on emotionally that I was able to tap into." "How much aid do you give to others? How much do you involve yourself in others' conflicts?" He asks aloud. Judge also loved exploring the question of what a technologically advanced nation like Wakanda owes other people. Judge joked about his signature deep voice, saying that he has "the ultimate respect for true voiceover actors because they have a catalog of voices. Judge worked with Beth McGuire, the dialect coach on the MCU's Black Panther film, and she helped him find the right Wakandan accent for this role, which is a more higher-pitched voice than he is used to. I put all that into it and hopefully people like it." "The only way I could really wrap my head around it was to not even attempt a voice match, to let my performance stand on its own. "To be quite honest, I was fearful of being compared to what Chadwick had so wonderfully done," Judge continued. The actual talks proceeded and, basically, I wound up doing it because my mother and my children said if I didn't do it, they would disown me." As EW puts it, a "bellow of laughter in his recognizably resonant timbre erupts at that thought." "There's many Black Panthers, but I really didn't believe that anyone should ever do T'Challa again. "I turned it down straight away," Judge said.
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