'Black Panther' Hits $1 Billion Mark In Worldwide Box Office Numbers

The superhero film challenges the Hollywood myth that movies with predominantly black casts "don't travel."
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“Black Panther” has surpassed $1 billion at the worldwide box office, challenging industry norms about films with black casts. 

The Marvel blockbuster passed the major benchmark on Friday, Forbes reports.

The film is now the United States’ ninth domestically highest-grossing film of all time, and had the second-largest four-day domestic opening weekend. “Black Panther” brought in $242 million in the U.S. over Presidents Day weekend, behind the $288 million “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” made when it opened in 2015. 

The international success of “Black Panther” has challenged the myth that films with predominantly black casts don’t sell ― and it helps unravel “unwritten Hollywood rules,” Jeff Bock, a senior analyst at entertainment research firm Exhibitor Relations, told The New York Times.

“I think about it like a wall crumbling,” Bock said. “In terms of ‘Black Panther,’ no studio can say again, ’Oh, black movies don’t travel, overseas interest will be minimal.’”

Stars of the film, including Chadwick Boseman, Lupita Nyong’o and Danai Gurira, have spoken out about the importance of representation in the movie. “Black Panther,” which is set in the fictional country of Wakanda, shows the possibilities of an African society untouched by colonialism and gender inequity. 

“I think there’s a thirst for these images,” Boseman told NBC. “There’s a real thirst for black superheroes.” 

Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige confirmed this week that a “Black Panther” sequel is in the works. Feige told Entertainment Weekly that there was “nothing specific to reveal” about the next movie but added that “we absolutely will do that.”

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Before You Go

Black Kids Watch 'Black Panther'
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Destiny Ellington, 12, sheds a tear while watching "Black Panther." (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Sixth-graders Destiny Cox, left, and Allana Walker watch the film. (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Saige Cabral, 10, joins classmates in watching the film. (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Sixth-grader De Ja Little, 12, reacts while watching the movie. (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Ron Clark Academy students watch the film "Black Panther" at Atlantic Station theaters in Atlanta on Feb. 21, 2018. (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Ron Clark Academy sixth-grader Naima Johnson, 12, center, joins classmates in applauding at the end of the film. (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Ron Clark Academy seventh-grader Nevaeh Williams, center, joins classmates in singing a song after watching "Black Panther." (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Students from Ron Clark Academy attend a screening of the film. (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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Students from Ron Clark Academy listen to their teacher after leaving the theater. (credit:Christopher Aluka Berry/Reuters)
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A group of children takes a selfie as they arrive on the opening night of the film "Black Panther" at the AMC Magic Johnson Harlem 9 cinemas in Manhattan, New York, on Feb. 15, 2018. (credit:Andrew Kelly/Reuters)
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A group of students from the Capital Preparatory Harlem School watch the film "Black Panther" on its opening night at the AMC Magic Johnson Harlem 9 cinemas in New York on Feb. 15, 2018. (credit:Andrew Kelly/Reuters)