Even as Ryan Coogler took the opportunity to announce that Black Panther 3 would be his next film, he revealed why he felt compelled to step back from the blockbuster franchise films and intimate biopics that have propelled his career to make the whole-cloth original Sinners. And the reason was to give back as much as he’s received.
“I think it was because, truly, the global filmgoing audience had given so much to me,” Coogler explained during the Sinners panel at Deadline’s Contenders Film: Los Angeles event. “I feel so blessed that at my age, each film that I’ve ever written indirectly has been released theatrically, has been released at some level internationally. And I don’t take that for granted because sitting in the theater was where I fell in love with movies.”
The two-time Oscar nominee added: “This artform has changed my life, has changed my family’s lives, [allowed] me to travel the world. I got my first passport because a movie I made in film school got accepted into a festival abroad. Film has literally changed the arc of my life.”
The industry’s recent labor disputes fueled Coogler’s desire to deliver something that came directly from his creative heart rather than established IP or someone else’s story. “There was a lot of anxiety about the business, whether the business was going to go away or not through the changing viewing habits,” he said. “And I realized, man, if the movies stopped, I would’ve never done something that was truly totally me, and that made me sad.
“It was really something where I didn’t want to be chickensh*t,” Coogler explained. “I didn’t want to have hid behind all these different franchises … and not ever really, truly showed all of myself in a cinematic context. … I grew up loving weird movies, horror cinema and literature. I hadn’t made anything in that space, and I felt like I hadn’t made enough moments that were surprising. Even though I had done that before, I wanted to make a movie full of them.”
The filmmaker also revealed that he wanted at least one more shot to reconvene with some of his favorite collaborators. “We were getting older. I mean, we’re buying minivans and sh*t,” he chuckled. “Now I could see our lives. I could see it becoming decreasingly likely that if I picked up the phone and called ’em and said, ‘Hey, meet me in New Orleans for four months,’ they would say yes. So it was very clear that the time was now or never, you know?”
When the subject of a third Black Panther film was broached, Coogler initially was cagey – “I can neither confirm nor deny” – but quickly relented and said revisiting the Marvel superhero was next on his slate.
“We’re working on it hard,” he acknowledged. “So it’s next. Yes, it’s the next movie.”
Check back Monday for the panel video.