Shuri (Marvel Cinematic Universe)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Shuri
Marvel Cinematic Universe character
Letitia Wright as Shuri in a promotional character poster for Black Panther (2018)
First appearanceBlack Panther (2018)
Based on
Shuri
by
Adapted byRyan Coogler
Joe Robert Cole
Portrayed byLetitia Wright
Voiced byOzioma Akagha (What If...?)
In-universe information
Title
Affiliation
  • Dora Milaje
  • Midnight Angels
Weapon
Family
  • T'Chaka
    (father)
  • Ramonda
    (mother)
  • T'Challa (brother)
Relatives
  • N'Jobu
    (uncle)
  • N'Jadaka / Erik "Killmonger" Stevens
    (cousin)
  • Toussaint / T'Challa II
    (nephew)
  • Nakia
    (sister-in-law)
Home
Wakanda
NationalityWakandan

Shuri is a fictional character portrayed primarily by

Talokan
against the rest of the world.

As of 2023, the character has appeared in four films.[2] Wright's portrayal of Shuri has been well-received.

Alternate versions from within the MCU multiverse appear in the animated series What If...? (2021), voiced by Ozioma Akagha.

Fictional character biography

Helping T'Challa and Bucky Barnes

In 2016, with Shuri's father T'Chaka having died,

vibranium
technology.

Nakia, Shuri, Ramonda, and Ross later flee to the Jabari Tribe for aid after Erik Stevens, revealed to be T'Challa and Shuri's cousin N'Jadaka, seizes the Wakandan throne and hurls T'Challa off a waterfall, presumably to his death. They find a comatose T'Challa, rescued by the Jabari in repayment for sparing M'Baku's life. Healed by a heart-shaped herb that Nakia stole, T'Challa returns to fight N'Jadaka and defeats him after Shuri initiates a

Hydra brainwashing, dubbing him the 'White Wolf
'.

Infinity War and resurrection

In 2018, Shuri is informed by T'Challa of her help needed and meets

Corvus Glaive to infiltrate the medical center, preventing her from finishing her work. Moments later, the Blip
happens and Shuri disintegrates.

In 2023, Shuri is restored to life and is brought via portal by the

the battle against an alternate Thanos and his army. Afterwards, she returns home and reunites with her mother. A week later, she attends Tony Stark
's funeral with her brother and Okoye.

Becoming Black Panther and facing Namor

Shortly after, T'Challa suffers from a disease that Shuri believes could have been cured by the heart-shaped herb. Shuri has been attempting to synthetically recreate the herb after it was burned by Killmonger but is unsuccessful as T'Challa passes away.

In 2025, Shuri accompanies Ramonda to burn the outfits they wore to the funeral, signifying the end of the period of mourning. Shuri refuses to burn the outfit, as she is still grieving. The two then encounter

FBI
and ambushed by Namor's warriors, who take Shuri and Williams to meet Namor.

Namor shows Shuri around the undersea kingdom of

Talokan
, which he has guarded for centuries and is rich in Vibranium. Bitter at the surface world that once rejected him, Namor offers an alliance with Wakanda against the rest of the world but promises to destroy Wakanda first if they refuse. Nakia infiltrates Talokan to rescue Shuri and Williams, and Namor retaliates with an attack against the capital of Wakanda, flooding the city. During the attack, Ramonda drowns after saving Williams from the water. Namor vows to return in a week, and the citizens of Wakanda evacuate to the Jabari Land.

Shuri, using a remnant of the herb that gave Namor's people their underwater abilities, synthetically reconstructs the heart-shaped herb. After ingesting the herb, she is transported to the ancestral plane, where she sees Killmonger, who urges her to kill Namor as revenge for her mother's death. Upon waking up, Shuri discovers she has gained the powers of the Black Panther, and travels to the Jabari Land to meet with the tribes of Wakanda, who accept her as their new protector. M'Baku tries to persuade Shuri to seek a peaceful resolution to the conflict, but she does not listen and orders an immediate counter-attack on Namor.

The Wakandans, on their Sea Leopard vessel, set a trap for Namor, luring him and his warriors to the surface, and a battle ensues. Shuri separates Namor from the rest of his people, intending to dry him out and weaken him. The pair crash on a desert beach and fight. Shuri eventually gains the upper hand, but decides to spare Namor's life, offering him a peaceful alliance. Namor accepts and his warriors retreat.

With that diplomatic resolution, Shuri forfeits her claim to the throne by declining the expectant succession duel and allowing M'Baku to attend for his own claim unopposed by herself. Instead, Shuri, remaining the Black Panther in a separate position, visits Nakia in Haiti and burns her funeral clothes. She then learns that Nakia and T'Challa have a son, Toussaint, who Nakia has been raising in secret far from the pressure of living in Wakanda, and Toussaint reveals that his Wakandan name is T'Challa.

Alternate versions

Several alternate versions of Shuri appear in the animated series What If...?, in which she is voiced by Ozioma Akagha.

  • In an alternate 2008, Shuri is present when her long-lost older brother,
    Ravagers
    .
  • In an alternate 2010, Killmonger murders T'Challa and engineers an American invasion of Wakanda using "Stark Liberator" drone, which Killmonger then defeats, manipulating king T'Chaka into making him the next Black Panther. Shuri is able to see through this deception and brings evidence of it to
    Dora Milaje
    . However, when they arrive, they find him gone.

Concept and creation

Created by the writer

Black Panther (Vol. 4) #2 (May 2005). The character, originally written as a princess of Wakanda and a supporting character, trains to and eventually succeeds her older brother T'Challa, becoming the Black Panther and ruler of Wakanda in her own right.[4][5] In 2018, Marvel published her first vital solo series titled SHURI, written by Nnedi Okorafor, a coming of age story which focused on Shuri dealing with her brother being absent from the throne while exploring her leadership and interests.[6]

Actor Donald Glover and his brother Stephen made some minor contributions to an early draft of the script for Shuri's debut film feature Black Panther, developing the sibling relationship between T'Challa and Shuri.[7] The James Bond character Q was a key influence on the development of Shuri during the writing phase of Black Panther, with director Ryan Coogler saying:

"Going through the process of writing the film and working with my co-writer, Joe Robert Cole, I thought Shuri would be a really cool Q. It'd be really interesting seeing a young African teenager who's manipulated this element [vibranium] in ways that nobody else could and who's confident and able to have their own space. In our minds, Wakanda's a place that looks at age differently than other places... I also thought that as we were writing, I realized that the more stuff we can put in this relationship between T'Challa and his sister, the better off we'll be... Their relationship is built on love, and out of that, so many other things grew. She became so much more than just a Q."[8]

In October 2016, actress Letitia Wright was announced to have joined the cast of Black Panther in an unknown role.[9][10] For the role, Wright "watched YouTube videos of real African princesses" and sought to emulate the idea of "normal girls who happen to be royalty" in her depiction of Shuri.[11] Discussing the film's potential to inspire, Wright said they "went in with the attitude of just telling the truth of the story, taking inspiration from different parts of African countries, whether it's the Zulu tribe or the Ashanti tribe, anywhere we could find true depictions of queens and kings in Africa itself."[12]

In November 2018, Wright was confirmed to be reprising her role as Shuri in the sequel.

colon cancer,[14]
and Kevin Feige later confirmed that the role would not be recast, feeling Boseman's portrayal "transcended any previous iteration of the character in Marvel's past."[15] Screenwriter Joe Robert Cole recalled that after Boseman's death, Nakia and M'Baku were considered to assume the Black Panther mantle before they settled on Shuri, who he defined as an easier choice given the character becomes Black Panther in the comics.[16][17] Coogler always intended to have Shuri eventually take the Black Panther mantle, but it would be "done in a different way where her brother was gonna be alongside her, really explore that, like the comic books, the ways in which T'Challa and Shuri would be Black Panther alongside each other and try to figure out how to defend their nation."[18] When Coogler first told Wright that she would be the new lead of the franchise, the latter was bitter for it being different from how she expected and felt there was an obstacle of "the impostor syndrome that I felt while doing it." She credited the encouragement of Coogler, costar Danai Gurira, and the rest of the cast with aiding the transition.[19] Wright, then "dealing with the emotions of grieving and loss", tapped into those feelings to bring authenticity to Shuri's portrayal in Wakanda Forever, citing both the character and herself as "going through the same journey."[20]

The original iteration of the sequel's script, which focused on T'Challa grieving the time he lost after disintegrating, featured Namor as the antagonist. After Boseman's death, the script changed to focus on the dynamic between Namor and Shuri.[21] According to Michael P. Shawver, there were scenes that hinted at a romantic attraction between Shuri and Namor but they were cut due to filmmakers believing they would jeopardize the plot: "But then you've got to watch out for portraying, for example, Shuri flirting to get what she wants as opposed to being a diplomatic leader and becoming the leader that she needs to be, that she'll get to at the end."[22] Marvel Studios officially remained silent on Shuri's ascension to Black Panther before the release of the film, though the studio alluded to the development with "merchandising designs to posters that provide plenty of hints, to footage shown in trailers and TV spots".[23]

Characterization

Personality and intelligence

Shuri is pretty smart, but she's really relatable as well, so she's not this super-intelligent person who nobody can really connect with and everybody feels like, 'aw, you're too intelligent to be my friend.' Shuri is super cool and ultra amazing, and her mind is her weapon. She uses that to create amazing technology, but then she's able to turn around and tease her brother, so she's still able to be a relatable, down-to-earth character who everybody can vibe with.[24]

Letitia Wright on Shuri's intelligence

In Black Panther, Shuri is portrayed as T'Challa's 18-year-old sister who designs new technology for her country of Wakanda.

Russo Brothers, directors of Avengers: Infinity War and Avengers: Endgame, agreed with the interpretation of her as the smartest character.[28][29]

Letitia Wright described Shuri's intelligence as "really cool", explaining: "Because, you know, we sometimes — when we see people who are 'super intelligent' and 'super smart', they don't really look like me." She further added, "[for] Marvel to be behind it and to be brave enough to say, 'She is the smartest girl in the universe – in the Marvel Universe' and 'Yes, she's younger than everyone'... Her and Peter Parker are pretty much the smartest kids on the block.'"[30] In another interview, addressing Shuri as an inspiration for young people, she explained that "Tony and Banner are great, not only as actors but in the films themselves. They're amazing, iconic characters, so to be able to be on par with them... and that's not even something I said! I didn't say that, the head of Marvel said that, and it kind of created a chain reaction. And Nate Moore said those things, so talk to those guys! They felt really strongly that Shuri was the smartest person in the universe, and I'm not going to downplay that. Young people are the future, so it's only right to allow that to be the thing that's being said online."[24]

Coogler called Black Panther: Wakanda Forever "a mother-daughter movie" with Ramonda trying to impart Shuri with the lesson that over the course of a long life, she is "going to have to grieve things, she's gonna lose things, and she can't allow that to change her, she can't allow that to shut her down." Coogler adds that for them, the film "was a test of did Shuri learn the lessons that her parents were trying to teach her? And how do you know if she learned the lessons?"[31] Wright described Shuri as burying "herself in her technology" while grieving her brother amid the time she spent in her laboratory and commented that a young black woman who is both a princess and scientist has never been explored before on such a "major scale" before.[32] Renaldo Matadeen cites her death by Thanos right as she and T'Challa "were recovering and forging a future" as being the result of outsiders meddling and given that this is followed soon after by "her brother's tragedy, it's understandable she'd resent the outside world, especially one that keeps seeing Wakanda as a threat or a convenient ally."[33] Scott Thomas declared that "Shuri's story illuminates how having faith means absconding from what we want faith to yield to us" when institutions keep science and faith apart and that believing "too strongly that something is meant to be (to try and right what's already happened) is the fastest path to vengeance and an unrighteous life."[34] Joshua Fox compares Shuri's arc to Killmonger's "in that her anger and need for vengeance were corrupting her and made her no better than the people she wanted to take down", viewing her journey in the sequel as "a reflection of Killmonger's path of rage-fueled vengeance".[35]

Relationship with Namor

Meredith Loftus notes the many similarities between Shuri and Namor, as both "were born and raised in a land separate from the full devastation of colonialism", are very proud of their homelands, serve as leaders who want to protect their people, and are "broken people."[36] William Goodman observes that Shuri is "keen to set Namor's ablaze" and with the film hinting at "even a slight possibility of Shuri giving into her anger makes it one of the more radically compelling emotional arcs of the Marvel Cinematic Universe to date".[37] Miles Surrey equates Shuri's arc in Wakanda Forever with that of her brother in Civil War and the original Black Panther film: "By crossing paths with Namor, who holds contempt for the surface world because it forced his Mayan ancestors to retreat to the oceans, Shuri is facing her own equivalent to Killmonger: an antagonist whose motivations are understandable, and who represents the temptation to allow anger to dictate your decisions."[38]

Appearance and technology

Black Panther costume designer Ruth E. Carter included an Adinkra symbol representing purpose on one of Shuri's shirts, similar to a Waawa motif, explaining that Shuri "certainly has a purpose in Wakanda".[39] Shuri's artificial intelligence 'Griot' was voiced by Trevor Noah,[40][41] with the name 'Griot' being a West African term for a historian or storyteller.[42]

For Wakanda Forever, Carter and others working on the sequel wanted clothing with "somber color palette to bring more of the attention to the emotions of the scenes". Carter noted that the grays and purple on Shuri's tracksuit were a homage to the royal color but were "more of a muted purple with some blue in it."[43] Shuri dons a Black Panther suit for her final battle with Namor. Head of Visual Development for Marvel Studios Ryan Meinerding notes that Shuri's suit "is kind of a combination between T'Challa's suit and Killmonger's suit. A mix of the silver and the gold. That's the Panther she needed to become in order to fight Namor at the end."[44] Carter added that Shuri's Black Panther suit was designed "to delicately enhance the dynamic figure of the panther suit" with more adornments than T'Challa's and viewed their inclusion and focus as giving the suit its femininity and not straying "too far away from her form, the silhouette of a woman, with a bust and hips and shoulders."[45]

Reception

Critical response and analysis

Reviews initially were positive of the character and the character's potential for the future, being described as a "fan-favorite".[46] Jacob Stolworthy of British publication

Disney princess we need and deserve".[50] Both Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly and Sam Sewell-Peterson singled out Wright and Gurira for praise, with Greenblatt writing that the pair felt the most "like they could easily hold their own films."[57][58]

The author of

young adult fiction novel Shuri: A Black Panther Novel, Nic Stone, praised the film version of the character claiming "I fell hard for the witty STEM genius girl who totally stole the whole show".[59] Having been labeled as the MCU's smartest character, it is often debated in media whether she or Tony Stark is smarter.[60][46][50]

Wright's portrayal of Shuri in Wakanda Forever, in which she succeeds her brother as Black Panther, was mostly well-received.[61][62] Lauding the cast, A. O. Scott of The New York Times wrote, "Bassett, Wright, Gurira, Williams and Coel — rejoined by Lupita Nyong'o as Nakia, who shows up a bit late in the action — form the kind of fractious, formidable ensemble that should be a franchise in its own right."[63] Empire praised Wright as finding "compelling volatility for Shuri to take the spotlight";[64] Forbes noted Wright's "multilayered, conflicted characterization is as full an emotional journey as any we've seen in Marvel's expansive universe of heroes" with a slow transformation from reactive to "more determined and proactive";[65] The Harvard Crimson writer Kieran J. Farrell observes that while Wakanda Forever "does become rather bloated at points, the completion of Shuri's journey is executed extremely well in the end, which is undoubtedly most important";[66] Ross Bonaime of Collider wrote that Wakanda Forever was by and large "Wright's film, as the weight of her responsibilities grows, while she still attempts to ignore her heartbreak" and lauded the actress as beautifully personifying "the pain, frustration, rage, and fear that this film inherently has about having to say goodbye".[67] However, some commentators were not receptive to Shuri's ascended role,[68][69] with Eric Webb admitting that Wright "gives Shuri new depth, but the role of protagonist never quite clicks",[70] and Evan Dondlinger of The Daily Nebraskan lamenting that Wright "simply just doesn't have the star power to propel this series forward as it's [sic] new protagonist, which is neither her fault nor the filmmaker's."[71]

Awards and nominations

Letitia Wright received various accolades and nominations for her portrayal of Shuri in Black Panther.

Letitia Wright at the 2017 San Diego Comic-Con
Year Award Category Work Result Ref.
2018
Saturn Awards
Best Performance by a Younger Actor Black Panther Nominated [72]
2018 MTV Movie & TV Awards Best On-Screen Team Nominated [73]
Scene Stealer Nominated
2018 Teen Choice Awards Choice Sci-Fi Movie Actress Won [74]
Choice Breakout Movie Star Nominated [74]
2019 Black Reel Awards Best Supporting Actress Nominated [75]
Best Breakthrough Performance, Female Won
2019 NAACP Image Awards Outstanding Breakthrough Performance in a Motion Picture Won [76]
Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Motion Picture Nominated [77]
2019
Screen Actors Guild Awards
Outstanding Performance by a Cast in a Motion Picture Won [78]
2023 NAACP Image Awards Outstanding Actress in a Motion Picture Black Panther: Wakanda Forever Won [79]
2023 Black Reel Awards Outstanding Actress Nominated [80]
2023 Kids' Choice Awards Favorite Movie Actress Won [81]
2023 Critics' Choice Super Awards Best Actress in a Superhero Movie Won [82]

In other media

The book Wakanda Files: A Technological Exploration of the Avengers and Beyond focuses on the Avengers from Shuri's perspective, referencing the events of the films and the television series Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D..[83][84]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ As depicted in the 2016 film Captain America: Civil War.[3]

References

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  58. ^ Sewell-Peterson, Sam (February 21, 2019). "Black Panther (2018) Review". The Film Magazine. Letitia Wright's impish gadget gal Shuri (T'Challa's sister, who must surely be destined for a scene where she emasculates Tony Stark through tech talk) and Danai Guira's deadly spear-wielder Okoye (imagine how formidable you have to be to be asked to protect a bulletproof warrior-king). Both are undeniable highlights of the film, and Marvel better be busy writing them into anything and everything they can.
  59. ^ Canfield, David. "Exclusive: An original 'Black Panther' novel centered on Shuri will publish next year". EW.com. Retrieved May 13, 2021.
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  62. ^ Williams, Abrigail (November 17, 2022). "'Black Panther: Wakanda Forever' celebrates the legacy of a king". The GW Hatchet. As the sequel parallels the loss of King T'Challa with the real-life loss of Boseman, cast members like Letitia Wright, Angela Bassett, Danai Gurira and Lupita Nyong'o give outstanding performances that leave audiences with a palpable sense of the raw emotion and revere they bring to the screen. As their respective characters Princess Shuri, Queen Ramonda, Okoye, and Nakia navigate life without T'Challa and the Black Panther, the characters find themselves answering those essential questions about grief, legacy and protecting one's own.
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