A good part of the film Black Panther takes place in Birnin Zana, the capital of Wakanda, a fictional African nation protected from outside influences by the Black Panther, whose real identity is T'Challa, the king of the technologically advanced, but isolationist country. What is striking about Wakandan city-life is how different it is from what we have become accustomed to seeing in movies offering a view of modernity, as well as in our own travels through the rapidly growing urban areas of much of Asia.
马克·马尔金在《建筑文摘》中写道,与我们期待在未来城市看到的无处不在的不锈钢玻璃高塔和失去生机的街头生活不同,电影为我们呈现出了一幅充满非洲质感、设计和颜色的丰富多彩的城市图景,这种城市围绕人与人之间的互动而存在。
Architectural Digest's Marc Malkin writes that rather than seeing the ubiquitous glass-and-steel towers and sterile street life that we have come to expect in the cities of tomorrow, we are shown in the film a colorful cityscape infused with African textures, designs, and colors, organized to emphasize human interaction.
这一元素为这个虚拟的非洲之都营造出一份独特、难忘的“氛围”——在那里摩天大厦矗立于活力四射的社区。
All this contributes to the fictional capital's unique, memorable “vibe” – one where skyscrapers rise from vibrant communities below.
【来自好莱坞的讯息:拥抱过去 塑造城市未来】相关文章:
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