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Ryan Coogler says Chadwick Boseman’s death hit Michael B. Jordan ‘the hardest’

By IANS | Updated: April 8, 2025 15:46 IST

Los Angeles, April 8 “Black Panther” director Ryan Coogler has talked about how late Hollywood star Chadwick Boseman's ...

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Los Angeles, April 8 “Black Panther” director Ryan Coogler has talked about how late Hollywood star Chadwick Boseman's death affected him and Michael B. Jordan.

Coogler directed the 2018 film, which had the character T’Challa, essayed by Boseman, return home to Wakanda to take his place as king. However, Erik Killmonger, played by Jordan, threatened the balance of power and the safety of others. Two years after the film's release in August 2020, Boseman died of colon cancer at 43.

"Out of all of my actors, Chad's death actually hit Mike (Jordan) the hardest," said Coogler, who noted that it was something he previously didn't have to talk about until his current press tour for Sinners during an appearance on The Breakfast Club, reports people.com.

"He was a fully baked man from the South," Coogler said of Boseman, who was born in South Carolina.

"He was an old school man's man and compared to that dude when we worked together bro, me and Mike were kids."

The director said Boseman changed his and Jordan's life in more ways than one.

Coogler said: "He was the kind of teacher who you never knew you were getting a lesson from when he taught. It was all by example and what he gave me and Michael was patience."

"He moved at an old-school pace and he took his time (but) he was always early. He was that type of dude. And Mike will tell you this, I told him man, I said, 'Hey bro, what would Chad do in this role? If he had this role what would he do?' 'Cause Chad never broke action," he continued.

Coogler recalled a time when an executive from Disney was on set during the filming of Black Panther, and Boseman was still in character and talking in his T'Challa accent.

"They were freaked out and I was like, 'Don't be freaked out, he's a working man. He doesn't turn it off till we wrap’," said Coogler.

The director said he used Boseman's commitment and work ethic, which Jordan saw "up close," to help them "lock in" while filming their new project.

Talking about Sinners, the film has Jordan playing twin brothers who, after leaving their "troubled lives behind," return to their hometown to start again, only to discover that an even greater evil is waiting for them.

Sinners will be released on April 18.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

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