They fight crime in old cotton hoodies, shimmering black capes and glowing LED unitards. They can repel bullets with their bodies, leap atop speeding cars like a svelte cat or dissipate in a puff of eerie smoke, all in the name of justice.
But most impressive of all: They have a newfound power to break color barriers that were once considered impenetrable.
From Black Panther to Marvelโs Luke Cage, 2018 has seen more African-American superheroes in their own namesake productions run, leap and fly to the forefront of pop culture than any other time in history.
If it wasnโt the blockbuster Disney film set in an African country so advanced it made America look like a developing nation, it was the steel-bending heroics of Netflixโs Mr. Cage as he defended Harlem, or family man and high school principal Jefferson Pierce electrocuting bad guys as the protagonist on the CWโs Black Lightning, or Cloak, of Freeformโs Cloak & Dagger, challenging corrupt New Orleans cops and robbers with his empathic abilities.
โIt used to be that one show had to be representative of all black people,โ says Cheo Hodari Coker, showrunner of Marvelโs Luke Cage and a former Los Angeles Times music writer. โNow you have several black superhero narratives on television, and at the same time you also have shows like Atlanta, Queen Sugar, Insecure, The Chi and Power. Thereโs so many different elements of the black experience on television now, it takes the pressure off any one (show) to represent everybody.โ
Black comic book characters date to the 1970s, but on screen, theyโve historically been sidekicks or villains if not entirely absent from Hollywood and televisionโs ever-increasing adaptations.
But as Ku Klux Klan rallies astoundingly have become a thing again, and unarmed black men and women are still disproportionately the victims of police violence, and the perpetrators of killings like Trayvon Martinโs are given impunity simply because they believed a hoodie-clad teen was โup to no good,โ avengers of color couldnโt be more timely.
Cress Williams, who plays high-voltage hero Black Lightning, lists some of the ripped-from-the-headlines issues his character was up against in Season 1: โCrime, police corruption, political corruption, drugs, police brutality.โ
Williams, whose versatile career stretches from Prison Break to Hart of Dixie, continued: โSometimes in a fantasy context, itโs easier to look at truths because you see them from a distance. Itโs like โOh, itโs sci fi or superhero,โ so itโs a great medium to look at some of our ills. Even though (our show features) a fictional city, itโs kind of representative of so many cities across America that seem forgotten and lost. With the show, we can look at it from that safe distance.โ
Now there are enough avengers of color to tell several stories with the latitude only fantasy provides. Who wouldnโt love to bend a muggerโs gun into a pretzel as Cage has done, or terrorize those gangs that have terrorized the neighborhood, a la Black Lightning, or catch dirty vice cops red-handed like Cloak?
Their recent impact on screen will no doubt be felt this week at San Diegoโs annual Comic-Con. The event will be full of fan boys and girls deconstructing the genesis of Cageโs powers, claiming they were into Black Panther before anyone else knew the name TโChalla, and chasing down characters from Cloak & Dagger for selfies (then itโs back to stalking The Walking Dead cast members).
This year also brought us more black female heroes, though not in lead roles. Domino (Zazie Beetz) brought luck to the foul-mouthed Deadpool, the fierce Wakanda warriors of Black Panther kept their king safe, and Black Lightningโs formidable daughters, Thunder (Nafessa Williams) and Lightning (China Anne McClain), both aided in saving their glow-in-the-dark dad more than once.
Samuel L. Jacksonโs chilly character Frozone also returned this year in Pixarโs The Incredibles 2. He preceded the current wave of African-American heroes but still has the coolest powers of the pack.
The uptick in representation could be studios and networks responding to criticism that their productions and programming have forever been whiter than the hair of Game of Thronesโโ Daenerys Targaryen. But thereโs also the oldest motivator in show biz to consider.
โThe color Hollywood cares about the most is green,โ says Coker, who worked on both seasons of Luke Cage. โHaving more cultural heroes is lucrative. Itโs different than seeing your average โexpectedโ superhero, and culture is the cheapest special effect around. Or I should say itโs the cheapest but most profound special effect available.โ
Notably it was Black Panther, not a Captain America or Iron Man movie, that became the third-highest-grossing film ever in America. The production starring Chadwick Boseman made a staggering $1.3 billion worldwide after its premiere in February.
The film certainly set a high bar and high expectations for the other franchise superhero projects arriving in its wake. The Afro-Latin character Miles Morales is the man behind the mask in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, Sonyโs forthcoming animated feature starring The Get Downโs Shameik Moore as the voice of the web-spinning defender.
As with all superheroes, Cage, Cloak, Mr. Panther and Black Lightning are conflicted, torn between their personal lives and public crime fighting. But for black superheroes, the idea of using violence to combat violence carries more weight given Hollywoodโs go-to stereotypes for characters of color.
Williams says that struggle is real for high school principal Jefferson Pierce (aka Black Lightning). But after so many decades of watching other superheroes save the world when his own neighborhood was burning, he found that enacting change required a new approach.
In his case, that meant enforcing a strong curriculum for his students by day and upending crime with high-voltage zaps by night.
โHe has tried education as a means to positively affect his community,โ says Williams, โbut sometimes you just gotta mess stuff up as well.โ
