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'Black Panther' Passes 'Titanic' To Become Third Movie All-Time at U.S. Box Office

'Black Panther' Passes 'Titanic' To Become Third Movie All-Time at U.S. Box Office Black Panther  has been smashing all kinds of records at the box office. It's had the best opening week for any Marvel movie ever, it's the biggest February opening at the box office, and it tied James Cameron's  Avatar  as having the longest run atop the box office at five weeks.

'Black Panther' Passes 'Titanic' To Become Third Movie All-Time at U.S. Box Office

'Black Panther' Passes 'Titanic' To Become Third Movie All-Time at U.S. Box Office Black Panther  has been smashing all kinds of records at the box office. It's had the best opening week for any Marvel movie ever, it's the biggest February opening at the box office, and it tied James Cameron's  Avatar  as having the longest run atop the box office at five weeks.

Black Panther 2 Release Date, Spoilers and What We Know

Black Panther 2 Release Date, Spoilers and What We Know Black Panther 2  is inevitable at this point. And Marvel has promised a number of sequels and spin-offs.  Black Panther  has become one of the biggest movies in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. It now holds the record for biggest February debut and has gone on to have the second-highest second weekend in box office history. Ryan Coogler has dropped a cultural phenomenon in theaters and moviegoers who wouldn't normally go see superhero movies are going in droves to see Chadwick Boseman's T'Challa and Wakanda on the big screen.

The 10 Most-Anticipated Debut Albums in Hip-Hop History

The 10 Most-Anticipated Debut Albums in Hip-Hop History Not everybody is built to be The Next Big Thing. In hip-hop, artists have been devoured by expectations. From Bad Boy would-be star Shyne to battle rap casualty Canibus, the glare of the spotlight can burn some careers to a crisp.

Drake - God’s Plan

Heaven or hell? The problem of the posthumous album

Heaven or hell? The problem of the posthumous album Posthumous albums come in two forms: the Cobble and the Legacy. The former is the least lovable. Michael Jackson’s first posthumous release, 2010’s Michael, was so threadbare that his family strongly questioned whether it was him singing on three of its tracks – the so-called Cascio Tapes. “I immediately said it wasn’t his voice,” mused brother Randy on Twitter when he heard them. Artistically, Cobbles are normally justified on grounds of completism: that they “tell us something new” about the artist, and occasionally turf up the odd gem that “deserves to see the light of day”. On that score, something like Jackson’s Do You Know Where Your Children Are, from his second posthumous album, Xscape (2014), ticks all boxes: both a solid jam and a jarring lyrical premise. Cobbles can also offer Stalinesque revisionism: some of Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes’s verses on TLC’s 3D – released seven months after her death in 2002 – were spliced t