The last
Favorite Characters post I have from Black
Panther for the time being, Okoye is certainly not least. The Dora Milaje general is fierce, devoted,
and formidable, fine qualities that any ruler would want at their side
(Okoye-related spoilers.)
Okoye
joins Black Panther characters like
T’Challa and Nakia in generally being more serious than a lot of MCU
characters, many of whom toss off one-liners as easily as they land
punches. Oh, she can be wry when she
likes to, and when she shows off her smile, it’s dazzling. But Okoye isn’t playing around. No doubt she’s trained long and hard to get
where she is, and she recognizes both the privilege and the responsibility of
her position as the head of the Dora Milaje.
Whether she’s in battle, undercover, or chasing bad guys through city
streets, she’s sharp and focused, singleminded in her aim of accomplishing her
task for the sake of Wakanda.
Because
more than anything, that’s what Okoye is about.
She’s a powerful badass with incredible fight moves, and it’s all in
service to her country. Not that she has
no other priorities – she does, like her friends and her love, W’Kabi – but
Wakanda will always come first. It’s
why, when T’Challa is bested by Killmonger and thought slain, Okoye and the
Dora Milaje remain at Killmonger’s side instead of fleeing the city like Nakia,
Shuri, and Ramonda to find a way to overthrow him. Okoye’s life is governed by duty, and because
T’Challa is seemingly killed according to the rules of ritual combat, she
believes Killmonger’s claim to the throne is legitimate, and no matter how much
she valued T’Challa as a person, she cannot circumvent her vow to serve the
king, whoever that may be.
That’s
one of the most intriguing aspects of Okoye to me, and her scene in the throne
room with Nakia is one of my favorites of hers.
This idea that she’s just as torn up over T’Challa’s “death” as Nakia
and the others, but she can’t allow her feelings to get in the way of her duty,
and so she stays. Nakia is horrified by
Okoye’s stance, but I understand where it comes from. And when T’Challa reappears and Okoye
realizes the challenge was never completed, she’s able to invalidate Killmonger’s
claim and lead the Dora Milaje to back T’Challa as their rightful king. Even there, though, fighting for the king she
both is sworn to and believes in, we
again see her placing Wakanda about other, more personal concerns; she goes
head to head with W’Kabi and is prepared to do what she needs to if he doesn’t
back down.
Another
facet of Okoye’s devotion to Wakanda is how its culture shapes her. She takes pride in her country’s traditions
and language, its weapons and customs.
Going undercover in South Korea, she loathes the wig she uses to cover
her shaved head (which marks her out as a Dora Milaje,) and when her cover is
blown, she discards it the first chance she gets, throwing it in the face of an
opponent to obscure his vision. She
scoffs at guns, primitive weapons compared to her Vibranium spear, and she can
stand on top of a car like she’s riding a chariot, solid as a statue as she
bears down on her target. Without a
doubt, a warrior you’d want in your corner.
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