BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — Ryan Coogler was feeling overwhelmed by "Black Panther."
It was only his third feature film and, at just 30-years-old, he was making it with Hollywood's most powerful studio under enormous cultural expectations and with $200 million to get it right.
And he really didn't want it to "suck" (his word).
The Oakland, California, native got into filmmaking almost on a lark when a creative writing professor at St. Mary's College in Moraga, California, where he was attending on a football scholarship, suggested he look into screenwriting. He had thought he would play football and be a doctor, maybe, to help his community. But this idea of being a filmmaker took hold, and after making a splash at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, he had solidified himself as one of the most promising and vibrant young directors to watch.
His first feature, the indie "Fruitvale Station," about the final 24 hours of Oscar Grant III, put him on the map after winning the Sundance Grand Jury and Audience prizes in 2013, a handful of critics groups awards and a Film Independent Spirit Award. His second, the "Rocky" spin-off "Creed," put him on another level.
The $35 million film grossed over $173 million worldwide and reinvigorated a franchise for Warner Bros.
It's the kind of one-two punch that made people who didn't even know him at the time, like actress Danai Gurira, feel proud.
"I had been at Sundance the same time he was there with 'Fruitvale Station.' I had so much respect and pride," Gurira said. "I had never met him but I was proud of him, of what he'd done and how he'd moved forward in the world and told stories that needed to be told."