All babies look like actor Wallace Shawn. Any resemblance to their parents is overridden by their resemblance to Wallace Shawn and may be coincidental or imagined.
It's pretty rare that I haven't heard of a movie, but this is only the second time I've heard of this movie, and the first time was on reddit yesterday. Was that you?
I totally see what you're saying, that the conclusion of Shuri's arc doesn't feel as organic as it could.
I think the movie just changes its frame of reference, or rather Shuri does. Her redemption moment is her deciding that she's not Killmonger in Black Panther; she's T'Challa in Civil War. That final scene is parallel to when her brother caught up with Zemo in Siberia and showed mercy, and her decision to do the same is how she honors her brother.
It wasn't perfect, but it couldn't be without Chadwick Boseman.
I liked how Shuri's arc mirrored T'Challa's arc in Civil War. It was each of their first appearances as Black Panther, and they each struggled with vengeance in the face of a murdered parent.
Overall I thought it was a great movie. The plotting was so tight. The way all the elements tied together was just really well done.
T'Challa's death being tied to the heart shaped herb, which then creates a tie between Wakanda and Talokan, as well as giving a plausible and satisfying workaround to the corner they wrote themselves into by destroying the herb in the first movie.
Namor's motivation being tied to the conflict (and conclusion) of the first movie, specifically because of the presence of vibranium in Wakanda and Talokan, which creates another tie.
And of course the heart shaped herb gets its power from the vibranium, so we again get to focus on a story that takes place with a consistent set of rules, because all the hand-waving is pretty much confined to that one thing.
The only exception to that is Riri, but the arc reactor is well established in the universe, so that's not a big deal. Plus she also ties back to the conclusion of the first movie (Wakandan outreach), so it's not like she's coming out of nowhere.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that one of the pitfalls of superhero movies is that sometimes elements of the story can just pop up in a way that feels arbitrary and unsatisfying. Wakanda Forever deftly avoids this. All of the new stuff branches out organically from established elements from the first movie. Very tight writing.
Seriously? People live their lives in those houses. They sleep, cook, decorate, throw parties, watch movies, raise children. Just because the outside isn't non-conformist enough for your personal tastes, that's not a home?
I used a bidet in Europe in my thirties, and then my ass was all wet. I could dry it with toilet paper and leave bits of toilet paper in my ass hair, or I could dry it with a dedicated ass towel, which is clearly less sanitary than just wiping.
It's wet and uncomfortable, and it's not any better than just wiping. Running a bit of water over something doesn't really clean it anyway.
So it sounds like you're checking to see when the light turns off, to know that the car is going.
Sounds like what we actually need is a green accelerator light on the front of the car.