"I hope people will watch this movie and see the hero in themselves," said star Chadwick Boseman.


Director Ryan Coogler was treated like a king at Monday's Black Panther premiere.


Enthusiasm was high ahead of the screening at the Dolby Theatre, and Coogler earned a sustained standing ovation when he took the stage to introduce the cast of his Marvel Studios film, including his leading man Chadwick Boseman, frequent collaborator Michael B. Jordon, Lupita Nyong’o, Danai Gurira, Martin Freeman, Daniel Kaluuya, Letitia Wright, Winston Duke, Angela Bassett, Forest Whitaker, Andy Serkis and Sterling K. Brown.


"He's a very, very honest director. He'll tell you what he believes in," Boseman told THR of his director. "You trust what he's saying, because he lives it, he's dreaming about it. He's willing to put himself through sickness in order to get the right thing on the screen."


Coogler, Boseman and many other castmembers wore clothing honoring the film's African's roots, while the (royal) purple carpet was flanked by Black Panther's all-female bodyguards the Dora Milaje and was lit by futuristic lamps worthy of Wakanda, which is the most technologically advanced nation in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.


Black Panther, which focuses on T'Challa's (Boseman) coming to terms with becoming king, is the most diverse Marvel Studios film ever, and on the carpet, stars spoke of the importance of representation in film.


"I hope people will watch this movie and see the hero in themselves. Even if it's a white person who sees it, if they can see a black character and identify with them, it changes a little bit about how our society is," said Boseman.


One particularly enthusiastic section of the Dolby Theatre featured a score of directors, including Marvel filmmakers Taika Waititi, James Gunn, Jon Watts, Peyton Reed, Joe and Anthony Russo, Jon Favreau and Joss Whedon. Also nearby were Ava DuVernay, Elizabeth Banks, Kumail Nanjiani, Emily V. Gordon, Donald Glover and Josh Gadd.


Boseman's co-star Kaluuya was fresh off landing a best actor Oscar nomination last week for Get Out, Jordan Peele's acclaimed horror film that put issues of race in America in the spotlight.


"The reason I do the films is because I believe in them. Because I believe in them and I want to watch them," he told THR. "I kind of have to remove myself from it. In the bigger picture, though, what's the script saying? What's the story saying? What's the politics saying?"


For those who weren't in attendance, here's a sampling of the reaction that circulated online after the screening.


Black Panther opens Feb. 16.