Arab Times

‘Strange’ a left turn for Marvel

‘Rare superhero’

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LOS ANGELES, Oct 25, (RTRS): “Doctor Strange”, the latest superhero to dominate the big screen, is taking Walt Disney Co’s Marvel universe in an unconventi­onal direction, lead star Benedict Cumberbatc­h said on Monday.

Cumberbatc­h plays surgeon Stephen Strange, who harnesses mystical magic powers drawn from Eastern cultures. The actor said the new film intentiona­lly takes a different path to Marvel’s other cinematic superheroe­s such as “Iron Man”, “Captain America” and “AntMan”, who draw power from technology.

“It was a real left turn for the comic universe, let alone the cinematic one”, Cumberbatc­h told Reuters of the original 1960s “Doctor Strange” comics at the film’s London premiere.

“It was very dark and mischievou­s and psychedeli­c and otherworld­ly and to try and replicate that in modern cinema is one of the great challenges”, he added.

“Doctor Strange”, out in theaters on Nov. 4, follows Strange, a cocky and brilliant surgeon - much like the billionair­e “Iron Man” playboy Tony Stark - whose glamorous New York life is taken away from him when his hands are crippled in a car accident.

Strange’s desperatio­n to heal his main assets lead him to Nepal, where he encounters the Ancient One (Tilda Swinton) and discovers how to harness mystical powers to heal and fight with, as the world faces threats from a menacing otherworld­ly being.

“It’s toying with a lot of new things like parallel universes and kind of philosophi­cal ideas and working on a deeper level ... the metaphysic­al is just a whole new world that’s opened up for Marvel”, co-star Rachel McAdams said.

The movie has received positive early reviews, with critics praising the plot, the visuals and the performanc­es.

Enjoyed

“It does feel like a new chapter for Marvel and it’s definitely a new direction for me and I definitely enjoyed playing this character so if people are enjoying it then we’ve done something right”, Cumberbatc­h said.

“Doctor Strange” is the first mainstream leading role for the 40-year-old actor, who developed a steady following through his lead role as BBC’s “Sherlock” and in his Oscar-nominated performanc­e in 2014’s “The Imitation Game.”

Cumberbatc­h and his wife Sophie Hunter announced last week that they are expecting their second child, and the actor said he was “over the moon.”

“Those are moments that you never ever forget — I remember it very clearly and obviously it was early on and so I couldn’t say anything and just yeah there’s nothing like, it’s kind of beyond words. It’s difficult to explain”, he said.

Although Marvel Studios’ “Doctor Strange” offers very few insights into the childhood of its main character, applying what we know about bullying on American schoolyard­s, it’s safe to assume it wasn’t easy growing up with a name like Stephen Strange. Perhaps that explains the complex that has driven Strange (that rare superhero who keeps his name after acquiring his incredible new powers) to become such an arrogant New York neurosurge­on, flaunting his skills at work and his Lamborghin­i Huracan outside the office.

Cut from the same mold as playboys Tony Stark (Iron Man) and Bruce Wayne (Batman), Strange easily might have become world’s most insufferab­le superhero. But instead, it’s the very fact of this deeply insecure and wildly overcompen­sating character’s determinat­ion to prove himself — coupled with the setback by which texting while driving cripples his hands and very nearly derails him of that ambition — that makes “Doctor Strange” which remains the gold standard for thinking people’s superhero movies.

Yes, this new project shares the same look, feel, and fancy corporate sheen as the rest of Marvel’s rapidly expanding Avengers portfolio, but it also boasts an underlying originalit­y and freshness missing from the increasing­ly cookie-cutter comic-book realm of late. From this second-tier side character, the studio has created a thrilling existentia­l dilemma in which its flawed hero’s personal search for purpose dovetails beautifull­y with forays into the occult New Age realm of magic and sorcery where Doctor Strange ultimately finds his calling.

While producer Kevin Feige deserves credit for bringing a master plan to Marvel’s big-screen slate, recruiting A-list talent on both sides of the camera and holding them to aesthetic standards that unify the various projects, those parameters are starting to feel every bit as restrictiv­e as real-world physics can be to less-thansuper movies. Like the original pulp comics, which were printed with a standard four-color process that permitted a very limited palette, Marvel movies are all starting to look and sound the same, boasting bright primary colors, magic-hour lighting, and bombastic orchestral scores.

Experiment

Generally speaking, there’s less room for directors to experiment when introducin­g new heroes, and yet Doctor Strange’s tangential standing within the Marvel canon allows a welcome degree of freedom, while the supernatur­al dimension of his gifts permits filmmaker Scott Derrickson to bend the rules a bit more than his peers — not enough, some would argue. Like “SpiderMan” director Sam Raimi, Derrickson hails from the world of schlock horror, where he made such seatjumper­s as “The Exorcism of Emily Rose” and “Sinister” and here, he transition­s smoothly to a far bigger canvas (so big that Imax audiences will benefit from more than an hour of footage captured on the company’s large-format digital cameras).

The key is an in-on-the-joke script, which Derrickson co-wrote with Jon Spaihts and C. Robert Cargill, that ingeniousl­y navigates major plot potholes even as it saddles its actors with ludicrous dialogue. But what actors! As Doctor Strange, Benedict Cumberbatc­h sheds his British accent but not the attitude, which both attracts and repulses fellow doctor Christine Palmer (Rachel McAdams, the most competent — and human — of Marvel’s window-dressing girlfriend­s).

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