The Commercial Appeal

Victoria Alonso discusses superheroe­s, multiverse­s

- Sigal Ratner-arias

NEW YORK – For more than 20 years, acclaimed Argentine filmmaker Victoria Alonso has helped steer Marvel’s cinematic juggernaut to ever-growing heights of success. With this week’s release of the “Doctor Strange” sequel, she is poised for another hit, and will fulfill a dream of debuting a superhero she’s wanted to see onscreen since she started at Marvel Studios.

Alonso started at Marvel in 2006 coproducin­g “Iron Man,” the studio’s first film, which was released two years later. Since then, she’s become one of Hollywood’s most powerful executives and her 25 Marvel Cinematic Universe movies – including the recent “Spiderman” blockbuste­r – have grossed $23 billion worldwide at the box office.

Adding to the list this week is “Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness” starring Benedict Cumberbatc­h – which continues to explore the notion of multiple realities and interconne­cted stories, in this case from “Wandavisio­n” and “Spider-man: No Way Home”. The film also introduces moviegoers for the first time to a young Latina superhero, America Chavez, played by Xochitl Gomez. Alonso, who last year was promoted to president of physical and post production, visual effects and animation production at Marvel Studios, spoke recently to The Associated Press from Miami about multiverse­s, superheroe­s, her work and the future of cinema.

AP: If the possibilit­ies for superhero movies seemed endless, the multiverse takes this notion to another level. How far do you think the Marvel Cinematic Universe can go?

Alonso: For me, it has no limits. We have I think 6,000 characters in our library, so now that we have opened the door to the multiverse and the door to madness (laughs), nobody can stop us!

AP: The mix of universes in the latest “Spider-man” was exciting for the audience, especially the inclusion of multiple actors who have portrayed the hero (Tom Holland, Andrew Garfield and Tobey Maguire). What can you tell us about the multiverse of “Doctor Strange”?

Alonso: Well, I think it’s a different movie in that respect. Spider-man is Spider-man and the meeting has been very exciting because the generation­s of people who have seen one, the other and the third (actors), to be able to see them together seems to have been a big dream for many. Having Doctor Strange as part of that movie also seemed to have been a great addition. To be able to have him now in his own film again, with the characters from his original story and also with Wanda Maximoff and the introducti­on of America Chavez, it’s a great opportunit­y to be able to take them to another place, a place we that haven’t been to.

AP: Speaking of America Chavez, what does it mean to you to have a Latinx superhero?

Alonso: America Chavez is one of the characters that I’ve been waiting for since I started working at Marvel Studios, and I’ve been waiting for her with great desire and the eagerness to start telling her story. As you know, these characters sometimes have a minor part in a movie, then they grow, have their own film or their streaming show, like we have with Moon Knight. To be able to have her in our MCU is an honor.

 ?? FILE/INVISION/AP ?? Xochitl Gomez, left, and Marvel Studios’ president of production Victoria Alonso appear at the 2001 premiere of “Spider-man: No Way Home.”
FILE/INVISION/AP Xochitl Gomez, left, and Marvel Studios’ president of production Victoria Alonso appear at the 2001 premiere of “Spider-man: No Way Home.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States