The Chronicle

Many faces of acting Strange

BENEDICT CUMBERBATC­H EMBRACES THE MADNESS IN HIS LATEST MARVEL FLICK

- JAMES WIGNEY

Benedict Cumberbatc­h plays multiple versions of his famous superhero character in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, sometimes in the same scene.

So how did multiple Oscarnomin­ee Cumberbatc­h, feted as one of the finest actors of his generation, rise to the challenge of having to act opposite Oscarnomin­ee Cumberbatc­h, feted as one of the finest actors of his generation?

“I’m pretty f--king great,” he jokes over Zoom call from Los Angeles, before quickly changing his mind. “I’m joking. I was terrible, I wasn’t there – I didn’t even turn up. What sort of arrogance is that? Who works like that, I mean seriously.”

Marvel fans know and love Cumberbatc­h’s goateed, redcaped Master of the Mystic Arts from the first Doctor Strange film, Avengers: Infinity War, Avengers: Endgame, and last year’s Spider-Man: No Way Home, all of which have been critical and box office hits.

The new film, the 28th in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, follows on from No Way Home and finds the good Doctor Stephen Strange flitting between alternate realities, which are home to other versions of the character said to include Sinister Strange, Supreme Strange, Defender Strange and even Zombie Strange.

“It was a little bit daunting,” admits Cumberbatc­h of the Strange match-ups achieved through studio trickery and stand-ins. “The idea on the page was interestin­g but doing it was really hard. I much preferred it when I had real profession­als to act with. But it was a nice challenge and fun.”

Having now spent more than six years in the MCU after being cast as Strange ahead of Jared Leto, Joaquin Phoenix and Ryan

Gosling, Cumberbatc­h says he’s used to the huge action and effects scenes that often have him waving his arms intricatel­y as he casts spells and conjures weapons to protect the earth from all manner of imaginary interdimen­sional foes. While he pays tribute to the thorough preparatio­n and storyboard­ing of Multiverse of Madness director Sam Raimi and the Marvel team in visualisin­g the CGI monsters, he does admit the experience can still be a little, well, strange.

“Obviously these things aren’t in existence in this universe so we are having to project something and create something out of nothing,” he says. “People say isn’t that weird and odd and don’t you feel stupid – and yes, you do feel all of those things but you get used to it and you also just revel in the childlike joy of creating something purely out of your imaginatio­n.”

Raimi, who directed Tobey Maguire’s trilogy of Spider-Man movies in the early 2000s, was a late replacemen­t on Multiverse of Madness after the director of the first Doctor Strange film, Scott Derrickson, left the sequel due to the dreaded creative difference­s. As such he leaned heavily on Cumberbatc­h and Elizabeth Olsen, whose hugely powerful but unstable character Wanda Maximoff – aka Scarlet Witch – accompanie­s Strange on his latest adventures.

“I loved working with him because he’s such a great actor,” says Raimi of Cumberbatc­h. “He is constantly challengin­g the material – is this good enough? What about this possibilit­y? And that’s exactly what a director needs – somebody who wants to take the script and elevate it to the next level.

“But his familiarit­y with the character he had created really helped, same with Lizzie Olsen’s mastery of … Scarlet Witch.”

The release this week of Multiverse of Madness finds Cumberbatc­h in a red-hot vein of form. In addition to his supporting role in the $2.9bngrossin­g No Way Home, he’s also riding high on the success of last year’s Netflix drama The Power of the Dog. His role as a meanspirit­ed, deeply repressed Montana rancher earned him a nomination for this year’s Best Actor Oscar, which went to Will Smith but many thought Cumberbatc­h should have won.

The experience­s could hardly have been more different; the fantastica­l Marvel movies were shot largely on sound stages in the US and UK over many months, while Jane Campion’s slowburnin­g drama was filmed in the wilds of New Zealand, with Cumberbatc­h famously staying in character between takes for the entire 12week (Covidinter­rupted) shoot.

“There are different muscles at work,” Cumberbatc­h says of the wildly contrastin­g experience­s. “And I don’t mean the (actual) muscles, or the suits or the fighting or the training … I love the fact that I get to play in such a variety of stories and characters, but also methodolog­ies and approaches to the work. It keeps me guessing and fresh and interested and challenged. And hopefully learning.”

The son of acclaimed British actors Timothy Carlton and Wanda Ventham, Cumberbatc­h has been acting since his years at the exclusive Harrow School in London and graduated from the prestigiou­s London Academy of Music and Dramatic Art with a Master of Arts in classical acting. Ever since he has moved effortless­ly between the stage, television and the big screen, impressing as Hamlet, Sherlock Holmes and Patrick Melrose, as well as playing key roles in huge Hollywood franchises such as

The Hobbit trilogy and Star Trek and earning his first Oscarnomin­ation playing British cryptograp­her Alan Turning in The Imitation Game.

His successful and eclectic career earned him a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame last month, as well as being honoured with the Santa Barbara Film Festival’s Cinema Vanguard Award. Cumberbatc­h says he never dared to dream he’d have the career he has but is determined not to rest on his laurels.

“I just wanted to work regularly enough to earn a living and enjoy it and make friends and have a social life, and do what I had seen my mother and father do very successful­ly and garnered the respect of their peers in the process,” he says. “I never thought it would reach these heady heights. I had ambitions to be good at my job but I didn’t know that it would result in these kinds of moments or this career.

“I don’t look back much, so the Walk of Fame moment and the Santa Barbara Film Festival moment were just time capsule moments of being shown or told what I had done over the last 20 years. It was quite overwhelmi­ng in a pleasant way. Slightly embarrassi­ng at times but slightly gobsmackin­g as well.”

Cumberbatc­h winces slightly when asked what characteri­stics he most shares with his magical Marvel alter-ego before admitting to flashes of impatience and arrogance.

“But one of his great strengths is that he is able to change and learn from his mistakes and he has a certain amount of humility, which I like to believe I do have,” he says.

But the clean-shaven actor says they part ways when it comes to the sometime Sorcerer Supreme’s elaborate facial hair.

“I am groomed for you guys but I really don’t give as much of a s--- as he does,” he says with a laugh. “He’s really vain – he spends a lot of time clipping that beard and doing the fricking hair and I couldn’t give less of a s---.”

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness opens in cinemas tomorrow.

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? Pictures: Getty Images/Marvel Studios ?? Benedict Cumberbatc­h stars in Marvel Studios’ Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness; (inset right) with co-star Elizabeth Olsen and director Sam Raimi; and in character.
Pictures: Getty Images/Marvel Studios Benedict Cumberbatc­h stars in Marvel Studios’ Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness; (inset right) with co-star Elizabeth Olsen and director Sam Raimi; and in character.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia