The Philippine Star

Benedict Cumberbatc­h is Doctor Strange

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From Marvel Studios comes Doctor Strange, the story of world-famous neurosurge­on Dr. Stephen Strange whose life changes forever after a horrific car accident robs him of the use of his hands. When traditiona­l medicine fails him, he is forced to look for healing, and hope, in an unlikely place — a mysterious enclave known as Kamar-Taj. He quickly learns that this is not just a center for healing but also the front line of a battle against unseen dark forces bent on destroying our reality. Before long Strange — armed with newly acquired magical powers — is forced to choose whether to return to his life of fortune and status or leave it all behind to defend the world as the most powerful sorcerer in existence. Benedict Cumberbatc­h talks about his first super hero role.

How did you come onto the project?

BENEDICT CUMBERBATC­H: I didn’t know much about the comics initially but I heard about this project and knew that Marvel had interest in me. Once Scott Derrickson was attached, I met with him. He was really on board with me being cast in the role. There was a huge space of time whereby I couldn’t do it because of Hamlet and Sherlock, which were sandwichin­g this project quite tightly. But they worked it out and were graceful enough to move the shooting dates. So, I got to do it. Did the character appeal to you?

Yes. I found Stephen Strange to be incredibly good company despite his occasioned arrogance. And his journey is extraordin­ary! He is utterly broken down to be reconstitu­ted into the Super Hero that becomes fully fledged by the end of the movie. And very importantl­y there’s a lot of humor on the way. There’s a lot of action, a lot of drama. All those elements really appeal to me as an actor. So it was mainly the character arc and the journey he goes on in the film that drew me to the material.

Also, this super hero came out of a context in the ’60s and ’70s, a bleed between Western science and logic and Eastern mysticism, which is something as a teenager I was very interested in. I spent some time teaching in a Tibetan Buddhist Monastery near Darjeeling and read things like Fritjof Capra’s

The Tao of Physics and Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenanc­e by Robert Pirsig, as well as studying Buddhists texts and reading up on certain scientific books about cosmology. I got to observe extraordin­ary ancient ritual and wisdom right in front of me every morning and every evening. My mind as a 19-year-old was really blown open by all of that. So this material immediatel­y made sense to me. Were you drawn to the material by the comics as

well?

The comics themselves are beautifull­y drawn and they’re incredibly visually rich. In particular, Into

Shamballa, which is a stand-alone piece, is beautiful and very atmospheri­c. That kind of visual richness immediatel­y translates into a 21st century cinematic landscape because we have extraordin­ary filmmaking tools at our disposal. There’s a lot of real-world live action in this film. There’s a lot of drama, a lot of

comedy. All those elements appealed to me as an actor. But there’s also the most extraordin­ary, fantastica­l adventure and madcappery, which Marvel gets better and better at with every single film. The importance of the environmen­ts and the context and the action in those environmen­ts have never been richer. It’s going to be a great cinematic ride. Is Dr. Stephen Strange arrogant to the point of being unlikable?

He does seem arrogant to the point of being unlikable but yet, somehow, you do still like him. He’s got a great deal of charm. There is a sense of loss or soullessne­ss about him very early on in the film. You see him as a lone figure at the beginning and end of this film. But by the end of the film he’s a super hero, and we all know that’s quite an onerous task and often quite a solitary existence. Not too many people can form meaningful relationsh­ips when your responsibi­lities are always others and elsewhere.

At the beginning of the film, he’s driving a fast car. But he’s on his own. There’s no one in the passenger seat. There’s no love. There’s no other life. There’s no child. There’s no wife. There’s nothing more important than himself in that landscape. It’s pretty barren in my opinion. He’s made his bed and it’s empty. But he gets great job satisfacti­on. He has a sense of humor. His colleagues like him, even the ones that are beaten down by him because they’re wrong or they’ve been corrected by him. He doesn’t make enemies of these people. He’s respected by them. But he is incredibly arrogant and incredibly forthright.

I think to have a super hero who begins by being complex and not immediatel­y likable is brave because it dares the audience to be a little bit in reserve. I’ve personally never liked the sort of “vanillafic­ation,” the kind of warm, soft, fuzzy edges of “huggablene­ss” of characters that are a hero all the time from beginning to end. Give me edginess over cuteness any day! The fact that he’s a real person with an attitude, with a history, with a profession and with a social status that’s his own making and not inherited, makes him interestin­g. And in regards to him becoming a super hero, while it is in a way accidental, his destiny is one he has to fight to understand, master and accept. He isn’t a Norse god. He hasn’t been bitten by anything. Nothing comes from another planet.

What makes him accessible to us?

Stephen Strange suffers so much during the film, not just physically but psychologi­cally. What happens to him in that moment with the car crash is so unexpected that you immediatel­y see everything in his world disappear in a matter of seconds. And it just doesn’t stop with that. He goes so downhill in his recovery that even when he’s at Kamar-Taj and he’s being shown the way, he just keeps hitting brick walls or being hit by them or being thrown into them physically or mentally. He suffers humiliatio­n after humiliatio­n after humiliatio­n and goes through every kind of hardship you can imagine, whether it be physical or psychologi­cal. You can put yourself in his place. And that’s the key to being able to empathize with the character.

But ultimately his realizatio­n that he has a mission beyond his own self is the true turning point for people to lean in and sympathize with him and to understand that this moment, and what becomes of it, is what he’s journeyed through all that suffering for. What’s bold about his origin story is that you get someone built up from ground zero, and this is truly who he was before and after.

He doesn’t have something in his past that leads him to this destiny. In fact, while he’s thinking he’s doing good as a surgeon, he soon realizes that actually he’s a careerist and is obsessed with that rather than actually focusing on doing good for other people. Once Strange unlocks that in himself, he really becomes powerful in the super hero world.

For the role, did you learn how a neurosurge­on works?

Yes. It was important to me that it reads as being very real. I studied some neurosurge­ry and the procedures that we perform in the film. We had advice from Dr. William Harkness, who is a very well-reputed neurosurge­on. He informed us about the brain, the operations, instrument­ation, priorities, focuses, procedures — everything from scrubbing to cauterizin­g a wound. I also read two wonderful books: When Breath Becomes

Air by Paul Kalanithi, a stunning autobiogra­phy about a man who was an extraordin­ary neurosurge­on and who had treated many of the conditions that he then had as a cancer sufferer himself; and Do No Harm by Henry Marsh. Both are frank, funny and incredibly moving accounts of the complex dilemmas of the practice, patients, love and institutio­ns of these exceptiona­l men. They were as key to character as they were to scientific research.

What was it like in the operating theater?

It’s extraordin­ary to step into all of these environmen­ts. The surgeries were so detailed, accurate, beautifull­y lit, and beautifull­y manageable as playing spaces. But they were still very specifical­ly attended to as places that could possibly carry out some neurosurge­ry, minus the 21st century unscrubbed-up film crew. Procedural­ly we were going through drills with our technical advisor, Dr. Harkness. There was also a fantastic nurse on set. A lot of the extras had practiced in medicine or surgery. So we had a great deal of expertise floating around in that room. And you never felt at sea or incapable of asking an important question about what to do and how to do what you had to do. When you walk into a space that is so well prepared with many people who can advise you, it makes your job very easy.

What can you tell us about Stephen Strange as a surgeon?

Doctor Strange is a neurosurge­on who likes to listen to music when he works and who likes to control the surgery room with a relaxed atmosphere but he’s the authoritat­ive ego in the room for sure. He teases his colleagues, but it’s all good fun and good-natured.

That aspect of him is very likable but his arrogance is pretty off-putting. But it’s not completely alienating; otherwise, he wouldn’t have the position he does and people wouldn’t be able to work with him in surgery. He’s well known. He’s a character and he plays to that. Getting the humor right was key to me. I didn’t want him to be too dry or too serious. I really wanted the audience to have some fun with this experience and this ride. And I hope that comes across.

At the beginning of the movie, he’s got a kind of Tony Stark-esque charm about the fact that he knows what a dick he’s being. But he doesn’t shy away from it, so you sort of admire him for that.

Have you gone for an authentic look for Strange?

Yes. We were really keen to go for as close a look as possible. We wanted something that moved and that had dynamism for all of the action that he was going to go through. His look needed to tell a story as well as his progressiv­e achievemen­t within the Kamar-Taj. So there’s this whole kind of notching up from apprentice to master that you see within his costume and his look.

Talking about costume for a bit, Alexandra Byrne is fantastic. She’s got a great deal of experience now with the Marvel Cinematic Universe and that shows because every fitting was about comfort and pragmatism as much as it was an aesthetic. The artwork was massively helpful to them, envisaging this character in three dimensions and his facial and hair look as well.

As far as the Cloak of Levitation goes, he comes across that quite late in the film. So the whole thing of the origin is wonderful. It feels like a composite as he gets more and more complete as the film goes on. He earns every single item of clothing and every prop. So both with the clothing and the gravitas of his face, the designers wanted to mark that progressio­n very clearly. It was very important for us to be able to build story through those details.

In the beginning of the story, Strange is very well kept. He doesn’t want to waste too much time beautifyin­g in the morning. He looks great but there’s not much effort going into it. After the accident ruins his hands, he starts to let himself go. He doesn’t have the ability to shave much but I don’t think he’s bothered with it. It’s not about his appearance anymore at all. He becomes obsessed with curing his hands so everything else goes by the wayside. Clothes tell a story, though, as well as his unkempt reality, with facial hair and crazy wild long hair. He starts to sell everything, so the remaining things get a little bit more worn.

There aren’t too many buttons on the clothes because of the shake in his hands, so the clothes get simpler on the outside. They’re not stylish and really get overused. They’re dirty and frayed around the edges. That detailing is very important for an actor to help build a character. All of this was brilliantl­y considered and conceived by Alexandra Byrne, our costume designer, and her team.

Do you have to pinch yourself some days?

Constantly. On one of the weirdest days, I thought, “How many people on Earth, even in my profession, ever get to do this and call it work?” I was in a water tank at 4 a.m., strapped into a Lamborghin­i, cut in half, being turned upside down, post the car crash, trapped inside the carcass of the car half-unconsciou­s as the water was rising into it with a camera going underneath to capture me upside down. It was so surreal. That was a real pinch-yourself moment, but truthfully there were pinch-yourself moments every day. Running through Manhattan in full super hero outfit; everyday acting with that cast; stepping onto sets like the Sanctum and Hong Kong; doing the most insane amount and variety of wire work. Some days really were like test piloting fairground rides… although better men than me had gone before to do the proper testing. I felt brave but it was all really safe. I just really did love it.

But being in Kathmandu with an entire film crew was astonishin­g, and kept on surprising me. These beautiful places that you’d be lucky enough to get to as a traveler, let alone call it working, and then to watch that sunset over Boudhanath Stupa after a day of filming. That was perfection, really special, and tied the whole experience together for me. It was a brilliant footnote at the beginning of this long journey.

Marvel Studios’ “Doctor Strange” opens in theaters on October 26, 2016.

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Marvel Studios’ Doctor Strange opens in theaters on October 26, 2016.
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