Review: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness (2022)

a reel of film

Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness is a film in the Marvel Cinematic universe from 2022. It stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Dr. Stephen Strange, Elizabeth Olsen as Wanda Maximoff/The Scarlet Witch. It also stared Xochitl Gomez as America Chavez and Rachel McAdams as Dr. Christine Palmer.

One hazard for Marvel Studios is the risk of requiring context from earlier releases to understand more recent movies. Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness falls prey to this monster. There are a few Marvel Cinematic Universe feature films that would be helpful to understand. This includes the first Dr. Strange and Avengers: Age of Ultron. However, Multiverse of Madness also has the Disney+ series WandaVision as an almost obligatory prerequisite because it introduces the Scarlet Witch character and develops her story in ways essential to Multiverse.

The Marvel multiverse concept is explored further in this movie. The Disney+ TV series What If…? is a good introduction to the Marvel Studio understanding of that idea. One idea added by this film is that, in dreams, you are experiencing the life of a different version of yourself in another part of the multiverse.

The “canon events” of Doctor Strange’s story (to borrow an idea from Spiderman: Across the Spiderverse) are assumed to be familiar. The movie begins with the wedding of Christine Palmer and is the film’s first reference to their failed relationship. Their misaligned love affair is an important detail throughout the movie. (See the Disney+ show What If…? for a detailed demonstration of their disconnection.) These beats aren’t difficult to explain, but for someone coming to the film unprepared, they are puzzling situations.

The film had luscious visuals of the many different environments traversed through the film. America has a really interesting power that motivates the story: she can provide access to different parts of the multiverse. Having her superpower be a star shaped portal makes sense considering her name, America, as it alludes to the United States’ flag.

The story has some characteristics of a classical tragedy where one character has a fatal flaw that leads to their downfall. It’s unfortunate that WandaVision is the foundation that explains that part of the story. It is the whole motivation for most the film’s events. The movie doesn’t have a shortcut to understand the Scarlet Witch and her family dynamics.

When I was looking around for links for this review, I found a Dr. Strange TV movie from 1978 that might be fun to watch. It is available for streaming. There is also an animated Dr. Strange: The Sorcerer Supreme from 2007 that is available through my library.

I watched the movie again because it jumped in front of me at the library. It’s not a great movie but I didn’t regret watching it a second time, so it’s not awful. I think the number of threads in the movie coming from pre-requisites make it indecipherable without some background in Marvel Studio presentations.

The almost empty glass of the Spectacular Age

Thought bubbleThe question of the day is “is the glass almost empty or is it almost full?”

The lens that identified a glass as half empty or half full hardly seems relevant. Such subtle semantic differences don’t matter in the Spectacular Age we are in.

I noticed a bumper sticker today. “Refugees Welcome” with the outline of Indiana. I suggested to a friend that it was really a good message. My friend was concerned that we’re running out and can’t afford such people.

It made me think about how much American perceptions are disassociated.

One can look at the glass and see that it is almost full. We have enough creativity, dedication, courage and hope to solve the problems facing the world.

Or, one can see an almost empty glass. The government is too expensive, the cost of doing business is excessive, society is about to collapse and only radical action can help.

I don’t know how to find a way to pour from my almost full glass to help relieve the thirst of the almost empty glasses. Do you?