Saturday, 5 November 2016

Strange Days: Review of Doctor Strange

Doctor Strange

Director: Scott Derrickson

By Alex Watson



While it may appear like Inception on acid at points, Doctor Strange is a thoroughly entertaining new Marvel adventure. With a stand out turn by the reliable Benedict Cumberbatch, this tale of sorcery is one that continually surprises us. Derrickson also has the psychedelic element down and over the course of the movie he drags his audiences to dimensions they couldn't possibly dream of. Watching this in 3D is worth the admission fee alone.

Dr. Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch) is a cocky surgeon known for his magic hands and ability to perform risk operations. After suffering a major car accident, his hands are crushed and the nerves are damaged, leaving him unable to practice. Strange quickly runs out of money finding a cure, until he hears of a place in Nepal that can cure people. When he arrives he meets the Ancient One (Tilda Swinton) who along with Mordo (Chiwetel Ejiofor) introduce him to a form of mystic arts.

Doctor Strange starts like any other origin tale, he is an arrogant doctor that burns through his cash on fast cars, expensive watches and thinks the good times won't end. He has a love/hate relationship with fellow Doctor Christine Palmer (Rachel McAdams) and she is possibly the one person who puts up with him. His car crash is an earth shattering one and Strange descends into near insanity trying to find a way to fix it. After being tipped off by a former patient, he heads to Kathmandu and looks for Kamar-Taj. Arriving here, the film begins to have fun with itself as Strange mocks the Ancient One and her beliefs. Moments later he is knocked out of his corporeal form and sucked into a dimension of vivid colours and crystals, this sequence is trippy to the core, especially when he arrives in a place where little hands start sprouting from his own hands. Arriving back to a smug smile from the Ancient One, you can literally feel his hand expand.

The principal threat comes from Kaecilius, a former student of Kamar-Taj who turned to the dark side of the arts. Seeking an alliance with a demonic force who promises eternal life, this where the story has its most fun. During these battles, we get some of the most awe-inspiring CG of 2016. Entire buildings change form, gateways to different locations are opened with the flick of a wrist and the possibilities are endless. A break from the Avengers norm, Derrickson seeks to give his audience a visual feast and we begin to question what we know of time and space. Big questions of the characters themselves also hang over the film, just how does The Ancient One keep her youthful appearance, will Strange be seduced by the prospect of eternal life? Although the story does drag in places, Derrickson is able to keep this picture on its toes.

Impressively for a third act, Doctor Strange is able to not to succumb to the typically overblown Marvel endings of late. Derrickson keeps things unpredictable during a Hong Kong set finale, where Strange attempts to go against what he has been taught to save the date. It also features one of the most unexpectedly hilarious sequences, keep a mental note of time loops during this movie it will come in handy. Strange is one character who you will grow to love despite his flaws because underneath his cocky exterior beats the heart of a true hero. This character in the wrong hands could have been a big mistake for Marvel, but Derrickson carries off with such finesse that it is hard to imagine this universe without him.

Benedict Cumberbatch shows his action hero chops and effectively carries off Strange's smug sense of humor. He succeeds admirably at building this character from the ground up during his recovery as he becomes a broken man in every sense of the word. Cumberbatch fits the character like a glove as he grows in confidence, so does his magical abilities. It will be fascinating to see what he does with more installments. Less fortunate are Rachel McAdams and Chiwetel Ejiofor, a great of great actors denied any kind of relevant screen time and given zero to do. Mads Mikkelsen also gets short changed as Kaecilius who is so underwritten that there is little threat to him. Mikkelsen is proven at playing villains and deserves better material.

Doctor Strange alongside  Captain America: Civil War is one of the stronger offerings Marvel will throw our way this year, this will be one piece that demands Blu-Ray purchase in future.

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