By AFPRelaxnews | May 5, 2022
The highly anticipated "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness," out Friday, sends Benedict Cumberbatch's sorcerer hopping between colorful, creepy and downright bizarre new dimensions
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The highly anticipated "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness," out Friday, sends Benedict Cumberbatch's sorcerer hopping between colorful, creepy and downright bizarre new dimensions. Image: Marvel Studio[/CAPTION]
After 27 box office-shattering blockbusters, the Marvel superhero films have no more worlds to conquer—so they are headed off to parallel universes instead.
The highly anticipated "Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness," out Friday, sends Benedict Cumberbatch's sorcerer hopping between colorful, creepy and downright bizarre new dimensions, with the help of teenager America Chavez (Xochitl Gomez).
It explores the "multiverse" concept popularized by superhero comic books, in which infinite universes -- and infinite versions of each hero and villain—exist side-by-side.
_RSS_"Oh yeah, we crack that door wide open," said Cumberbatch at this week's Los Angeles world premiere.
"And I'll tell you one thing about it. It's beautiful. It's very, very beautiful."
But for a Hollywood franchise that has thrived by making the sometimes arcane world of comic-book lore accessible to the broadest possible audiences, is it all getting a little too complicated?
"Multiverse of Madness"—the second standalone "Doctor Strange" movie—is packed with references not just to films that preceded it, but also to Disney+ television series "WandaVision" and "Loki."
A review from The Hollywood Reporter says the parallel universes concept—on top of Marvel films' previous time-travel forays—"starts to look like a franchise-sustaining crutch."
Marvel films already contain "a practically infinite number of weird characters and unlikely events" without the "rapidly aging plot device" of parallel universes, wrote reviewer John Defore.
Variety's Owen Gleiberman said Marvel is already "the kind of place that even the most ardent comic-book fans have to dedicate themselves to keeping up with."
Gleiberman called the film "a ride, a head trip... a what-is-reality Marvel brainteaser and, at moments, a bit of an ordeal."
"It's a somewhat engaging mess, but a mess all the same."