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Ancient One

Doctor Strange: Marvel’s Magical Formula

strngeBenedict Cumberbatch is everywhere, and I don’t even mind. Sometimes Khan and sometimes Sherlock Holmes, occasionally historic and periodically period piece, Cumberbatch now arrives as the latest name actor to populate the Marvel Universe. As mangled Dr. Stephen Strange, Cumberbatch shines with an American accent, action figure moves, and a magnetic, sardonic sense of vicious humor. For fans longing to see what happens when the Marvel Studios’ lens is turned toward the mystical corners of the comic universe,?Doctor Strange?is just the mind-bending, faith-and-science combo that they’ve been hoping for.

strange3Strange is a ‘class A’ jerk (and gifted surgeon) before ?a traffic accident mutilates his hands and leaves him unable to grip anything. Exhausting his medical options, he heads to Kamar-Taj where he meets the Ancient One (Tilda Swinton) and her other Masters, chiefly Karl Mordo (Chiwetel Ejifor). Before he can fully be indoctrinated in the ways of the Mystic Arts, Kaecilius (Madds Mikkelsen) and his hench-wizards blow into town and cause all kinds of trouble.

Marvel's DOCTOR STRANGE..Kaecilius (Mads Mikkelsen)..Photo Credit: Film Frame ..?2016 Marvel. All Rights Reserved.

What follows is a mind-bending spectacle of epic proportions that seems more grounded than the visuals of?Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, highlighting the way that writer/director Scott Derrickson has kept the world we can see closely wound to the spiritual one in his previous films. While this film takes us into spiritual dimensions that seem inspired by LSD (and given Marvel’s background with the title, seem probable), it also has a darkly funny and poignant take on humanity, spouting witty near Kung Fu-isms that seem to be?Matrix-like morals we’d get if we blended Jesus, Buddha, and Gandhi together.

strang4Is it derivative? Well, no, but it certainly reeks of the Marvel Formula for a standalone story of our heroes, both well known and obscure. We might even recognize that Strange solves the ‘big’ problem in the film by making the same choice that Tony Stark does in The Avengers… even if he does so in a more humorous, less final, way.?We might even say that?Doctor Strange?(gasp!) seems to echo not just the Marvel use of pattern-making for debuts, but that first modern hero film (when we switched from a ‘white’ knight to a slightly muddy, gray hero with issues):?Batman Begins. That is not, however, to say that I didn’t enjoy or appreciate the film because I did.

When the Ancient One tells Strange to “forget everything you know,” we realize he’s about to have his mind blown. When she tells him that he will never have control until he relinquishes control, we might hear Jesus telling his disciples to let go of their lives to find them (Luke 9:24). When she tells him that he has tried everything he knows, everything scientifically possible, and now he wants to ignore the mystical possibilities, we can see the development of a person’s faith – or the journey toward recognition – in every person, not just in a Marvel superhero. All of that is to say that Derrickson has imbued this film with more than the formula even if, underneath some of the more meaty parts, the skeleton remains the same.

Disney’s plus-size special features include the audio commentary by Derrickson, deleted scenes, and a lighter gag reel. But on the Blu-ray/DVD/Digital HD, audiences will also get “A Strange Transformation” (basically, the making of featurette) plus “Strange Company” (a more nuanced cast’s take on doing a Marvel film), “The Fabric of Reality” (the set assembly), a look at the Phase 3 ideas brewing (Guardians of the Galaxy 2, Thor: Ragnarok, Black Panther, and, of course, Infinity War), and the unexpected laugh looking at Thor and his roommate in “Team Thor: Part 2.”

Dr. Strange(r Things)

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?You?ve spent your whole life looking through a key hole.? ? The Ancient One

When Robert Downey Jr. first brought Tony Stark to life in 2008?s Iron Man, none of us had any idea that we would be this far down the proverbial Marvel ?rabbit hole? at this point. A mere eight years later, we have seen everything from shrinking ex-cons to hammer-wielding demi-gods to talking raccoons do battle on the big screen and, over that time, I had become fairly convinced that Marvel Studios simply had no surprises left.

Dr. Strange has proven me wrong.

Dr. Strange enters another hero (are there any left?) into the Marvel Cinematic Universe by introducing Dr. Stephen Strange (Benedict Cumberbatch), a brilliant?but arrogant?surgeon. When a tragic car accident leaves him unable to practice medicine, he becomes emotionally lost and searches for answers amongst the mystics of the East. Learning from his otherworldly mentor, The Ancient One (Tilda Swinton), Strange?s eyes are opened to the spiritual realities around him. Then, when a former student of the Ancient One threatens Earth?s balance of power, Strange is forced into a battle that he never sought out but of which he finds himself in the middle.

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Directed by Scott Derrickson (Sinister, Deliver Us From Evil), Dr. Strange gives the veteran director the daunting task of creating a visual atmosphere that is both terrifying and beautiful at the same time. Largely known for his horror films, Derrickson was clearly given the keys to the Kingdom regarding his special effects budget yet he manages to create this CGI wonderland in (sorcerer) supreme fashion. While the film?s visuals will undoubtedly be compared to other sci-fi entries such as Inception, The Matrix and even 2001: A Space Odyssey, Derrickson?s spin on the film is nonetheless both dazzling and unique.

The film has drawn several comparisons to Iron Man for its tale of the redemption of the powerful?and that?s not inaccurate. (In fact, given the quality of some of the other Marvel entries, it?s actually a high compliment.) As Stephen Strange, Cumberbatch delivers a solid and charaismatic performance (though they don?t give him much to work with in terms of the character?s depth).

Still, the real surprise of the film for me was its unabashed conversation about spirituality.

While it seems obvious that a film that includes magic and Eastern philosophy would contain some discussion of faith and believe, what really struck me was how enthusiastic about it. As the film opens, Strange himself has a very strict scientific mindset, believing only in his own abilities as a surgeon. When that worldview is threatened by the mysticism of the Ancient One, he exclaims, ?There is no such thing as spirit. There is only matter!? His is a heart hardened by knowledge and self-amazement.

ancient one astral punch

However, after The Ancient One opens up his eyes?ever so briefly?to the world beyond his own understanding, Strange is completely transformed. For the first time, he recognizes that he is not the most powerful force in the universe.

And he is completely awestruck by it.

In the story he tells, director Scott Derrickson doesn?t just dip his toe into the idea of a larger spiritual reality, he dives in headfirst. In Dr. Strange, he demonstrates the supernatural to be something that actually has a vested interest in protecting the lives of the people, even if they continue about their lives blissfully unaware. (After all, like Strange himself, they too have ?spent [their] whole lives looking through a key hole.?]

As a pastor, this depiction of belief strikes as a cinematic representation of ?he who has an ear, let him hear?, as all are called but few are interested in seeing beyond their own world. Like Strange, we too can often become so wrapped up in ourselves that we miss the calling to experience the Kingdom beyond us.

Like Strange, we too need to be humbled and shaken from ourselves.

If we are, maybe we?ll be able to see beyond the key hole for the first time.

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