It’s been eight years now and fourteen movies (not to mention a whole bunch of short films and television shows), and I suspect that for some of us, the new Marvel Studios movies don’t feel all that much like an “event” anymore. There’s a respectable homogeneity to the films in this franchise now, which makes new installments seem less “new” and the sequels to pre-existing movies seem like a trip back home again. Maybe familiarity doesn’t always breed contempt. Maybe sometimes it just breeds, and makes a little family.
Marvel’s newest superhero epic Doctor Strange certainly shares some DNA with the other films in the franchise. Based on a superhero co-created by Stan Lee, the film stars Benedict Cumberbatch, an actor famous for playing Sherlock Holmes, as a goateed egotist who gets his comeuppance and then devotes himself to heroism in order to atone for his past. The film’s similarities with the first Iron Man are right there, on the surface, and they are inviting you to get judgy.
But while Doctor Strange never completely abandons the mighty Marvel heroic journey formula, and even though its quippy tone is consistent with most of the other films in this series, director Scott Derrickson’s new film does manage to earn its place at the dinner table. Doctor Strange adds a mystical element to the Marvel Cinematic Universe in more ways than one, expanding on that universe as we know it, broadening its philosophical scope, and raising the bar with mind-blowing set pieces that amount to more than just brutal fistfights.
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Marvel Studios
Altercations in Doctor Strange do of course involve some kicking and punching but, in-keeping with the fanciful illustrations of co-creator Steve Ditko, they take place on another level entirely. Battles between sorcerers in Doctor Strange are elaborate duels that warp time and space on a whim, forcing the combatants to be creative in ways that few – if any – superheroes ever have before. Perhaps most admirable is the film’s bizarre climactic confrontation, which presents audiences with a series of shocking and hilarious images instead of just blowing up the bad guy and beating down his army of faceless minions.
Doctor Strange, the character, is tasked over the course of this film with expanding his mind. Tony Stark took several films to think about anybody other than himself, or to think about his own place in the universe. A brilliant and skilled surgeon, Doctor Stephen Strange severely damages his hands in a car accident. He tries every medical procedure known to man, and when all that fails he turns to mysticism. Throughout the majority of his movie, everyone around Stephen Strange tries to hammer home that his hands don’t matter, and that he doesn’t matter either. He can find inner peace and contribute to the peacefulness of others without being a dick about it.
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Marvel Studios
This overwhelming sense of humility permeates throughout Doctor Strange, and while it doesn’t compensate for the film’s familiar hero/villain plot, it does elevate it slightly. The film introduces a “multiverse” of dimensions – a concept familiar to fans of Marvel comic books – and it acknowledges that a firm grasp of the infinite has the capacity to make an individual feel as though their own lives are meaningless. Doctor Strange is invited to embrace that understanding and explore its possibilities. But the villain Kaecilius (Mads Mikkelsen) sees his own, finite existence as a cosmic joke, and decides to use his own mystical powers to pursue immortality, in order to make his own existence important, whether or not that comes at the sacrifice of others.
Mads Mikkelsen adds a lot of understanding and humor to this villain, but more importantly Kaecilius represents a warped version of Strange himself. It sounds like an obvious dramatic choice but it’s not one that Marvel always employs. Often they resort to stock villain plots about abusing science or conquering and/or destroying the world. In Doctor Strange, everyone is trying to solve the exact same problem but they interpret that problem in different ways. Solving it won’t be easy, and it may involve an act of pure sacrifice and humility, which feels like the exact antithesis of who Doctor Strange was when he started on his path.
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Marvel Studios
There are confusing quirks to Doctor Strange that don’t do the film any favors. The timeline of the movie feels jumbled, with certain events obviously taking place over months (if not years) while other events, edited so that they appear to be taking place simultaneously, would seem to only occur over the span of a handful of days. It’s not an unforgivable sin – The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King does the same thing, to an even more distracting degree – but it does detract from a film that, for all of its insightful ideas and hypnotic visual flourishes, already has a plot that doesn’t hold up to close scrutiny.
Doctor Strange is a feast for the senses, a visual marvel that demands to be experienced on a giant screen and yes, even in 3-D. At its best it’s a consciousness-expanding head trip of fantastic proportions, and at its worst it’s merely an entertaining superhero movie, mostly familiar with occasional spikes of ingenuity. The cast is great – especially Tilda Swinton, who transforms endless exposition into a worthy and memorable character – and the action is first-rate. This may not be Marvel’s best movie, but it’s still pretty magical.
The 15 Funniest Superhero Movies:
Top Photo: Marvel Studios
William Bibbiani (everyone calls him ‘Bibbs’) is Crave’s film content editor and critic. You can hear him every week on The B-Movies Podcast and Canceled Too Soon, and watch him on the weekly YouTube series Most Craved, Rapid Reviews and What the Flick. Follow his rantings on Twitter at @WilliamBibbiani.
The 15 Funniest Superhero Comedies
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15. Sky High (2015)
The son of a successful superhero winds up in shameful sidekick school in this surprisingly funny family comedy, which features tons of great roles for geek icons like Kurt Russell, Linda Carter and Bruce Campbell.
Funniest Moment: Campbell, in just about any scene as the gym teacher, "Coach Boomer."
Photo: Buena Vista Pictures
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14. Tank Girl (1995)
The Australian post-apocalyptic hero (and fashion renegade) got her own, highly underrated movie starring Lori Petty and Naomi Watts, who romance kangaroo people and wage war against douchebags of all kinds.
Funniest Moment: If you're going to do a musical number in a superhero movie, it might as well be "Let's Do It" by Cole Porter.
Photo: United Artists
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13. Super (2010)
James Gunn's dark, dark, dark comedy stars Rainn Wilson as the superhero answer to Taxi Driver; the satire is brutal, and the violence even more so.
Funniest Moment: "Shut up, crime!"
Photo: IFC Films
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12. Mystery Men (1999)
Z-list superheroes like Mister Furious, The Shoveler and The Bowler (played by an all-star cast of great comedians) get their chance at the big time when the city's "real" superhero, Captain Amazing, gets kidnapped. An endearing and quirky ode to the working class.
Funniest Moment: "Lance Hunt wears glasses, Captain Amazing DOESN'T wear glasses. [...] It doesn't make sense. He wouldn't be able to see!"
Photo: Universal Pictures
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11. Flash Gordon (1980)
The classic comic strip hero came to the big screen with a kickass Queen soundtrack, an amazing cast and a campy sense of humor that was probably ahead of its time. Brian Blessed is (weirdly enough) perfectly cast as a half-man, half-hawk warrior.
Funniest Moment: "Flash, I love you, but we only have fourteen hours to save the Earth!"
Photo: Universal Pictures
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10. Iron Man (2008)
In the first (proper) Marvel Studios film, the action often takes a backseat to watching Robert Downey Jr. play a charismatic a-hole who learns a valuable lesson about why he's an a-hole.
Funniest Moment: Tony Stark's last line before the credits, which flies right in the face of superhero movie tradition.
Photo: Marvel Studios
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9. Big Hero 6 (2014)
The Oscar-winning animated feature, about a brilliant young scientist who puts together a superhero team to cope with his brother's death, would have been pretty melancholy were it not for the lovable, inflatable robot Baymax, who's WAY too adorable to kick butt.
Funniest Moment: Baymax's sound effect whenever he "blows it up."
Photo: Walt Disney Studios
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8. The Avengers (2012)
Joss Whedon's first superhero team-up movie is still the best, in large part because he lets all the strange personalities of the Marvel heroes and villains conflict with witty dialogue and deadpan snark. Bonus points for Galaga.
Funniest Moment: "Puny god."
Photo: Marvel Studios
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7. Iron Man 3 (2013)
Shane Black's superhero sequel has a controversial storyline that ticked some fans off, but it also has some of the funniest dialogue and unexpected set pieces of any superhero movie.
Funniest Moment: Iron Man finally meets The Mandarin, and (once again) this franchise flies right in the face of superhero movie tradition.
Photo: Marvel Studios
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6. Spider-Man 2 (2004)
Sam Raimi's second Spider-Man movie understands what makes this hero work: the world keeps hitting him in the face, but he keeps getting up. Watching Peter Parker take a beating, from both Doctor Octopus and life in general, is one of superhero cinema's greatest pleasures.
Funniest Moment: "I'm back! I'm back! [Smash.] My back... my back..."
Photo: Columbia Pictures
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5. The Incredibles (2004)
Pixar presents their superheroes as a sitcom family, with stifled powers representing midlife crises and pubescent angst. Every member of The Incredibles is funny, but let them bicker at each other and you've got comedy gold.
Funniest Photo: A rapid-fire montage of innocent superheroes, all of them killed by their own capes.
Photo: Pixar
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4. The Specials (2000)
James Gunn wrote the script to this clever, low-budget superhero comedy, about a crappy superhero team on one of their days off. Almost no action to speak of, but tons of insightful satire and a great cast make The Specials one of the best unsung superhero films.
Funniest Moment: It's too profane to write down here, but Rob Lowe misunderstands a fellow superhero, and accidentally comes up with a whole new kind of weevil.
Photo: Anchor Bay
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3. Guardians of the Galaxy (2014)
A group of morally ambiguous jerks team up in space (when they're not trying to kill each other) and take on a genocidal madman in James Gunn's bigger budget superhero film, full of memorable characters, wonderful music and endlessly quotable dialogue.
Funniest Moment: "They got my dick message!"
Photo: Marvel Studios
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2. Batman: The Movie (1966)
The campy, silly Batman TV series was a pop culture sensation in the 1960s, and leapt onto the big screen with a hilarious all-star supervillain team-up, and iconic moments like shark repellant and a sequence where Batman is trying to throw a bomb away, but keeps running into innocent bystanders like nuns and baby ducks.
Funniest Moment: "Some days, you just can't get rid of a bomb."
Photo: 20th Century Fox
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1. Deadpool (2016)
Not just hilarious, not just emotionally satisfying, but outright subversive. Deadpool takes superhero movies down a peg, and adds a healthy dose of pegging for an R-rated, self-aware satire that also ranks among the better superhero movies (even the ones that don't have a sense of humor).
Funniest Moment: "Happy Lent."
Photo: 20th Century Fox