Instead, Raimi cashes in on his expertise to make this one his strongest and the most vibrant film, visually with unmissable elements of horror. It’s a tightly knit screenplay with little space for verbose, lengthy scenes. Of course, we’re making it sound too simple and easy but ‘Dr Strange in the Multiverse of Madness’ does have its share of complex characters with real emotions and shades of grey that one could argue are ‘reasonable’. It’s a recipe that cannot and doesn’t go wrong even when it’s built on a simple comic-book premise of saving the world (multiple worlds in this case) from someone who has the absolute power. Director Sam Raimi (The Evil Dead franchise, Spiderman trilogy) knows this only too well and smartly works his way in organically building a narrative that can be executed with exciting elements of horror, fantasy, colourful visual effects and a clash of the superheroes. So, the fun is always in getting the surprises that come along the way, in any form. REVIEW: Watching a film from any Marvel Cinematic Universe means that you already sign up for a few standard issue tropes that every fan and now even the non-fans are well aware of. But saving her comes at an unexpected cost and consequences that neither of them are ready for. STORY: When a mysterious evil force is wreaking havoc on the city, Dr Stephen Strange and Wong happen to rescue a young teenager, who can travel multiple universes aka multiverse.
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