Doctor Strange Is Good Because He Sucks - Detail Diatribe

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  • čas přidán 8. 07. 2024
  • (This video does NOT discuss Multiverse of Madness - don't worry about spoilers)
    "Doctor Strange" is one of the MCU's best movies because it actually bothers to show what Heroism means. Stephen Strange's arc is so compelling because it's so fraught -ultimately, he's such a Good character because the man straight up *Sucks*. Strange is so utterly insufferable, and it works fantastically.
    (I originally had edited in footage of the actual scene in question but Disney smote my first draft with the fury of 1000 claims - sooooooo I replaced it with still screenshots instead. That's just the game you play when you use movie footage, and this is why we mostly do the powerpoint slides for Detail Diatribes.)
    Our content is intended for teenage audiences and up.
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Komentáře • 1,4K

  • @kurathchibicrystalkitty5146
    @kurathchibicrystalkitty5146 Před 2 lety +2415

    The real moral of Doctor Strange is: always save before a boss fight.

    • @animeepstudios9110
      @animeepstudios9110 Před 2 lety +73

      The DS vs Dormammu fight is basically cuphead vs the devil

    • @coffee-ouji
      @coffee-ouji Před rokem +36

      that's kinda what fighting the Pokemon League felt like
      i just waltz in, get brutally kicked in the ass and before you know it the first champion's already seeing me come in like "heyyyyyyyyyy"

    • @alepenagorbe9135
      @alepenagorbe9135 Před rokem +22

      Dormammu is the Dark Souls of Marvel villains

    • @isabrom5295
      @isabrom5295 Před rokem +16

      What I took away from this movie was: driving a car is dangerous
      (I know he was a bad driver but still)

    • @sylvy16
      @sylvy16 Před rokem +10

      @@isabrom5295 yup. People don’t realise this, but most travel related deaths are road accidents. Cars are many many times more dangerous than planes.

  • @tbotalpha8133
    @tbotalpha8133 Před 2 lety +4753

    Someone else pointed this out, so I'll just quote them:
    "It wasn't just Stephen's intelligence that won [the confrontation with Dormammu], it was spinning the context of the situation. I highly doubt Dormammu would've even considered the idea of not murdering him forever had he not said "That makes you my prisoner."
    Flipping the context of the situation makes Dormammu feel like he's not in control, and a being that huge and all-powerful not being in control is far worse than any fate he could've inflicted on Doc. Taking control away from one of the most powerful beings in the multiverse stings its ego, just like the loss of his hands; hands being a parable for control. Stephen knew the best way to get under Dormammu's metaphysical skin was the same way to get under his own skin, because he knows the failings of ego."

    • @theyormlad
      @theyormlad Před 2 lety +121

      way to make a triple negative

    • @MrFelblood
      @MrFelblood Před 2 lety +353

      I love this interpretation. Dormammu is defeated by being just as much of an egotist as Strange used to be, and Steven understanding that.

    • @aradraugfea6755
      @aradraugfea6755 Před 2 lety +173

      And "control" is where the villain whose name I'd have to rewind the video just to remember, let alone spell comes in. Everyone in the movie EXCEPT the Ancient One is looking for this perfect control. Mordu believes in the rules, in an orderly universe that has rules for a reason and that only by tightly controlling the universe through those rules can an ideal be reached. Hench wants a perfect, timeless, static world, where bad things can't happen because THINGS don't happen independent of the concept of time. Dormammu sees a whole reality to invade and capture and control. Strange has spent his entire adult life with literal control over life and death, tightly managing the odds so that he maintains this ludicrous perfect record as a surgeon. He loses control once and spends years and all of that wealth trying to get it back. Only when he gives up on that idea of perfect control, total control over the outcome, does he get the mental ability to act as Dormammu's mortal, fragile, infinitely killable jailor.

    • @jakespacepiratee3740
      @jakespacepiratee3740 Před 2 lety +16

      By "ego" do they mean the literal version or the weird metaphysical Chakra Bhuddist one?

    • @TyDreacon
      @TyDreacon Před 2 lety +68

      @@aradraugfea6755 As far as I remember, even the Ancient One was once looking for control - over death, at least - in her heyday. That was why she sought the dark arts to stay alive longer, and she even mentions how it's hard to let go. The movie takes place at a point where she consciously realizes that total control is fruitless, and even then, we see echoes of that younger, control-hungry self.

  • @Grim_Sister
    @Grim_Sister Před 2 lety +5124

    Strange basically beat Dormamu by using the ancient method of: “Is this bothering you? Is this bothering you? I’m not touching you!” 🤣

    • @Prettywitchiusaka
      @Prettywitchiusaka Před 2 lety +329

      Exactly! This is why Stephen’s awesome. He knows he doesn’t stand a chance of defeating an elderitch monster, he doesn’t care!
      At that point, allowing himself to experience that pain, just so the earth could live was more important to him.
      It shows a strength of character, yes, but also dhows the courage and nobility that was always dormant in him.

    • @emanuelrojas2
      @emanuelrojas2 Před 2 lety +146

      Which honestly the most unique way of defeating a big bad.

    • @jordanholt9170
      @jordanholt9170 Před 2 lety +202

      Honestly, I like that Strange didn’t beat Dormamu, he got Dormamu to leave out of boredom

    • @Prettywitchiusaka
      @Prettywitchiusaka Před 2 lety +160

      @@jordanholt9170 Well that and making him rage quit. lol

    • @arancourt5623
      @arancourt5623 Před 2 lety +139

      He basically Deadpooled him into submission. You can't kill me, and you can't get rid of me, and I'm not going away.

  • @elenanojkovic2554
    @elenanojkovic2554 Před 2 lety +5187

    I also like that Strange's not-really love interest who, while not a big character, is also made to contrast him, is an emergency doctor. A doctor who deals with chaos, who can't chose what she gets on her table, who is working in the field of medicine where you literally have the least control. Where you're bound to lose some patients because you can't pick. Strange can get his patients, prepped and ready for him, in the sterile OR.
    Christine...can't. She gets the agony, she is there, with patients who are crying, bleeding, hurting.

    • @Ramsey276one
      @Ramsey276one Před 2 lety +246

      You just inspired me to make two spellcaster characters
      Library Wizard & ER Witch
      EW: DO NOT ASK!
      LW: ...and that's why we have FOUR BATHROOMS. She had an Okay day, I'm sure...

    • @pablodonner5213
      @pablodonner5213 Před 2 lety +121

      @@Ramsey276one sounds like a great concept for an urban fantasy novel. Let us know when you publish it

    • @Ramsey276one
      @Ramsey276one Před 2 lety +56

      @@pablodonner5213 I would go more for a comic strip…
      XD
      We’ll be letting you know!
      :-P happy doggo

    • @ALookIntoTheEulenspiegel
      @ALookIntoTheEulenspiegel Před 2 lety

      @@Ramsey276one
      Could have a whole conflict of societies, with the wizards protecting society on the political level in palaces and the witches protecting communities on a personal level in the villages and cities. And of course they can't stand each other, despite both dedicating their everything to protecting peace and freedom.

    • @Ramsey276one
      @Ramsey276one Před 2 lety +40

      @@ALookIntoTheEulenspiegel Hence LW and EW share a house near the city limits. LW leaves the car at the Parking Tower, EW arrives... SOMEHOW. Cartpool? Gatorback? UBERTAUR?
      XD

  • @Darkraes743
    @Darkraes743 Před 2 lety +3103

    One of my favorite moments in the MCU is Strange being notably upset and disturbed at having taken a life. Even if it was to save his own life and, ultimately, stop the bad guy he still took an oath to do no harm. It was nice to see.

    • @ShugoAWay
      @ShugoAWay Před 2 lety +45

      Eh i thought the hypocatic oath chicken was funny

    • @PainCausingSamurai
      @PainCausingSamurai Před 2 lety +258

      Moreover calling him out on the hypocrisy of that line of thinking was also one of the best moments of moral uncertainty in the MCU.

    • @suisui7481
      @suisui7481 Před 2 lety +9

      Wait who did he kill?

    • @Riverthunder
      @Riverthunder Před 2 lety +119

      @@suisui7481 He killed one of Kaecillius’s followers

    • @ClericOfPholtus
      @ClericOfPholtus Před 2 lety +1

      Yeah for as much of an ass as he is he still completely took the Hippocratic Oath to a very personal degree and breaking is some hard shit for him apparently. Definitely a nice touch

  • @shrimpisdelicious
    @shrimpisdelicious Před 2 lety +1482

    One thing that didn't get mentioned that struck me was that even as the Ancient One is imparting this last lesson about not being in control, she acknowledges how hard it is to relinquish that control. "You think after all this time, I'd be ready. But look at me. Stretching one moment out into a thousand... just so that I can watch the snow."

    • @sabertoothkim
      @sabertoothkim Před 2 lety +240

      I really appreciated that especially, as well! In the comics, the Ancient One was always (in my experience) cast as just the stereotypically wise, saint-like, teacher who shows up to issue judgements upon the flawed protagonists. Having this Ancient One be aware of her own flaws, and selfish, and still unable to not be a tiny bit selfish in the moment of her death, changed EVERYTHING, because it proved that she actually knew what she was talking about rather than just being some transcendent teacher reciting dogma. And by association, that makes her student Strange all the more human as well.

    • @kennethsatria6607
      @kennethsatria6607 Před 2 lety +46

      @@sabertoothkim Oh yeah I never realized the teacher teaches student teaches teacher dynamic they had, and it really makes the first movie a treat to rewatch.

    • @curranfrank2854
      @curranfrank2854 Před 2 lety +33

      @@sabertoothkim Yeah honestly unfortunate that she had to die, I get that it's a key point in Strange's story in the movie but I really liked Swinton in the role and I thought she was written well

    • @impartialthrone2097
      @impartialthrone2097 Před 2 lety +15

      and then there's the people that just complain that "woke Disney is replacing all the perfectly good male characters with *gasp* women"

    • @deadlylaigrek
      @deadlylaigrek Před rokem

      @@impartialthrone2097 The main complaint that I saw was actually whitewashing, but there's no way that Disney was going to take a stance on Tibet or even mention it if possible. So you're either changing the race (to white, because this is still Hollywood) or changing the country. Damned if you do, damned if you don't.

  • @ceruleanwalker1069
    @ceruleanwalker1069 Před 2 lety +272

    If your Ancient one is bald, powerful, filled with infinite chill and imparting the lesson that you cannot control the world before fading away gracefully into death.
    Then that's not the ancient one...
    That's Master Oogway.

  • @KITsune-ICHI
    @KITsune-ICHI Před 2 lety +713

    One scene from the movie that I still find particularly important is when he kills his attackers. Unlike most "normal" people in these movies he is visibly upset. The thought of taking a life is upsetting to his core. His first reaction is to leave the monastery and be done with sorcery. It is rare to see a truly human reaction to death in a comicbook movie and I think it does a lot to show that even though Strange is an @$$hole at his core he is still a caring human being.

    • @angrywizard3199
      @angrywizard3199 Před 2 lety +138

      It's also especially important because he defines himself as a doctor. Even upon becoming a sorcerer he still refers to himself as a doctor. And of course, a defining feature of being a doctor is to do no harm. Like losing the Ancient One, this to him is a failure as a doctor, another blow to his ego, just one that pushes him in the opposite direction that the Ancient One's death does.

    • @peggyliepmann5248
      @peggyliepmann5248 Před 2 lety +92

      That's also the one time the Ancient One does anything resembling ego stroking, when she offers him the New York Sanctum. She even suggests the title of "Master Strange", which he angrily responds with "It's /Doctor/." Followed by him stating clearly that even if he's an arrogant dickhead, First Do No Harm still means something to him.

  • @TheSpearkan
    @TheSpearkan Před 2 lety +3461

    I do worry that multiverses will fall into the same pitfall as zombies. Everyone jumps on to it because it can be a very effective narrative if executed well, but everyone ends up sick and tired of it because too many botch it up.

    • @FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest
      @FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest Před 2 lety +24

      Considering the woke, contrived dumpster fire that was multiverse of madness, I have zero hope for anything marvel makes next.
      One massive edit because you soy-cucks like to nit-pick like diseased chimps: (WARNING: read before replying)
      For context; I don't just spew drinkers views. (maybe go read the rest of the comments before you drag yourself into this debate.)
      I used my own arguments; and his points happen to be very similar to mine; which is why I said to go watch him because our views are very similar.
      That's why I sourced his video.
      Also Nerdrotic has similar points too; very good points.
      So If I'm "copying Drinker", then I guess Nerdrotic copies drinker too; also his review came out a few day after drinkers, so its in theory possible, according to your "standards".
      Speaking of reviewers; go watch The Little Platoon if you want a very in depth review; he goes VERY deep into it; and also makes similar points to Drinker and Nerdrotic.
      Also; the fact your raging, have resorted to calling me names, false reported me as spam and spew flat out false claims just means I'm right; your raging because you have no counter argument.
      What's even funnier is how you whine and complain; saying I have none, then go dead silent when I pull up.
      Seriously, grow up.
      Also; if anyone replies to this and still whines like a dying chimp I'm just going to ignore your goofy ass; because you either:
      1. Ignored the reply warning.
      2. Can't read.
      3. Have room temperature IQ.
      4. Are a trained chimpanzee that somehow has internet access.
      5. Flat out ignored the warning and my statements; just to have something to whine about.
      6. Are a troll / brainlet with nothing better to do.
      7. Full of sheer arrogance.
      8. Are a libtard.
      TLDR:
      Jokes on you; there is no tldr, learn to read.

    • @wooper3107
      @wooper3107 Před 2 lety +28

      DON'T JINX IT!

    • @kam5944
      @kam5944 Před 2 lety +372

      @@FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest woke? Why are people calling every movie they don't like "woke". Is it because one of the main characters isn't white? Seriously it's not even political it's just diverse. When will people make real criticism again.

    • @biblebot3947
      @biblebot3947 Před 2 lety +312

      @@FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest anyone who unironically uses “woke” doesn’t have a real criticism of the thing in question.
      Edit: Came back to see that Andrew deleted his comment in shame.
      F

    • @FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest
      @FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest Před 2 lety +13

      @@biblebot3947 Nice attempt to disarm my argument; go watch "The Critical Drinker".

  • @voltronimusprime3833
    @voltronimusprime3833 Před 2 lety +500

    "It is possible to commit no mistakes and still lose. That is not a weakness, that is life."
    - Jean-Luc Picard

    • @sadnessofwildgoats
      @sadnessofwildgoats Před 2 lety

      what episode?

    • @voltronimusprime3833
      @voltronimusprime3833 Před 2 lety +17

      @@sadnessofwildgoats I can't remember the number, but it's the one with the "master tactician" and there's supposed to be a simulated battle between the Enterprise and another much weaker Federation ship.
      Data is convinced to fight the guy in a strange electronic game and loses, and suddenly feels like he can't be trusted to make the right decisions.
      Picard had to convince him that losing doesn't always equal failure.

    • @voltronimusprime3833
      @voltronimusprime3833 Před 2 lety +16

      Decided to look it up;
      "Peak Performance"
      Season 2; Episode 21

    • @RisingAurora
      @RisingAurora Před 2 lety +14

      People forget the counterpoint to this. It's possible to commit every mistake and win. That's also life.

    • @DrHughMonguscoque
      @DrHughMonguscoque Před 2 lety +5

      @@RisingAuroranah... thats only if youre rich.

  • @sams.975
    @sams.975 Před 2 lety +4267

    I also want to point out that the insult "bachelor's degree" thrown at the PT, *probably isn't even accurate*. Physical therapists generally have graduate degrees in order to do their work. Which means he's just decided the PT is lesser than him, and pulls whatever education-based insult out that is easiest.

    • @blackosprey2219
      @blackosprey2219 Před 2 lety +276

      Very true!! My mom and one of my best friends went through PT school, it's years of nonstop school with no vacations and a brutal curriculum. It's not brain surgery, but it takes an overwhelming amount of effort, intelligence, patience, and compassion to do.

    • @CanonKathryn
      @CanonKathryn Před 2 lety +86

      It's a doctorate degree. A PTA is a bachelor's degree

    • @AShoutIntoTheVoid
      @AShoutIntoTheVoid Před 2 lety +202

      As a Physical Therapist, I’m not even surprised by the depiction that a cowboy surgeon doesn’t realize we get Doctorate degrees in the US.

    • @Christine-bu2cc
      @Christine-bu2cc Před 2 lety +76

      @@CanonKathrynFun fact' it's currently a doctorate degree in the US, but it hasn't always been. I know a couple of near-retirement PTs with "just" a bachelor's.

    • @VIIISeraphiel
      @VIIISeraphiel Před 2 lety +13

      All that education and they still had me doing elementary school stretches.

  • @Oxcarthor26
    @Oxcarthor26 Před 2 lety +915

    Something that is scary of that final Dormmamu scene is that we'll never know for how long Strange and Dormmamu were trapped in the loop. It easly could've been a couple minutes or straight up centuries, even if it was a couple minutes Strange was still willingly and voluntarily accepting death multiple times. Each time the loop started he could've just fled, but he didn't, he died extremely painfully over and over to save the world, what a badass.

    • @ndricimhalili9793
      @ndricimhalili9793 Před 2 lety +106

      As heroic and grand as Tony Stark's death was and how beautifully it was executed. I still felt that Strange also made such a great gamble and sacrifice himself. What if Dormamu somehow broke the loop or had the ability to control his mind or Strange actually lost his mind during the loop. Yet still, no one will ever know what he did. Especially that dumb sorcerer that kept saying "The bill is due" or something like that

    • @Ilias2
      @Ilias2 Před 2 lety +31

      @@ndricimhalili9793 "Dormamu, I've come to bargain!"

    • @christopherfleetwood5252
      @christopherfleetwood5252 Před 2 lety +25

      @@Ilias2 Dormmy, I’M BACK!

    • @baonkang5990
      @baonkang5990 Před 2 lety +53

      Considering how much his skill in magic improved after that encounter, I can safely say it was a very long time.

    • @mortisCZ
      @mortisCZ Před rokem +13

      I have always assumed that he died 14000605 times to Dormammu. I know his vision of possibilities might not be tied in any way to this duel but it somehow felt right.
      Even if he always died after a few seconds or minutes... that would be months of constant suffering and combat. If sanity of anyone could srvuve such an ordeal then they would get really good at fighting; whatever their original experience was.

  • @Wolfs0n
    @Wolfs0n Před 2 lety +2793

    Little interesting note.
    When Steve Ditko created Doctor Strange and sent in his illustrations for the magic he casts.
    Sevreal people in Marvel honestly thought he was on drugs and would frequently visit him at his home to make sure he was doing alright.

    • @VicEntity
      @VicEntity Před 2 lety +335

      Turns out he *wasn't* doing alright, but drugs weren't the problem

    • @animationdude9
      @animationdude9 Před 2 lety +31

      @@VicEntity what was?

    • @superbproductions7193
      @superbproductions7193 Před 2 lety +71

      @@animationdude9 he was a nut

    • @Wolfs0n
      @Wolfs0n Před 2 lety +309

      @@animationdude9 I assume they are referring to Ditko being an isolationist stuck in his views after the comic world changed?
      He didn't handle that very well he was an old comic creator that was stuck in the view of kids can only be sidekicks, morality is black and white and he couldn't deal with that.
      He went to DC after leaving Marvel where he could stay in that mindset for longer but still not forever.
      Then he became an indie publisher of his own work until he died at 90 of a heart attack.

    • @VicEntity
      @VicEntity Před 2 lety +1

      @@animationdude9 Dude reads an Ayn Rand article in a porn magazine *once* and decides to make it his whole personality.

  • @valhallen338
    @valhallen338 Před 2 lety +501

    Anyone: Are you happy, Stephen?
    Strange: Irrelevant, next question

    • @Aregulargameplayer
      @Aregulargameplayer Před 2 lety +49

      Strange: If I don't answer, I don't know it myself.

    • @abigailw7146
      @abigailw7146 Před 2 lety

      @@Aregulargameplayer avoid your problems and they dont exist!

  • @lintree
    @lintree Před 2 lety +661

    I don't know if it's just me but I really like that Strange and Christine don't end the film getting together or even as established friends again, it's clear both of them still care about the other, but his earlier shitty treatment isn't just forgotten either for the sake of the straight romance and I personally really appreciated that as someone with frankly no interest in watching another somewhat bland couple make out at the end of every film

    • @wolfehologram3539
      @wolfehologram3539 Před rokem +20

      It comes to a full head in Multiverse of Madness. And in what is a very poorly put together and tonally inconsistent film, that particular arc is on that is actually done well.

  • @EN-Fitz
    @EN-Fitz Před 2 lety +1524

    Before magic, Strange saw things as about him.
    Afterwards, Strange saw things as a grand calculus, needing to put the big picture before himself and others.
    Now with No Way Home and Multiverse he's finally learned it's not about him or the grand calculus, it's about helping when needed.
    THAT is a character arc.

    • @AShoutIntoTheVoid
      @AShoutIntoTheVoid Před 2 lety +19

      Well said!

    • @icedragonaftermath
      @icedragonaftermath Před 2 lety +23

      @@cewla3348 Well, after Spiderman, yes.

    • @doppelrutsch9540
      @doppelrutsch9540 Před 2 lety +54

      I think the problem with that is the "when needed" part. If you have powers like that you are *always* needed. You basically have to deliberately ignore people you could help all the time.

    • @ginge641
      @ginge641 Před 2 lety +12

      Yes, with the caveat that those last two movies didn't give him much of an arc. Certainly not a good one, at any rate.

    • @paulgibbon5991
      @paulgibbon5991 Před 2 lety +31

      It's also interesting to compare him with Wanda in MoM. Like him, Wanda lost something she thought was vital to her happiness and purpose, and obsessively chased after it, heedless of the damage she was doing to other people. You also get a hint of Strange's potential to go the same way when you see the Strange of the collapsed dimension and his obsessive wish to possess Christine. But in the end, he's able to accept that sometimes you just have to accept what you've lost and keep moving forwards, rather than being stuck pining for it.

  • @gammothguy297
    @gammothguy297 Před 2 lety +511

    There is also the fact that the “Bargaining” scene also works as a ridiculous power up for him too. He was still quite a novice at magic when he went in, but he had a constant eternity of combat training against a being he could never defeat. They also illustrate this with the scenes where he dies, you can see him slowly becoming more and more competent at dealing with Dormamu’s attacks.

    • @cussundriakneal9904
      @cussundriakneal9904 Před 2 lety +130

      Right? The scenes were fast, but it showed him surviving for longer periods of time, andeven showed him *deflecting and withstanding attacks.* That's pretty insane for a normal dude, but... who knows how long it acrually took for him to get to that point.

  • @turnerthekilledgamer6995
    @turnerthekilledgamer6995 Před 2 lety +727

    One thing I haven't seen mentioned here is that Strange doesn't just suddenly become an amazing magic user after The Ancient Ones death. He's still just as skilled as before, if maybe a little better at using what he knows due to accepting the risk of failure. Dr. Strange only becomes the amazingly skilled Sorceror Supreme we see in other movies during his struggle against Dormammu, gradually becoming better every loop. His actions not only represent his newfound acceptance of failure, but that because he accepts failure he can now learn from it. By accepting the fact he can fail Strange is able to master himself and his powers to a degree he never could without doing so.

    • @mrsolidsnake007
      @mrsolidsnake007 Před 2 lety +70

      I imagine he spent a very long time in the loops to get as strong as he is when he leaves.

    • @SamJNE122
      @SamJNE122 Před 2 lety +55

      That makes me curious as to how strong he could've become, if he had stayed in there longer. If Dormammu hadn't accepted the bargain, would he have eventually just gotten powerful enough to defeat him on his own?

    • @ndricimhalili9793
      @ndricimhalili9793 Před 2 lety +30

      @@SamJNE122 Well, he probably could still do that at the time, but I think him learning can be seen as something to keep him sane while dying over and over again.

    • @HydraulicDesign
      @HydraulicDesign Před 2 lety +9

      Wait is this theory canon? 'Cause watching it at the time I made no assumption he was actually even aware of all the time spent in the loop. Dormammu was only aware of it because he's supposed to be "beyond time," that's why it worked. And that's the risk of using a Time Loop like that, you'll get stuck in it forever because you have no idea you're stuck in it and should hit the cancel button!
      And I'm not sure how much training you're going to get being killed every 6 seconds.

    • @ndricimhalili9793
      @ndricimhalili9793 Před 2 lety +40

      @@HydraulicDesign he seemed aware to me. And it would be pretty bullshit from a writer's standpoint for him to not be. Since it's a heroic act and Dormamu himself said that Strange would suffer and Strange replies with "Pain's an old friend" (which is a pretty badass line imo)

  • @kamloopy2438
    @kamloopy2438 Před 2 lety +228

    35:28 something else i really like is when Dormamu tells Strange "You can't win" and Strange answers "Yes, but I can fail, again and again for all eternity". Really highlights the growth in his character from being someone who only took cases that he knew he could succeed at so he could get praise to someone willing to sacrifice himself and fail over and over for no recognition at all.
    also in terms of visuals the whole mirror dimension sequence was sick

  • @olympian543
    @olympian543 Před 2 lety +980

    There’s another part about the slow motion scene that I’d like to talk about. The slowed down helicopter in the air. Helicopters are known for their superb control in the air, being able to shift just a few feet in one direction and being able to stay level, but in this scene it’s being blown by the wind, fighting against the storm. I think that helicopter is also symbolic of strange and the idea of control. In the storm of chaos and fate, we have that little portion of the sky we can control. We cannot change the weather, we cannot stop the lightning or snow, which are likely symbolic of all the problems fate throws at us, but we can still work through the challenges of fate. We may have to make course corrections and things may get a little shaky, but if we do it right we can still safely get to our desired destination despite all the challenges that are thrown at us.

    • @dondowner8264
      @dondowner8264 Před 2 lety +3

      Kobe…

    • @jaydenklaus
      @jaydenklaus Před 2 lety +21

      That is a beautiful metaphor.

    • @DonnaBarrHerself
      @DonnaBarrHerself Před 2 lety +13

      Also if a helicopter gets really more than just little bit on its side, show's over - and they glide like a rock. They're stable until they're NOT.

  • @TacComControl
    @TacComControl Před 2 lety +181

    Can we all appreciate the fact that this movie basically ends up summing up to Dr. Strange beating a cosmic horror by basically just annoying it into submission?

    • @TacComControl
      @TacComControl Před 2 lety +23

      Seriously, I wanna see a cut of the movie where every time Strange shows up, he's on another verse of "I know a song that gets on everybody's nerves"

    • @jasonkeats931
      @jasonkeats931 Před rokem +6

      @@TacComControl how did you manage to get that song stuck in my head with one line in a pure text format?!

  • @obedhernandez4533
    @obedhernandez4533 Před 2 lety +369

    "We are all little specks in an uncaring universe that is out to get me"
    That's a good way of disproving one's philosophy.

    • @86fifty
      @86fifty Před 2 lety +53

      Oohhh, I didn't realize until you put it that way, that that philosophy is SO self-centered, while pretending to be not. I understand now!

    • @TheOmegaXicor
      @TheOmegaXicor Před 2 lety +20

      more than anything, if it is out to get anyone then it HAS to care or else it would do nothing

  • @garglfluz
    @garglfluz Před 2 lety +454

    I like that you make the point about easy nihilism as an excuse not to try because one of the things that struck me the most about the Come To Bargain scene is that Strange *tries*, every loop. He knows he'll die, he knows that what's coming is an endless loop of pain and failure, but he always tries to block and stop what's coming for him, always tries to fight back each time. Which is so so much harder than just taking no action and mutely accepting helplessness. He finally learns the lesson that even if success is not guaranteed that doesn't mean he shouldn't put real effort into things that are worthwhile

    • @ianr.navahuber2195
      @ianr.navahuber2195 Před 2 lety +30

      if anything you could argue that's how strange kpet himself focused every time he died
      sure, he is still going to die, but might as well make the most of the minutes before that and get skilled at using the spells he knows

    • @raelkvasiir9704
      @raelkvasiir9704 Před rokem +22

      he also managed to get a LITTLE further each time. each time he died, he held out just a little longer than the last. so the thing that struck me as existentially scary is that he genuinely was LEARNING "How to defeat Dormammu"- or at least, "How to SURVIVE Dormammu". (not that it would've made a HUGE difference given the fact that Dormammu is orders of magnitudes more powerful than Strange was, and likely than Strange could ever actually BE, but i still found it kinda fascinating)

    • @TimmyStreams
      @TimmyStreams Před rokem +4

      @@raelkvasiir9704 like Dead Cells!

  • @sethheppner7138
    @sethheppner7138 Před 2 lety +164

    I appreciate how Red isn’t afraid to be optimistic. I feel like many wannabe intellectuals believe that being negative and nihilistic is the true way to view the world and anything positive isn’t real/is completely stupid. Red’s viewpoints are refreshing

    • @ClaustroPasta
      @ClaustroPasta Před 4 měsíci +6

      not intellectuals but edgy 21st century young adults (and some older people). Actual intellectuals dont turn up edgy and bitter about fate and faith, they just accept the differences in philosophy and tolerates diversity. These edgelords on the other hand think they know better and shun the "sheep" of people who doesnt share their "enlightened" mind. which is a very fitting topic to discuss on a comment section for a movie that exemplifies exactly that! You're not THE ENLIGHTENED ONE in a sea of sheeps, you're part of the system and needs to learn tolerance towards it.

    • @ryanjensen1945
      @ryanjensen1945 Před 16 dny

      It's really interesting that you attribute this to Red in this duo video.

  • @Billyblue98
    @Billyblue98 Před 2 lety +71

    To be fair about Ant-Man, it wasn't that Scott was better than Hope, it's that Scott was more *expendable* than Hope, if I"m remembering correctly

    • @DragonbIaze052
      @DragonbIaze052 Před 9 měsíci +9

      In-universe, yes. From the perspective of the writers, though...

    • @MikeCoxmaul
      @MikeCoxmaul Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@DragonbIaze052Well TBF I don't think Hope is even a character in the comics lol. Hank Pym and Janet are the Antman/Wasp and Scott later becomes Antman while Cassie is a hero as well. If they'd made her the protagonist (despite it making more sense in the narrative they built, her being trained while he's a newbie), the fan babies would've been up in arms lol.

    • @DragonbIaze052
      @DragonbIaze052 Před 7 měsíci +5

      @@MikeCoxmaul Hope IS a character in the comics since at least 1999, but only ever in alternate futures. Given how old they made Hank and Janet, I feel like one of these stories may have contributed to Hope being in the MCU.
      A main-timeline version named Nadia (Russian word for hope) was introduced the year after the movie version. She's a teenaged Black Widow-Wasp hybrid who's a massive dork, a total nerd, and also ace. She's a really fun character. I definitely recommend reading her debut issues in All-New All-Different Avengers, then her solo comic, Unstoppable Wasp.

  • @chrisc1140
    @chrisc1140 Před 2 lety +63

    Honestly my favorite part of Dr. Strange is when he's driving before the crash, I turned to my dad and said "don't text and drive" and RIGHT THEN he crashed. Perfect.

    • @stevenpaul1476
      @stevenpaul1476 Před 2 lety +13

      They didn't screw around with that crash either. Really freaking violent.

    • @professorbutters
      @professorbutters Před rokem +5

      I know Dr. Strange really well and I was expecting it, and I still screamed out loud. And the accident happens because he’s really fucking arrogant, with the flashy car and the high speed and planning more self-aggrandizement. And right before it, he actually accelerates. Yikes.

  • @liukangtheconqueror8216
    @liukangtheconqueror8216 Před 2 lety +203

    One part of this story that I love is when in End Game the Ancient One handed over the stone after Banner told her Dr. Strange handed it over to Thanos. She had ABSOLUTE faith in who Strange was and who he’d become. She couldn’t see past her death but the idea that Stephen had a plan was enough for her to give away the stone to Banner risking destruction of her own reality. She gave away the stone the same way he did knowing her student was correct in whatever action he took.

    • @lyinar
      @lyinar Před 2 lety +29

      I think part of it was that she knew what he was going to have to face just after she died. She might not have been able to divine the outcome, but she was certainly smart enough to put 2 and 2 together and realize, "Oh, reality's still extant for Thanos to be a problem in, Strange must have gotten his head out of his ass enough to deal with Dormammu" when talking with someone who traveled back in time from significantly after her death. She already knew he had the potential for it, but she inferred that he did actually manage to reach the point where he *could* come up with the kind of plan that would actually work.

  • @asherjones5725
    @asherjones5725 Před 2 lety +288

    I like the practical symbol of the lightning bolt as it goes in a million directions until it finds the end point and it solidifies into one line. Not only can we not control life and death, we can't control that final line burned into people's eyes that is our legacy. We reach out our lives in a thousand directions but ultimately we will hit the ground and in a bright and instant flash the path to that point is made clear for solemn reflection. Kind of beautiful, and some joy can be found in ot, but it has an undeniable sadness to it.

    • @dragonsswarm1987
      @dragonsswarm1987 Před 2 lety +12

      [APPLAUSE]

    • @AegixDrakan
      @AegixDrakan Před 2 lety +5

      Damn, that is good introspective stuff and now I'm staring up at the ceiling, in contemplation. XD

    • @minutemansam1214
      @minutemansam1214 Před 2 lety

      @@AegixDrakan It's not that deep. It's, like, the kind of thing a highschooler would find profound.

    • @samueldimmock694
      @samueldimmock694 Před 2 lety +3

      @@minutemansam1214 Are you insulting highschoolers?

    • @cptclonks7279
      @cptclonks7279 Před rokem

      @@minutemansam1214 it's not a matter of "deepness", it's a matter of how well that analogy fits into what you can describe life to be. Like near perfect fit

  • @justinsinke2088
    @justinsinke2088 Před 2 lety +100

    Like you mentioned with the New York Sanctum fight, despite all he's learned and likely being a faster student than most, he's still outclassed by those who've been at it a lot longer than he has. He only gets through as I recall by the skin of his teeth, a little luck, a little help (from the flaying cape), and a few moments of quick thinking.
    Another important moment leading up to the discussed scene is when Strange is in the surgery room, and sees that he can't keep his hands steady, rather than try to fight through it, he relinquishes some of that control, with little hesitation tells one of his colleagues that they'll have to do it, accepting that he is not in a position to save her life as much as he wants to, whereas at the beginning of the movie he would never even consider such even if there was a safer option. That moment, to me, was a huge pivot point for him in addition to the scene being discussed. This surgery isn't just a mark on his record, he has personal stakes in it, something he's never really had before.
    And yes, I love Stranges line with Dormamu tells Strange that he can't succeed: "No, but I can fail. Over, and over, and over. Making you, my prisoner."

  • @ufofighter16
    @ufofighter16 Před 2 lety +53

    In most superpower stories, magic empowers a humble protagonist; in Dr Strange, magic humbles a proud protagonist.

  • @markkoehr5003
    @markkoehr5003 Před 2 lety +425

    Dr Strange in the comics is even more unheroic than movie Strange. Strange in the comics is the greatest surgeon ever, but he would only take on patients that could afford him. Anyone that couldn’t afford him, he didn’t care about them and wouldn’t take them on.

    • @ShudowWolf
      @ShudowWolf Před 2 lety +37

      huh, good to know.
      They still went a route that preserves the character which I like - it's technically different, but fundamentally the same.

    • @joannasthings
      @joannasthings Před 2 lety +91

      He ain't special, thats just the american healthcare system

    • @renatocorvaro6924
      @renatocorvaro6924 Před 2 lety +4

      They really should have used that version of Strange. Movie Strange was unheroic but he was still fundamentally a good person, and it was a big loss to not show that change.

    • @sammiller6631
      @sammiller6631 Před 2 lety +21

      @@renatocorvaro6924 No, they used the right version of Strange.

  • @NemisCassander
    @NemisCassander Před 2 lety +343

    I'm surprised that it wasn't mentioned how someone who fears failure would be attracted to Time Magic in the first place. What better avenue to pursue than one that lets you undo failures? That's another lesson that he learns in The Scene: an acknowledged Master of Time magic, as the Sorcerer Supreme guards the Eye of Agamotto, cannot prevent even her own death, let alone others.
    I think you'll like the themes of Multiverse a bit, and a lot of what you talk about resonates there.

  • @ninjafish6185
    @ninjafish6185 Před 2 lety +59

    One bit you guys kind of skipped over is that, when the ancient one was going in for surgery, Strange was prepping to go in as the surgeon, but then stepped aside to let the other doctor do it because he recognised that it wasn’t something he would be able to do.

  • @elilawrence7166
    @elilawrence7166 Před 2 lety +95

    Cumberbatch was the perfect actor for how they ended up writing Dr. Strange's character, the behavioral and emotional nuance is excecated so well, and you guys do a great job of highlighting that!

    • @barbaragarb9453
      @barbaragarb9453 Před 2 lety +5

      That was Cumberbatch!?!?!

    • @professorbutters
      @professorbutters Před rokem +3

      I agree. I was thrilled when he was cast. They didn’t even need to alter his appearance that much.

  • @sirbobulous
    @sirbobulous Před 2 lety +110

    My favourite scene in Doctor Strange was the 'teach me!' scene. When he is shown proof that the world is so much more than what he already knows and is so confident about he casts ego aside (for that moment) and goes to learn more.

  • @anikanele7958
    @anikanele7958 Před 2 lety +46

    for me the "i come to bargain" scene also has the theme of "you dont have to be stronger in power than your enemies. You just have to be more determined". and a lot of other superhero movies try to be like "he won cause he never gave up" but it always seemed meaningless, because in the end they win by being more powerful. like captain america, they try so often to reframe it as if what makes him a hero is his persistence and hope, but still he defeats his enemies by being physically stronger than them. but doctor strange pulled through with it. strange doesnt defeat dormammu, he is not stronger than dormammu. he is just annoying, he literally makes his dickhead-ness we all hated in the beginning the thing that saves the world.

    • @DragonbIaze052
      @DragonbIaze052 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Steve wasn't stronger than the entire Hydra battalion he was captured by. He saw unbeatable odds, refused to admit defeat, and came up with a plan to overcome the odds.
      He wasn't stronger than the Winter Soldier, but he refused to give up. He let himself get beaten into unconsciousness and nearly die because he refused to give up hope that Bucky was still in there.
      Steve wasn't stronger than Iron Man, but he still did everything he could to stand up for what he believed was right and worked to reach an ending where nobody had to die.
      He wasn't even close to being as strong as Thanos, even when working with both Thor and Iron Man. After all three of them were defeated together, Steve got back up, stared his death in the face, and refused to give up. If it wasn't for everybody else showing up, he would have been killed with minimal effort at that point.
      In only one of those four situations did he actually win the physical fight, and it's also a fight he didn't want to happen in the first place AND he lost the fight he was actually trying to win (convincing Tony he's wrong). The thing about Captain America never giving up isn't that it's how he wins a fight, because it never has been. Never giving up is part of what makes him a hero because he will always believe in and fight for a better future. He genuinely believes in other people and does everything he can to help them.
      The only thing that happens to him personally when he refuses to give up is that he gets his ass kicked over and over, but doing so inspires others.

  • @SunlessNick
    @SunlessNick Před 2 lety +36

    I like that even at the beginning, Strange's arrogance had a different character from Tony Stark's - as the character he's most often compared to. If you asked Stark how he got to be such a great engineer, he wouldn't say study and practice.

  • @Indigo_Roses
    @Indigo_Roses Před 2 lety +224

    I love the mention of Constantine because there is so much overlap of the two and honestly the psychologically tortured mage who are kinda a dick are just my favorite characters

    • @KWBR1123
      @KWBR1123 Před 4 měsíci

      You ever read the Dresden files?

  • @HestiaVesta
    @HestiaVesta Před 2 lety +87

    I noticed when I first saw the movie Strange is 3 variants of the chosen one.
    1. Choosy magical artifacts: the levitation cloak came to him because he proved himself worthy of it.
    2. Literal chosen one: the ancient one chose him to take on responsibility (followed by rejection of the call)
    3. Self chosen one: when he chooses to take up the sorcerer supreme mantel to stop the end of the known world.

    • @adambielen8996
      @adambielen8996 Před 2 lety +4

      To be fair, with the magical artifact it was established that all of them pick their users.

    • @HestiaVesta
      @HestiaVesta Před 2 lety +5

      @@adambielen8996 I know but doesn't mean that the artifact DIDN'T CHOICE Strange.
      And Red mentioned in the Chosen 1 video that there could a bunch of artifacts and they could be a bunch of chosen welders.
      Actively showing the green lantern corp as an example those are literally the same artifact looking for the same criteria in as many people as possible across all worlds.

    • @adambielen8996
      @adambielen8996 Před 2 lety +1

      @@HestiaVesta fair enough

    • @HestiaVesta
      @HestiaVesta Před 2 lety

      @@adambielen8996 if you could choice or make a magical artifact what would you choice?

    • @NobodyC13
      @NobodyC13 Před 2 lety +7

      @@adambielen8996 I think I read somewhere that the VFX artists characterized the Cloak of Levitation by combining the Magic Carpet from Aladdin (to get a basis on a flying piece of fabric that's silent but still emotive and bursting with personality) with that of an experienced horse dealing with an inexperienced rider, and that's usually where conflict arises.

  • @woodrobin
    @woodrobin Před 2 lety +60

    Steve Rogers is an admirable everyman. He's someone with a heroic soul trapped in a body that can't effectively express the courage, tenacity, and other good qualities he possesses. However:
    1. Tony Stark was always Inventive and Successful . . . and Alcoholic and an Emotionally Broken Womanizing, Flippant Jerk. Until his hero-turn where he understands commitment and self-sacrifice.
    2. Thor was always Loyal and Prince of Asgard . . . and Arrogant and Impulsive and Entitled. Until his hero-turn where he understands humility and mortality.
    Stephen Strange starts out heroic, in the sense that he's a surgeon who saves hundreds of lives, and becomes self-centered, seemingly arrogant, and insular because of his fear of failure (as the Ancient One points out). In the comics, this is rooted in the same event that set him on the road to becoming a doctor: *his sister drowns while at a local swimming hole, and he's unable to save her.* Thus, a commitment to saving lives, tied up in a fear of trying to and failing, Hence the avoiding of cases with no hope of life-changing success (the elderly patient -- he can save her from her condition, but she's likely to die either from the stress of the surgery or another cause in the near future, and he'd feel attached and responsible, so he doesn't want to touch the case).
    Strange isn't an admirable everyman. He's an exceptional man, who should be exceptionally admirable, but who is too twisted up in his own inner demons to either believe he *really* deserves the accolades (he's more than a bit dismissive of the award dinner he's expected to attend) or to actually embrace his full potential (you see a hint of it when Dr. Palmer pulls him out of his shell: an amazing diagnosis, formulation of a surgical plan, and execution of a very delicate surgery, based on a tiny shred of a detail . . . so much more than cherry-picking pre-diagnosed surgeries that are lobbed over the plate so he can knock them out of the park). Strange has the talent to be a world-class diagnostician even if he had no hands at all . . . and a complete inability to accept any limitation that might lead to a failure that he's somehow responsible for. Either he controls every aspect of every case he chooses to involve himself in, to eliminate any chance of failing to save someone, or he can't bring himself to do it.
    Strange's watch collection is a nod to that need, as well. He wasn't able to save his sister because he couldn't reach her in time. Even though he knew all the right things to do, it was just too late to help her, and he couldn't control that factor. Hence the need to track time, to prioritize his time, to see himself as always on the precipice of failing, to see himself as unworthy of love, to think if he mars his perfect record (if anyone knows he's failed) everyone will realize what he believes about himself: that he's unworthy, that he can't do it, can't measure up, is less than he should be. The Ancient One calls him out on that in the lightning scene: the fact that he's never been driven by a desire to succeed, but by a fear of failing.
    That's the fatal flaw we see in Strange Supreme in the What If episode: he opens up to Dr. Palmer, and loses her, and cannot accept the idea that there can be a situation in which a life is important to him and he is unable to save that life. No matter the cost, he can't accept the idea of allowing that kind of pain to exist in his life again.

  • @Tuaron
    @Tuaron Před 2 lety +767

    I was hesitant to watch because I haven't been able to see Multiverse of Madness (theatres are far away, okay?), so I really appreciate how you clarify you're not talking about it very quickly. Then I looked at the length of this video and realized I don't have the time to watch it right now. Definitely will when I can, though. Love these Detail Diatribes!

    • @thedemonhater7748
      @thedemonhater7748 Před 2 lety +15

      This comment is violently relatable

    • @alecLogan
      @alecLogan Před 2 lety +8

      @in desperate need of a scotch How is that your response to comments literally saying how they don’t want spoilers?

    • @tibboocelot9272
      @tibboocelot9272 Před 2 lety +21

      @in desperate need of a scotch Hard disagree. Multiverse of Madness absolutely exemplifies an important part of Strange's character and improves upon him in a significant way by the end of the film.

    • @FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest
      @FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest Před 2 lety +3

      Don't watch multiverse of madness; its sucks.
      Its full of woke garbage, character assassination, contrivances and various other dog shit.
      This movie single headedly ruined dr strange as a character, just to keep spewing "The message".

    • @johngarland4338
      @johngarland4338 Před 2 lety +36

      @@FatherAndrew-Scarlet-Priest thanks, I will be sure to watch it

  • @ItsDaHoots
    @ItsDaHoots Před 2 lety +235

    I love that strange was this egotistical asshat that has to learn humility to learn the magic to heal himself
    But he still doesn't get everything he wants
    In fact he's now saddled with more responsibility than ever
    And he's still not the best person, he's learning to be better over time and still makes mistakes

  • @zaza_ink
    @zaza_ink Před 2 lety +23

    26:04 “It’s amazing how beautiful even the smallest of things can be when you look at them gratefully instead of expectedly or deservedly.” Blue… that is a beautiful quote. Thank you

  • @thunderbird0134
    @thunderbird0134 Před 2 lety +56

    I know this video was about the single movie itself, but I really love how these traits of Strange are expanded on in the rest of the MCU. Like one of my favorite scenes is in Infinity War, where he just introduced himself as Dr. Strange to Spider-Man, as he would to anyone else. He doesn’t see himself as some crazy superhero, he just sees himself as the same man who stumbled into a pretty funky career change. Sorcerer Supreme is just another position to add to his resume. Plus, he still has those pretentious asshole traits from when he was a surgeon too. In Multiverse of Madness he catches a lot of flack for presuming that the only way to save the universe from Thanos was the plan that he came up with, and in No Way Home he refuses to take the morally upstanding risk of saving the spider villains in favor of just sending them back to their times and killing them. There’s just so much really powerful continuity with such a morally grey character.

    • @Shadowreaper5
      @Shadowreaper5 Před 2 lety +11

      He didn't say it was the only way to win, he said that the only way he saw to do it. He had limited time to figure it out. Also Strange said that they were supposed to die. Altering the timeline was the problem in the first place. Also, all of them were pulled from right before they died, so sending them back fixed is closure only for the Peters. Those villains will still die.

  • @BingBangPoe
    @BingBangPoe Před 2 lety +16

    37:57 "It's like we said with the Dormammu fight: it's not about about conquering the bad guy, it's about conquering yourself."
    This hits even closer home when you find out that Dormammu was voiced by Benedict Cumberbatch.

  • @peggyliepmann5248
    @peggyliepmann5248 Před 2 lety +28

    Just stating this for the record, Strange accusing the Ancient One of using dark magic is 1. Right after he's had to kill one of the mooks, and she offers him the New York Sanctum, making this the rare time he's not in the mood for an ego stroke, and 2. HE'S RIGHT. She has been using the Dark Dimension to extend her lifespan, and she's been hiding it for centuries. Even if she hated doing it, she still did it, and that doesn't make him wrong.

  • @chefdano3474
    @chefdano3474 Před 2 lety +58

    I think Red's point about how humans react to tragedy and problems is only half correct. There are people who would react like strange does, without the ability to recognize compassion without selfish ulterior motives, but there are some who cling to deeply to the "love conquers all" belief. Some people react the opposite and become incredibly clingy, and desperately dependent on those that care about them during personal crisis, and you don't see that too often in movies I think. Where the protagonist has a life changing event and they spiral down a terrible path, but that path is ultra dependence, where they wallow is self pity thinking the only thing that can help them is their friends and loved ones, so they ask/expect the world of them while doing nothing to help themselves. They get mad when their loved ones get sick of it and leave, making them pity themselves more, driving more loved ones away.
    We usually only see characters like this start off at that low point, but I can't think of many "Hero's journey" style movie where we see them spiral down into that state.

  • @venamotylek
    @venamotylek Před 2 lety +31

    Dr. Strange is a prime example of why therapy is important.

  • @v.v365
    @v.v365 Před 2 lety +119

    In What If, the Doctor Strange from the show has a similar but very different origin where he loses Christine, but unlike the MCU (Sacred Timeline) Christine just dies, it’s a fixed point that Strange cannot change without breaking his entire universe. Since Christine dying ends with the destruction of a universe, Kang and the TVA decide that Strange needs a different motivator, so in the Sacred Timeline he still loses Christine but it’s because he drives her away by being awful in his misery after losing the use of his hands. It keeps the universe intact and creates Doctor Strange, so it gets to be in Kang’s Sacred Timeline.

    • @blackbloom8552
      @blackbloom8552 Před 2 lety +33

      Its pretty fucked up for a person life to be considered a "necessary motivator" I kind of understand doctor strange going off the rail when faced with a universe that was fine with cosmically mandated fridging.

    • @washada
      @washada Před 2 lety +33

      I like how that episode is built because the ‘’absolute point’’ is just the premise of the story. It’s ‘’the episode where Christine dies’’ and Steven does everything in his power to change that. Despite it, she keeps dying, because it’s the episode where she dies. When he finally manages to save her, the entire thing collapses because the story no longer lines up with its own premise. Christine doesn’t die in the episode where she dies, and that just doesn’t work.
      I don’t know if this was intentional, but I love this meta aspect.

    • @JaelinBezel
      @JaelinBezel Před 2 lety +1

      Do you mean Kang the Conqueror?

    • @abigailw7146
      @abigailw7146 Před 2 lety +3

      @@blackbloom8552 yeah the mcu is very morally.. well strange

    • @Glamador
      @Glamador Před 2 lety +2

      @@blackbloom8552 That's just the plot of Steins Gate! Good episode tho. I liked it.

  • @Eyewarp
    @Eyewarp Před 2 lety +36

    A sort of meta aspect to the "it's not about you" line that I particularly loved is that one of the creators of Doctor Strange was Steve Ditko, a diehard objectivist whose views often made it into his comics even when they blatantly conflicted with what his partners were writing. As someone who loathes Ayn Rand, her work, and her half-baked philosophy with every fiber of his being, I found it immensely satisfying to see a character created by a raving objectivist told to stop being a selfish prick and start thinking about other people for once.

  • @FuzzyStripetail
    @FuzzyStripetail Před 2 lety +169

    Red's name was probably on a scroll somewhere because she was destined to step on Ant-Man thereby giving her superpowers and ultimately dubbing her Red Ant-Woman.

    • @SharowbladyeGaymerPorate
      @SharowbladyeGaymerPorate Před 2 lety +18

      I’m still head cannon that Red and Blue are ancient super powerful beings that just really like literature and history.
      Current ideas is that Red is Loki and Blue is Thor.

    • @DoveJS
      @DoveJS Před 2 lety +8

      @@SharowbladyeGaymerPorate But are we certain Red isn't the Monkey King?

    • @SharowbladyeGaymerPorate
      @SharowbladyeGaymerPorate Před 2 lety +4

      @@DoveJS well you do have a good point there.
      I never thought of that

    • @DoveJS
      @DoveJS Před 2 lety +1

      @@cewla3348 Why not? Especially books about the monkey?

  • @ygitor
    @ygitor Před 2 lety +83

    I was thinking about the “What, like you?” line the other day, because when I saw this in theaters, everyone in the room recoiled at that line like they were the ones being told that. It reminded me of Rian Johnson talking about how the “I am your father” line works so well because it hurts both the character and the audience personally. While Darth Vader’s line is a little more iconic and this line feels a lot more venomous, both serve the purpose to flip a normal trope on its head

  • @tlotlomolefe4057
    @tlotlomolefe4057 Před 2 lety +141

    Side note: does anyone else get so engrossed in these detail diatribes that they feel like they can literally see the dolls talking until they actually look at the dolls?

    • @Pandie2828
      @Pandie2828 Před 2 lety +6

      Well the dolls could be talking we just wouldn't know because they don't have mouths

    • @aerchys4779
      @aerchys4779 Před 2 lety +2

      Nah bro lay off the smoke

    • @salem-01
      @salem-01 Před 2 lety

      Yes

  • @alexm-e4910
    @alexm-e4910 Před 2 lety +13

    So, funny thing I learned from medical staff while my mom was going through some spinal surgeries, most hospitals keep the surgeons away from the patients when they’re recovering because most of them are so bad at treating people kindly that they decrease patient survival when they try to do the whole bedside manner thing.

    • @BlueTressym
      @BlueTressym Před 2 lety +1

      Oof.

    • @lukeroberson2115
      @lukeroberson2115 Před 5 měsíci +2

      I can actually kind of get it. Can you imahine trying to empathize with someone if all you can think of is them lying on a table with their guts in the open?

  • @locsoluv94
    @locsoluv94 Před 2 lety +11

    18:15 This is a really good point. One thing that frustrated me about this character is that he focused so much on being a surgeon again that it seems like he forgot that he could be a doctor in other ways that didn't require steady hands. But something tells me that 1) he thinks less of the pediatricians and primary care doctors and the ObGyns (that aren't in the delivery room) so he would be a "lesser doctor" if he decided to open a clinic and 2) he only wants to deal with unconscious people. So maybe being a surgeon is the only way to be a doctor for him. Also, opening a clinic doesn't get him the glory.

  • @kerricaine
    @kerricaine Před 2 lety +37

    i really like how Dr. strange's character arc across the films is more subtle than just "story 1 is done, huge progress, completely good heroic character now!"
    in DS 1 he needs to learn to set aside his ego. infinity war/other appearences, he's so focused on the big picture, the universe as a whole, but in no way home he needs to see the human aspect of things. finally, in multiverse of madness, his arc is not just about him no longer being in control, but learning to relinquish control to other people and trust them.

  • @aidanshea5942
    @aidanshea5942 Před 2 lety +103

    The first Doctor Strange is about learning to trust others.
    The second is about trusting in yourself (Both America and Strange's character arcs revolve around this)
    The third could possibly be about Strange teaching someone else to trust others, thus completing his character arc?

    • @falquicao8331
      @falquicao8331 Před 2 lety +14

      The second Dr. Strange was actually all about Strange trusting America to do the right thing instead of trying to stop Wanda by himself, which is what he did in the first movie. Did you get the first and second movie mixed up?

    • @LaZodiac
      @LaZodiac Před 2 lety

      What second Doctor Strange?

    • @aidanshea5942
      @aidanshea5942 Před 2 lety +5

      @@LaZodiac You wouldn't know it, it cane out in another universe

  • @ginge641
    @ginge641 Před 2 lety +40

    16:39 This is leaving out quite a significant moment for Strange. After the explosion in the chamber that separates him from Wong and Mordo and leaves him stranded in the New York Sanctum, Strange chooses to intervene to save the life of the Sanctum's master despite being horrifically outmatched. He may not be willing to throw in with the good fight when it's presented to him as a concept, but in the moment, he's willing to jump in and try to save a life.

    • @kacperdrabikowski5074
      @kacperdrabikowski5074 Před 2 lety +12

      True, I thing that Strange in the beginning is textbook example of jerk-with-a-heart-of-gold. Even his introductory moment has this: his first surgery on screen he treats very much like a game, like he's not saving someone's LIFE, but the moment he hears there is a new patient that no one has any idea how to treat, he jumps in, makes a correct on-spot diagnosis and decides he can do it, so he does. He is very much a glory hound, but he treats actual saving lifes seriously.
      That is not to say he isn't a nasty person, he very much is, but I wouldn't say he doesn't care about people AT ALL. Also, remember that he was on the spot and operating in the middle of the freaking Chitauri invasion.

  • @Kayclau
    @Kayclau Před 2 lety +29

    I like a theory about this movie that says that Strange became such a great wizard by the end of it because he spent functionally decades or even centuries in the time loop dying over and over again and that helped him develop his skills way further.

    • @TrinityCore60
      @TrinityCore60 Před rokem

      I like that theory.
      If there’s one teacher better than most, it’s trial and error.

  • @Berd_Alert
    @Berd_Alert Před 2 lety +13

    Red yelling about the "what, like you?" Scene is an ace mood

  • @murderofcrows5089
    @murderofcrows5089 Před 2 lety +38

    I love how during the bargaining scene towards the end Strange is like “Hey buddy wanna bargain?” Just to be as annoying as possible

  • @Anglomachian
    @Anglomachian Před 2 lety +26

    Even now, I don’t know whether I just read it into the movie or not, but I really enjoyed the undertone off optimistic vs pessimistic nihilism in this movie. Strange “brief specks in an unfeeling universe” vs the Ancient One’s “is not about you”. Nihilism can be a freeing realisation if one approaches it without the encumbrance of ego. Realising that the universe is a place, an event that is occurring rather than a being with expectations of you, where every single one of your faults will be measured and added up in the great tapestry of time.
    Instead be happy that you’re able to be a part of it, and make the most of the time and experiences still available to you.

    • @AegixDrakan
      @AegixDrakan Před 2 lety +5

      Yeah. So often, nihilism is just "everything is meaningless edge edge angst angst" or an excuse for a psycho do do evil things...
      But if it's approached with humility, wonder, and as the *starting point* and not the endpoint of one's view of the world... Suddenly it becomes about how lucky we all are to be able to experience all these things together, and how *we* are the ones who give meaning to our worlds, and how if the universe is uncaring...Then we owe it to ourselves and each other to care, so we can make this shared experience better for all of us.
      Instead of making the universe cold and worthless, it actually turns around and makes every moment of it precious.

  • @TheRuneTail
    @TheRuneTail Před 2 lety +18

    I remember an older comic where Strange teamed up with Silver Surfer. He was floating cross legged and reading one of the tomes, and practicing a new spell. He does the "I love you" hand sign, says the spell, fired the spell and rocketed his ass into the bookshelf and he's just sitting there stunned, open book on his head and him going "huh"

  • @ikefox4212
    @ikefox4212 Před 2 lety +13

    I, a math nerd, got very excited when Red talked about the thematic appropriateness of the Brownian motion of lightning during their conversation on accepting chaos in the world.

  • @yourdoom6554
    @yourdoom6554 Před 2 lety +15

    There's also something interesting to note about where Strange fights Dormammu that I think is the main reason why his time magickry works as well as it does.
    Iirc, it's defined that Dormammu is a timeless entity that exists in a timeless void. There is, functionally, no concept of time where Dormammu lives.
    So since there is no "time", Strange can freely rewind time back to "I've come to bargain" as many times as it takes for Dormammu to give up, and there is never a continuity error and he can keep existing past that point, because he is fundamentally in a location where time has no meaning.
    So, theoretically, Dormammu and Strange could have had their little song and dance for all of eternity, and nobody would be the wiser for it.

  • @bazzfromthebackground3696
    @bazzfromthebackground3696 Před 2 lety +26

    I may be misremembering, but didn't he give Peter the "It's not about you." line in "No Way Home" just after discovering they summoned the villains?

  • @readonlymemories
    @readonlymemories Před 2 lety +88

    Finally! Someone actually digging into the core philosophical themes of the film because goddamnit this film has something to say and barely anyone talks about it! So often it's brushed off as another mediocre marvel origin story and it can get frustrating. And I'm deeply grateful you acknowledged the fact that he doesn't immediately start getting better after the usual "take down the arrogant hero a few pegs and he immediately sees the folly of his ways and starts getting better." In fact he gets worse; he makes it even more about himself because he's spiralling and panicking and it's all so painfully, unflinchingly human. Human in the way we can't help but inflict our pain on others when we're terrified of losing control, of the idea that change will happen whether we want it to or not.
    As someone who's been a fan of the film for over 5 years, I can confidently say this is one of the best videos on yt about it wherein you actually engage with the ideas and themes presented. I mean it's not like it's hard, as there aren't many to begin with, but still. This means more than you probably think to someone like me, who was charmed by the film due to it being so theme and philosophy-heavy in the first place.
    I am *not* a fan of the sequel though. I agree with the Wanda stans that it should've been given the title of Wanda and cancel Strange's role entirely, like in Wandavision, because he's barely relevant to the plot and message of his own film. What a waste. But I digress.
    Once again, I cannot thank you enough that you actually discuss in-depth about the themes in the film. It makes this weary doctor strange fan feel like they're not crazy after all for liking something most brushed off as boring. Truly, thank you both.

    • @LunaryonSunborn
      @LunaryonSunborn Před 2 lety +4

      I fundamentally disagree. I think that that MoM was not only a good movie, but the crux of the movie was about Doctor Strange and passing his core lesson onto both Mac and Wanda

  • @Eckister
    @Eckister Před 2 lety +25

    honestly - I dare to disagree with your points on Stark. It is not that "he didn't know his weapons kill people". He made all those weapons, because he believed they will be used by "the good guys". But then Yin-Sen tells him, that his company was selling his inventions to terrorists and THAT is what was shocking to him, because he did not know of the trade arrangements of his own company. It is not that "the gun I invented and designed shoots bullets! OMG!!!!", it's more like "how did I never know that my business partner is a psychopat?".

    • @williamtimonen6814
      @williamtimonen6814 Před rokem +5

      I think he even says something like ”I saw the weapons I built kill the soldiers I built them to protect” or something.

    • @Eckister
      @Eckister Před rokem +4

      @@williamtimonen6814 yup, he literally did - at the press conference when Stark escaped the 10 rings. Eh - it is not called "Overly Rational Productions", no idea why I got triggered at all lmao

  • @cobalt2672
    @cobalt2672 Před 2 lety +78

    I COMPLETELY agree with Red about multiverses. Watching Loki was neat initially but when the pulled the whole "multiverse" thing it made the whole Infinity War / Endgame saga feel like it no longer had any stakes

    • @eshbena
      @eshbena Před 2 lety +33

      The stakes are still your life. Even if there are a thousand versions of you across the multiverse, you, yourself, are unique and not even the other versions of you are exactly you. If your timeline collapses, that's still you dying. The stakes haven't changed at all except that they're bigger now. You can destroy whole realities and slaughter untold numbers of people and that's pretty terrible.

    • @carmacksanderson3937
      @carmacksanderson3937 Před 2 lety +13

      I'm not sure I understand it. I mean, the Avengers still saved the universe, right? Even if it was one of an infinite many, they still did that. I'm not quite seeing how the multiverse retroactively invalidates all that hard work

    • @veggiesnake4430
      @veggiesnake4430 Před 2 lety

      i don't think it eliminates the stakes so much as it shows just how disconnected from any reality the TVA is; to anyone inside the universe, the stakes are incredibly high, but to the TVA, the stakes are incredibly low, because they go around destroying whole universes anyway to maintain what they think is the 'right one'.

    • @willieoelkers5568
      @willieoelkers5568 Před 2 lety +10

      @@carmacksanderson3937 Depends how they play it; if they want to they now have whole sacrificial universes to use as “this is serious” fodder, except of course at that point as noted in a Trope Talk, that’s a scope we can’t process and so it can easily undercut the point. Personally, I tend to find the “funhouse mirror” approach tedious in short order. Show me something new and different out there, not just a fanfic/crackfic take on things we’ve already seen

    • @StoryTeller796
      @StoryTeller796 Před 2 lety

      @@eshbena I prefer to take your take as someone with Autism.

  • @eyesofthecervino3366
    @eyesofthecervino3366 Před 2 lety +21

    Fun Easter egg: Dr. Strange wasn't just turning down helping "some random strangers who wouldn't get him enough prestige." He was turning down helping someone with spinal damage from flying in an experimental exoskeleton because it wouldn't get him enough prestige.
    That's Rhodey. He turned down helping put Rhodey back together.

    • @adambielen8996
      @adambielen8996 Před 2 lety +4

      I thought it was the Hammertech pilot that got his spine snapped.

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 Před 2 lety +12

      @@adambielen8996
      The actual line is, "I've got a 35-year-old Air Force Colonel -- crushed his lower spine in some kind of experimental armor."
      Take that as you will, but I'm pretty sure it's Rhodey.

    • @adambielen8996
      @adambielen8996 Před 2 lety +4

      @@eyesofthecervino3366 You're probably right. I didn't remember the wording of the line.

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 Před 2 lety

      @@adambielen8996
      Yeah, I had to go look it up real quick ^^

    • @JeromeSankara
      @JeromeSankara Před 2 lety +5

      I think it was confirmed that it was NOT Rhodes but it probably depends on who you ask

  • @sams.975
    @sams.975 Před 2 lety +31

    Actually, they also continue to explore and demonstrate the theme of relinquishing control in Multiverse of Madness. Awesome to reflect on it in hindsight.

  • @Nasser851000
    @Nasser851000 Před 2 lety +111

    Strange needs to see a magical therapist who can literally make his problems disappear XD

    • @wrestling_is_fake
      @wrestling_is_fake Před 2 lety +7

      Or rather teach himself psychology and become a therapist 🗿

    • @rafaelfigfigueiredo2988
      @rafaelfigfigueiredo2988 Před 2 lety +4

      In about an hour a marvelhead will make an list of candidates and I'm here for it

    • @8unnylover
      @8unnylover Před 2 lety +6

      I nominate Bruce Banner, not bc he'd be good at it but because the idea of Stephen, an actual doctor, doing the same stupid thing Tony did at the end of that one Iron Man movie makes me giggle

    • @junoniathesilkwing4221
      @junoniathesilkwing4221 Před 2 lety +2

      Sign Wanda up for that magic therapy too.

    • @abigailw7146
      @abigailw7146 Před 2 lety +1

      can we also sign peter up for therapy! poor dude got his whole social life whisked away

  • @michaeldaniels642
    @michaeldaniels642 Před 2 lety +10

    Hearing this makes wonder how the hell does the "What if Dr. Strange lost his heart instead of his hands?" even work? The man didn't have a heart until the end of the first movie!

  • @OhitsONnow
    @OhitsONnow Před 2 lety +11

    Actually Holy cow. Now that I think about it. Doesn't this make Steven Strange's "this is the only way" in endgame even more poignant? The sorcerer with the power to look through time and previously wanted to do everything *perfectly*, looked through every outcome and had to settle for an imperfect victory sacrificing an ally.
    Even with the infinity stone. No control.
    And in the multiverse of madness the guy at the wedding asks him "was it really the only way" and strange solemnly says yeah and said guy proceeds to tell him about how he lost his brother(I think) so here Strange is again, facing the chaotic outside world and failure to save everything.
    The movie starts with him facing not everything going his way, Christine married off to some other guy. Even in a multiverse with another Christine, he can't get with her cause universes would implode. No control.
    (Where as Scarlet Witch is grasping for control, has far greater power, and envying strange who learnt the lesson things aren't perfect & is just toppling through the universe as a mess at 100mph)
    Thinking about it now, the thought baked into these movies is staggering.
    I really liked the part at the end where, strange replaces the broken watch glass. My boy's finally moved on

  • @elizabethgodwin7679
    @elizabethgodwin7679 Před 2 lety +10

    As a person with a love interest who is going through a hard time, I just want to attest that people don't say "at least I have you" because they're not concerned, they say it because they ARE really scared right now and they're trying to comfort themselves and their partner. It turns out to be a very comforting statement. I know that even if my husband and I lose our apartment or have to take out loans just to make it through the month we will find a way through this together. The statement turns my focus away from all the things I'm in danger of losing and towards the most important thing that we won't lose so long as we stay dedicated to it. And if you've read this long, I want you to know that earlier today when we confronted our financial situation it was my husband who comforted me, and I'm so grateful to him.

    • @roguepsykerhaaker4813
      @roguepsykerhaaker4813 Před rokem

      Thank you for sharing, that was lovely. May I ask how things are going?

    • @elizabethgodwin7679
      @elizabethgodwin7679 Před rokem +1

      @@roguepsykerhaaker4813 Things are getting better. We keep plugging along. Thank you for asking. I forgot I wrote this comment

    • @roguepsykerhaaker4813
      @roguepsykerhaaker4813 Před rokem

      @@elizabethgodwin7679 oh that's great! I'm very happy for you both

  • @laughingmask3118
    @laughingmask3118 Před 2 lety +17

    There's an implication I've found so few people discuss when it comes to Strange's dual with Dormammu:
    Exactly how many times did Dormammu, a TIMELESS BEING, have to kill Doctor Strange before he even just got ANNOYED?
    How many times did he kill Strange in this loop before he became ANGRY?
    And a timeless being of unimaginable patience, how long after losing that patience do you think Dormammu, who was certainly capable of it, maybe to turn torture to make the mortal submit?
    ...and then how long did Strange ensure death and very likely agony until death before finally, the timeless being of unfathomable patience, actually feel like bargaining was now his only logical option?
    Stephen Strange is so much more of a steel balled badass than the fandom gives him credit for just on the grounds of those implications alone.

  • @zebrastrong9291
    @zebrastrong9291 Před 2 lety +11

    What’s great is that Dr Strange is dead center spot on for most neuro surgeons. They almost have to have a God complex to have the sheer nerve to operate on people’s brains…

  • @slimtimn9153
    @slimtimn9153 Před 2 lety +7

    I love that the movie’s main motif being time is hinted at very early on. In the opening scene during the surgery, Strange tells the attending Dr to cover his watch, hinting that Strange doesn’t want the distraction of change and time, while explicitly saying that what he wants is not to be distracted by other people and their noise. Strange then breaking his watch in Nepal gives to him exactly that, and he’s distraught by it. He carries the broken watch with him now as a reminder of that desire and it’s consequences

  • @woodrobin
    @woodrobin Před 2 lety +11

    Strange's journey with the Ancient One is so much darker in the comic: the Ancient One is dying and Shuma-Gorath is using his mind as a gateway to try to invade Earth's reality. Strange has to *kill* the Ancient One by entering his mind and destroying his ego, his sense of self and identity. Afterward, he swears to never use sorcery again. The Ancient One then appears to him, revealing that, although he thought he would die when Strange destroyed his ego-core, what had actually happened was that the Ancient One no longer had the distinction between Self and Other, allowing him to become One With The Universe. So, by killing the Ancient One, Strange had actually allowed him to become one with Eternity, the embodiment of existence. But in that intervening period, Strange thinks he's killed his mentor, friend, positive father figure, savior, and role model.

  • @Lawlietftw30
    @Lawlietftw30 Před rokem +4

    About Tony Stark being surprised that his weapons had hurt people - I don't think he was entirely ignorant about the fact that they were used, but rather he had trusted the wrong people in who he had sold them to. That theme gets reinforced by the fact that his key business partner Obadiah is one of those untrustworthy, even nefarious characters that Tony Stark had trusted. It's still true that Tony Stark had been kind of off in his own little world before "the cave" incident, but he found out the hard way that he couldn't just let other people handle all of the responsibility that comes after the invention is made.

  • @Bryan21381
    @Bryan21381 Před 2 lety +162

    Actually, I would think of scarlet witch as one that requires some kind of psychic therapy. Yes, I'm making a psychonauts reference but, looking at her mental state, feels like she may be a 'beyond Maligula' level type of danger. And yes, I'm thinking there are threats that are 'beyond Maligula' levels.

    • @CrimsonBlasphemy
      @CrimsonBlasphemy Před 2 lety +21

      Maligula is *just* a *really powerful* hydromancer. Scarlet Witch is a reality warper. The level of threat is definitely on totally different levels.

    • @Bryan21381
      @Bryan21381 Před 2 lety

      @@CrimsonBlasphemy true. I'm just thinking of mental states & I thought of Psychonauts since I'm both a fan of those series. Not to mention, her mental world would be wandavision or something.

    • @animationdude9
      @animationdude9 Před 2 lety +6

      God I would love a Psychonauts crossover with marvel. Just 4 one comic series!

    • @elenafriese891
      @elenafriese891 Před 2 lety +6

      @@animationdude9 actually, hell, just give us *a* comic series for Psychonauts! There are *so* many options!

    • @Bryan21381
      @Bryan21381 Před 2 lety

      @@elenafriese891 true. I would just think of a crossover than just a comic series.

  • @Ty-Dy
    @Ty-Dy Před 2 lety +18

    Thank you for putting that there was no Multiverse of Madness discussion in the description. I love to support creators like you guys by watching the videos when they premiere (I know that helps the algorithm or something) but I also don't want to see spoilers for the movie since I haven't seen it yet.

  • @kingbeauregard
    @kingbeauregard Před 2 lety +48

    Little-known fact: the first Sorcerer Supreme they tried to train was Gregory House. Had to pull the plug on him almost immediately because he kept calling the Ancient One "Dumbledore".

  • @rashkavar
    @rashkavar Před 2 lety +14

    I've always liked the fictional doctors who get completely *wrecked* when they lose a patient. It's not healthy for real surgeons, but in the realm of fiction, you often need a very quick way to demonstrate that they *care* about their patients and that kind of scene often does an amazing job of showing that.
    There's an old TV show called M*A*S*H which is about a fictional mobile army hospital in the Korean war, and I think every single doctor on the show has at least one scene where they have a patient that dies or has serious ongoing complications that shows just how they handle that. This ranges from Frank Burns (possibly the most asinine character in TV history) saying "Oh well, he never had a chance anyway, NEXT" to a full episode where Hawkeye goes through a full breakdown, moving out of his quarters and obsessing over his patient's myriad complications every waking moment and both pulling away and driving off everyone who tries to help. He does eventually work out what's wrong because protagonist energy inspires him, but it's still a good episode. (The one who's closest to Dr. Strange in the show is Charles Emerson Winchester III (yes, this is how he introduces himself) who, upon having a patient flatline on him says "How could you do this to me!?" before starting CPR. (He's Frank Burns' replacement, coming in when the show had matured to be a bit more nuanced in how it does it's antagonism.)
    (The show is far from completely unproblematic, but it's far better than you'd expect from a 70s sitcom, and I grew up watching it. So I'm a bit of a fan.)

    • @skazwolfman8622
      @skazwolfman8622 Před 2 lety +1

      What's this?! A wayfarer of the Internet with an Edwin Odesseiron profile picture discussing the television classic that is M*A*S*H? Truly I've stumbled onto the best of all possible timelines. But yeah, Frank is in fact the absolute worst, and as much of an insufferable ass as Charles could be he had a lot more humanizing moments than old Ferretface.
      You're right that, being a 70s sitcom and all, M*A*S*H has its fair share of problematic elements, but to anyone stumbling upon this comment I cannot recommend it enough. I have still yet to find another TV show that can CONSISTENTLY be both as funny and as emotionally devastating as M*A*S*H is, and sometimes in the same episode! Truly one of the great Classics of television.

  • @yungzhe
    @yungzhe Před 2 lety +6

    "It's not about you" something that Dr. Strange then go on to really take to heart.
    In all the movies he appears in, he always tell people that he's interacting with, their lives are no more than a speck of dust in the grand cosmos of things, they gotta sacrifice for the greater good.

  • @Tmnt_is_cool
    @Tmnt_is_cool Před 2 lety +5

    Strange is the human embodiment of opening the door and getting stuck in the wall next to it

  • @sars910
    @sars910 Před 2 lety +6

    We need a Detail Diatribe on the moment when Dr. Michael Morbius says ,"It's Morbin time", in Morbius.

  • @Wolfeson28
    @Wolfeson28 Před 2 lety +6

    32:53 It's interesting looking at that scene through the lens of overcoming fear of failure. In the one sense, of course, Dr. Strange *isn't* failing - he's succeeding at stopping Dormamu from consuming the Earth. But, as you pointed out, Strange is only able to succeed in that task because he's willing to accept the *possibility* of failure. Stopping Dormamu is the equivalent of those surgical cases he always avoided because he didn't *know* if he could save those patients. As the Ancient One tells him, his fear of failure was what held him back from true greatness; by refusing any case he doesn't know he can "win", Strange avoids any failure but also holds himself back from the prospect of even greater success by saving some of those patients that weren't guarantees.
    It's a nice application of the idea that failure is the primary path toward true growth. Failure is how someone learns and improves, and only by pushing one's own limits (and sometimes inevitably going beyond them) can one achieve their greatest success.

  • @AegixDrakan
    @AegixDrakan Před 2 lety +8

    You know, for all the dickishness of Strange, I'm glad that he had that one moment midway through that showed there was more to him, the moment that a LOT of MCU characters kind of just blaze through. You know the "When I became a doctor, I swore an oath to do no harm and I have just killed a man! I'm *not* doing that again!"
    The fact he recognizes that and has a problem with it is actually pretty great, honestly.

  • @zachnoland155
    @zachnoland155 Před 2 lety +10

    In theaters it just kind of felt like a retread of iron man 1 but I can see now it had a lot more going on. Liked how DSMoM expanded on these themes by exploring the consequences of his choices as well as his established need to be in control over the choice in the first place.

  • @wombatpandaa9774
    @wombatpandaa9774 Před 2 lety +4

    Guys, thank you for doing this diatribe. I'm currently coming out of something that to me feels kind of similar to what Strange went through. Thankfully, it was a lot less of a problem, but it still shook me deeply, the idea that I wasn't, in fact, in control. I am a man of faith and believed from the beginning that God wanted me to learn something from this, probably to learn about control, but that didn't really make it any easier. I'd just begun over the last year or so to really push for things that I wanted - I'd spent years on the sidelines, dealing with trauma from an emotionally abusive relationship, and finally felt ready to go, to take control of my life and do the things I'd always wanted to do. Over the course of a year, I went from working tech support and spending all my free times holing up in my room playing video games to finding a wonderful woman to be my girlfriend, working through my emotional issues, and working my way up to my dream job with the Department of State. Now I'm staring down my future as a father, as an IT professional, as a son-in-law, brother-in-law, someone holding a top secret security clearance, potentially a leader in my global church organization, and I'm thrilled. Everything seems to be going my way. Then I get rear-ended in an intersection ten minutes from my home and get a concussion that take some out of work for two weeks, because I stopped for a red light and the other guy didn't see. I know it's not the worst thing, and I'm grateful it wasn't worse. But it really shook me. In a moment, it felt like my idea for my life that I had been building came crashing down, like it was what got hit through that intersection instead of me and my car. If I couldn't predict this, if I couldn't control for this variable, what else is coming? What else will I not be able to prepare for? What else could derail me, and what is the point of continuing to pursue these dreams of mine if a guy not paying attention to my driving for one second could potentially derail them all?
    Thankfully, the accident didn't derail my life. I fell back on my parents, bless them, and I had a bit of money saved up so between those two things I was able to take work off. We'd already planned a trip to give me more time away from work to heal, and both my current job and my prospective job are fine. Me and my girlfriend are stronger than ever, and I'm still looking forward to all the things I was before. I got out so lucky, because of so many good people around me, so much outside of my control. And I guess that's kind of the point, right? That in the chaotic workings of the cosmos, we can't fathom what is coming even in our own lives. Whether you believe in a higher power or not, that is always true - stuff happens that we can't prepare for. But it is in that chaos that we find not just the unexpected car accidents that take us out of work and shake us and cause us to question our fundamental beliefs, but also the amazing people around us that bolster us up afterwards, the fact that it wasn't so bad, the lessons we learn. Relinquishing control is about trust. Trusting that whether it be God or some fundamental force, that the chaos will give as it will take, and that whatever it gives or takes, we'll be ready enough to meet it.
    Anyways, thank you guys. I appreciated the opportunity I had to think about this event in my life again, to be reminded that it's okay to not be in control, and that in fact, it's better if I recognize that in much if not all aspects of my life save my own actions, I am usually not in control. I can just do my best with what little I have, and hope and trust that that will be enough.

  • @phoenixkingtheo
    @phoenixkingtheo Před 2 lety +8

    I remember a a theory/someone saying that Strange got too powerful to fast after the movie, but we don’t know how long he was in the realm with Dormomu and “training”

  • @TheMimiSard
    @TheMimiSard Před 2 lety +12

    If you want a great backstory-in-flashback, Moon Knight. Giving the flashback in the penultimate episode as a DID Alter learns the history of how he came about is an interesting way of doing it.

    • @TheMimiSard
      @TheMimiSard Před 2 lety +2

      Interestingly, one of the tentpole motivations of Doctor Strange becoming a doctor in the comics was made canon in MoM - the death of his sister Donna. The exact setting of how she died is slightly changed, but she still drowned. But I can see how once he got to his doctorate, he felt he had succeeded what he owed Donna, and thus became the arrogant asshole we see in the first movie.
      I feel like all of Stephen Strange's canon appearances have been keeping him solidly on a steady characterisation path. As you say, Stephen wants control. He controls events in IW by looking into future timelines and doing what needs to be done to keep things on the most successful path (by giving up the Time Stone to keep Tony alive), and then telling Tony, in a silent signal, that there is only one path. I NWH, Peter fights against Stephen's need to control, and by doing so shows Stephen that paths other than the one he wants to follow can work. For all that the movie ends with the forgetfulness spell wiping knowledge of Peter Parker from the world, including - presumably - from Strange - I suspect what happens in MoM is a subconscious result of what happened with Peter. MoM shows three alternates of Stephen who are all control freaks (one of whom he was told that by Christine's Variant), and all have come to bad results because of it, but because Stephen wants to do better than the Variant America mentioned, he digs into his ability to give up some of his control and trust America, giving her confidence to gain control of her powers and win the fight.

    • @TheMimiSard
      @TheMimiSard Před 2 lety

      I will note, my thought that the setting of Donna's death was changed is not as changed as I thought. I thought the ice may conflict with Nebraska, but I looked at a map of the USA properly and found out where Nebraska actually is, and between that and peeps on Discord worked out that they would have frozen water in winter. The place where it is changed is I think the original story (which I got via Geek Culture Explained) it was a summer swim in the local waterhole, where as the scene in MoM where Stephen mentions Donna says it was ice cracking.

  • @ALookIntoTheEulenspiegel
    @ALookIntoTheEulenspiegel Před 2 lety +8

    Doctor Strange is basically a Greek Hero, no wonder Red likes him.
    Selfish prick, prone to angry outbursts, only out for himself, but you just gotta admire his resourcefulness and how he gets results.

  • @yakketyyak6414
    @yakketyyak6414 Před 2 lety +22

    Loved this video, perfectly summed up how I felt about the first movie and how good it was even if Strange isn't my favorite Marvel character--I wasn't interested in most of his stories or comics before the movie and ended up watching it because "oh it's part of the MCU I guess I have to watch it now??" and it ended up being one of my favorites because as you guys said, it works as a standalone movie not only in it's cinematic universe, but also because it's just a damn good movie! You guys bringing up Steve Rogers also made me wonder if we'd ever get a Detail Diatribe about him and his movies (particularly Winter Soldier). IDK if you'd have a lot to talk about regarding him but I love hearing you guys talk about things I like, lol. Great work as always!

  • @Rookie14.
    @Rookie14. Před 2 lety +2

    I straight up yelled in excitement when Red mentioned Black Jack, that was one of the first manga I ever read and it stuck with me, so having Red mention it and say she’s also read it, (as far as I know it was not very commonly known even then) was wonderful.

  • @markointhesky
    @markointhesky Před 2 lety +12

    I'm not certain Strange actually remembered the resets when bargaining with Dormamu, since it always makes a point of him checking his wrist AFTER jumping to the planetoid where he talks to Dormamu. While this could be just him nervously making sure the spell is still active and that he's not about to die for real, one way to look at it would be like the tallymarks the Eleventh Doctor and co put on their inner arms whenever they met a Silence, an alien that erased the memories of whoever sees them as soon as they look away.
    I think the spell was keeping track of the loops, and that (plus Dormamu's later reactions) is how Strange knew to change things up a bit from his original plan
    You could even stretch it further and link it to watches and how both would tell him how much time has passed at a glance.

    • @lukescheffe9851
      @lukescheffe9851 Před 2 lety +4

      I agree, that is how I always pictured it, that he was able to keep things up for theoretically eternity because he never remembered any of it. So he only had to keep earth safe for a minute, and every minute is his first minute doing so. Additionally, it would be weird for the spell to restore his body without deleting his memory. And he is still clearly a relative novice at magic later on, which is unlikely if he spent a small eternity fighting Dormammu, as people seem to be suggesting.

  • @tlotlomolefe4057
    @tlotlomolefe4057 Před 2 lety +6

    Also loved the fact that Benedict played both Strange and Dormammu.

  • @robinhildebrand6012
    @robinhildebrand6012 Před 2 lety +4

    That bachelor's degree insult just made me think "Oh, you know that he's the kind of guy who just coasted through university if that's how he thinks of a bachelor's degree."
    But overall, thank you for reminding me how good that first Doctor strange movie is. I remember really liking it when it came out.

  • @unwantedmacguffin5611
    @unwantedmacguffin5611 Před 2 lety +71

    Makes perfect sense just like how scott pilgram is good because he sucks. Like Paarthurnax says, "is it better to be born good, or to overcome your evil nature through great effort?" P.s. I haven't watched the video this is based of the title.

    • @JoshtheOverlander
      @JoshtheOverlander Před 2 lety +8

      Man, fuck the Blades. Paarthunax is a genuinely reformed dragon who waited god knows how long for the one would bring down Alduin so he could properly prepare them for the battle.
      So what if he did bad things in his past, it may be important to remember history, but that doesn't mean we should be dictated by it. At any point until the Dragonborn awakened to his power, Paarthunax could've very easily caused mass destruction and mayhem and could've even betrayed the Dragonborn when he clashed with Alduin atop the Throat of the World, but he didn't.
      And they expect you to kill Paarthunax because what? They don't trust him? That he was bad, once upon a time? Or is it just because he's a dragon? Whatever the case, they're wrong about him, they're wrong to ask of you such a task, and they can take their little weeb-stick-wielding club of theirs and shove it right where the sun don't shine.

    • @KenhelExcallius
      @KenhelExcallius Před 2 lety +3

      I always just open console, make a few npc able to die, and the blades coincidently go missing I wonder why

    • @JoshtheOverlander
      @JoshtheOverlander Před 2 lety +2

      @@KenhelExcallius Wish I could do that, I play Skyrim off my old PS3, so I don't have the luxury. I just have to settle for giving these two dimwits a hard "No" and walk away, never to be seen by either of them ever again.
      Good job driving out the best possible person that could've joined your newly-rebuilt Blades, and all because you couldn't accept letting Paarthunax live. It's honestly questionable why there's not an option to try and persuade them or something, but I guess they're just *that* pig-headed.

    • @KenhelExcallius
      @KenhelExcallius Před 2 lety

      @@JoshtheOverlander grey beards > blades
      Greybeards
      Teaches you how to use shouts
      Essentially gives you free dragon souls by transferring their knowledge
      Has epic friendly nice dragon that gives you buffs
      Blades
      Wants to kill epic friendly nice dragon
      Annoying
      Suppose to follow what the Dragonborn says, instead threatens to kick the Dragonborn out if he refuses
      Gives gear that I can get myself or use funny exploits to make even stronger crap

    • @JoshtheOverlander
      @JoshtheOverlander Před 2 lety

      @@KenhelExcallius I feel like if there were still an emperor to command the Blades during the dragon crisis, Delphine and Esbern would *still* try to strongarm the Dragonborn into killing Paarthunax, even if the emperor himself commanded they let him live.