I don't know what this is or if anyone else will relate to this other than me but here you go. Rights to all clips go to Marvel (and some from Jimmy Kimmel).
Exactly!Imagine all the hard times he had as a kid for being called Strange. Like this is how it went when he started first grade: Teacher:"Hello class,today we're gonna have a new student coming in,please be kind to him" *Stephen walks in* Everyone:"Hi!!" Teacher:"Ok,now please present yourself to the class" Stephen:"Hi eveeyone I'm Stephen Strange" *The whole class starts whispering things to each other and everyone giggles*
I think it's Stephen, the man who loves music and feels a little out of depth in this world of magic and gods, vs Dr. Strange, the powerful and wise mage who is charged with safeguarding reality
What most people don't know is that first part with the music in surgery is relatively common, mostly for routine surgeries. Normally they quiet it down during the most intense moments but yeah, Strange listening to music mid-operation isn't just a display of his skill, but it's just a habit some surgeons do. Identifying it is the kicker.
@@washurhands5079 surgeries like removal of the pancreas are so routine and commonplace that it’s almost entirely possible to do them with much more relaxation. Movies and TV have hyped up all forms of surgery as this “super serious thing” that they don’t realize modern medicine has advanced beyond that stage and it’s possible to take it easy during simpler surgeries.
@@blueline4857 I can definitely see that. I have ADHD so I use music to drown out all the random little noises in the room while I’m working. The printer, scanner, fax, coworkers who don’t know how to control the volume of their voice talking about what they made for dinner last night again, screaming child down the hall, 11 sneezes in a row, someone heavy footed crossing the room… all of that is more distracting than an awesome playlist. I get more work done with the music than without it lol
Sometimes I forget Dr. Strange is a just regular human being with a phd and not some weird wizard from another dimension. It's nice to watch his relatable moments.
Dr. Strange was such a packed fucking film. He went from saving a dude with shrapnel or whatever in the head to annoying a multi dimensional being made of energy into leaving our realm alone. That's just one movie. A lot of people don't realize it and just end up hating on it. It was a good film, they packed a shit ton of action in that couple of hours. Maybe if it was a series it would have kicked more ass but for a movie with such a packed plot I think it did extremely amazing. I wasn’t bored for a moment. And I think that Dr. will do great in his upcoming films.
Strange is my favorite in the MCU and I thought the movie was awesome. I'm biased towards wizards/magical fantasy, though. Definitely top 5 of the MCU, imo.
@@CaratsRitzy About 34 minutes into the special features on the Blu-Ray, they show the comic book store appearance. They were shooting in New York, and there was a comic book store right there, so they went in!
Honestly... in my opinion... dr. Strange's best line in the MCU is the "You should really read the whole thing... because the warnings come after the spell"
Actually he was cut from the show entirely because they didn't want Wanda to seem weak or him to 'mansplain' to her, I kid you not. He was all set up to show up and they canceled him on the last second. He's the one who send the commercials.
So if Eminiem exists in the MCU, that must mean 8 Mile does as well..... Anyone ever tell Falcon he looks a lot like the guy who Eminem destroys in the final rap battle?
I don't think so, because then we also would have gotten some kind of "No shit, Sherlock" scene with both Iron Man and Doctor Strange on screen, but I like the idea, yeah
I’ll never get over how Strange takes his job as Sorcerer Supreme so seriously like he’s been holding the position all his life when in reality he’s been a sorcerer for… 2 years in Endgame
See, you've got all these people going on about how Dr. Strange's behavior in the Spiderman trailer is 'kinda sus' and all like "WoUld hE REalLY dO that?", and I'm kinda just like... Have you flippin seen the dude's first solo movie? Like, have you payed the slightest bit of attention to the character's personality at all?
I think that's because most people if not everyone comes from IW and Endgame where he is super serious and all about the time stone. Like, he doesn't wan't to destroy it to stop Thanos plans, but now he is willing to change reality itself for one dude?. But your right, on his solo move and even his appareance in Thor Ragnarok make him look more of an arrogant risk-taker. Also excuse my english not my first language
In his solo film he's a newbie magician. In no way home he's been the most powerful one for years, so we dont expect him to take such ridiculous risk for a teenager
@@salveRSRF being the most powerful wizard probably made it seem like less of a risk though. There's even a gag in the movie about how they've done the spell in the past for less, lol
@@salveRSRF this is a pretty late reply but i feel that strange really just took such a big risk for peter mainly cause he likely saw peter displaying a value that the ancient one had to spit out to dr. Strange in his first film. Which was "It's not about you", and peter just genuinely wanted to avoid his friend and girlfriend from sharing the risk and blame for the mistakes he makes as peter and spiderman
Villain: *starts monologing* Strange: "oh stop it..." Villain: *continues monologing* Strange later in the marvel universe: *uses Eye of Agamoto to speed up villian monologing* Avengers: *confusion* Hulk: "Waita minute, waita minute, how to we know he's not saying anything important?!" Strange: "look, I already looked into the future to check and he's just giving us the whole "this is pointless, stop struggling" bit." Spiderman: "So it's just flavortext and your using an *infinity stone* as a skip button?" Strange: "I know some of you'd do the same if you could!"
Ah yes, I too hate it when a magical bald lady feeding off of the Dark Dimension strands me on top of Mount Everest after going through a portal made of fireworks, very relatable
2:46, omg Cumberbatch did the British thing! He pronounced been like a Brit though he’s playing an American character! Just like Tom Hardy did in Venom.
@@ittselli3245 yup! Brits pronounce been like "bean," and you can catch that out of Cumberbatch, and Hardy. Another one I remember is in Doctor Who S6E2 when Mark Sheppard plays an American CIA agent, but pronounces literally as "lit-rully" as Brits do.
@@Asch_Ente Really??? Then why does it seem so prevalent in movies and TV shows? Is it, perchance, from an accent from a particular region of the UK? Like maybe not southern cockney, but maybe something different? Also what about "lit-rully?"
I’m glad Steven strange has made a long journey till this day. I hope he continues to be happy and a great doctor strange in future mcu movies:))) And - Not die
Yeah I can totally relate to a partially paralyzed genius master neurosurgeon that became a wizard that can fly with a sentient cloak, can time travel using a necklace with a green rock, become a ghost, and can also create portals by warping the fabric of spacetime. and then fought a giant inter dimensional being the size of a planet which is basically satan for eternity until it would bargain, and then vanished from existence for 5 years