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After a battle between the two, Strange Supreme overpowers and absorbs his counterpart. He then uses his enhanced powers to reverse Palmer's death, but his monstrous appearance repulses her. As the paradox begins tearing reality apart and his surroundings collapse, Strange Supreme begs the Watcher for help. The latter refuses to interfere and ...
The series' opening title sequence was designed by Perception, who sought to emphasize the series' themes by displaying "the beauty and idea of space". The sequence draws inspiration from the work of film poster artist Bob Peak , particularly his artwork for Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979) and Excalibur (1981), and uses imagery of glass ...
Strange Supreme takes Captain Carter to his Sanctum Infinitum, where he reveals that he has been capturing "universe-killers" to atone for his sins, and asks for her help in capturing an escaped variant who fled to a universe where Hydra used the Tesseract to destroy the world. Carter agrees and encounters Kahhori, who reveals that Strange has ...
Here's what that character's introduction during the "Doctor Strange" sequel's credits scene could mean for the future of the MCU
The Watcher recruits Strange Supreme, Captain Carter, Star-Lord T'Challa, "Party" Thor, Black Panther Killmonger, and a variant of Gamora who killed Thanos [a] from their respective universes to battle Ultron, dubbing them the "Guardians of the Multiverse". In Ultron's home universe, the Guardians encounter Natasha Romanoff who, with Carter's ...
In Captain Peggy Carter and Star-Lord T'Challa's respective universes, [a] she fights Georges Batroc while he helps Peter Quill defeat Ego before the Watcher recruits Carter and T'Challa along with Doctor Strange Supreme, Erik "Killmonger" Stevens / Black Panther, "Party Thor", and a Gamora variant who battled on Sakaar alongside Tony Stark and killed her version of Thanos [b] to form the ...
The character of Doctor Strange was originally created in the 1960s. Artist Steve Ditko and writer Stan Lee have described the character as having been originally the idea of Ditko, who wrote in 2008, "On my own, I brought in to Lee a five-page, penciled story with a page/panel script of my idea of a new, different kind of character for variety in Marvel Comics.
IGN 's Tom Jorgensen thought the episode was "one of the clearest displays yet of What If 's strengths and potential for extrapolating worthwhile stories out of MCU canon", praising the story divergences from the films while "keeping the themes of Age of Ultron" by focusing on more grounded characters like Renner's Barton and Bell's Romanoff ...