Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness has officially been rated PG-13 with a description that teases horror elements. The upcoming MCU movie is the second in the Doctor Strange series and continues the events of Spider-Man: No Way Home, which also starred Benedict Cumberbatch's Stephen Strange. Directed by Sam Raimi in his return to the superhero genre, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness is set to hit theaters on May 6.
At one point, when it was still to be directed by Scott Derrickson, the filmmaker behind the first Doctor Strange and horror films like Sinister, Doctor Strange 2 was intended to be the MCU's first scary movie. The studio backed off that stance and Derrickson eventually left the project due to creative differences, but the suggestion has continued to follow it under Raimi's stewardship, given his history with the Evil Dead franchise. While it certainly wouldn't be a full-on horror project, viewers have speculated that some elements of the genre would still be worked into its multiverse plotline, something that seemed to be confirmed by the first Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness trailer.
Related: Marvel Should Lean Into Horror After Doctor Strange 2 — For Real This Time
Now, the Marvel movie's official MPA rating offers new evidence pointing in that direction. Unsurprisingly for the family-friendly franchise, Doctor Strange 2 has been rated PG-13, but the description claims this is due to "intense sequences of violence and action, frightening images and some language." While superhero movies are no strangers to violence and action, singling out frightening images suggests that some sequences do indeed lean on Raimi's past as a horror filmmaker.
While Marvel Studios would have to
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