Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness star Elizabeth Olsen says she gets frustrated and feisty when people dismiss Marvel films as works of art. The film is the first sequel to 2016's Doctor Strange, which introduced Benedict Cumberbatch as the titular sorcerer. Although it has been six years since the character's last solo effort, Doctor Strange has experienced a lot throughout other MCU projects, including the Avengers crossover films Infinity War and Endgame, as well as last year's titanic box office hit Spider-Man: No Way Home. This time, he will appear alongside current Sorcerer Supreme Wong (Benedict Wong), new heroine America Chavez (Xocitl Gomez), and Olsen's character, the Scarlet Witch.
Olsen has been a part of the MCU even longer than Cumberbatch, as her character — real name Wanda Maximoff — was introduced in 2015's Avengers: Age of Ultron. Wanda and her twin brother Pietro (Quicksilver) were experimented on by HYDRA, which gave him the power of superspeed and her the ability to manipulate reality with her mind. Her character has had a complicated emotional journey throughout the MCU, losing her brother in Age of Ultron, falling in love with Vision in Captain America: Civil War, losing him over the course of Infinity War and Endgame, and using her grief to fuel a strange TV sitcom-inspired alternate universe where they are both still alive in WandaVision, the events of which lead directly into Doctor Strange 2.
Related: Why Scarlet Witch Is So Different In Doctor Strange 2 From WandaVision
During an interview with The Independent, about her role in Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Olsen expressed her frustration with people who seek to belittle the artistic quality of the MCU. She explains
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