Ant-Man
Director: Peyton Reed
Producers: Kevin Feige
Written: Edgar Wright & Joe Cornish (Story)
Edgar Wright, Joe Cornish, Adam McKay & Paul Rudd (Screenplay)
Based on ‘Ant-Man’ created by Stan Lee, Larry Lieber and Jack Kirby
As we enter the last film for Phase 2 for the Marvel Cinematic Universe, we are taken on a smaller scale and enter the world of Ant-Man. When first announced, Edgar Wright was to helm it but creative differences took the opportunity for Wright to bring his vision to life. However, Peyton Reed took over and Wright still had writing and executive producing credits and helped make the troubled film entertaining as its source.
Ant-Man introduces Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), a former criminal who is recently released from prison and only now wishes for a life free of crime and to be closer to his daughter but his past still manages to affect this life in terms of relationships and work. Looking to be a better figure and support himself, he takes a small heist that ends him in get caught again but gaining the interest of inventor Hank Prym (Michael Douglas in top form) and his daughter Hope (Evangeline Lilly). Prym then offers Lang a chance at redemption when his protégé Daren Cross () is on the verge of inventing and manufacturing a suit that enables size capacity and strength for war purposes, an item that Prym himself has created and kept safe from falling into the wrong hands, thus Lang is offered to wear this and help pull a heist that can stop Cross from enabling danger into not only their lives but the world around them.
Storyline was great with the contributions of Edgar Wright and Joe Cornish and supporting material from Paul Rudd and Adam McKay, the plot features a heist theme that makes the film set to a tone and genre (similar to what The Winter Soldier did, mixing political thriller and the superhero genre together) and packs a lot of humour and slight emotion throughout. The humour is what makes the characters likeable, and actor Michael Peña (who plays as an ally to Lang) helps to deliver some of the best moments of the film’s comedic side, same with Rudd and Douglas.
In terms of visual effects in the MCU, Ant-Man features topping visuals that make it seem Oscar worthy for consideration. When Ant-Man has the capabilities of being small, what we see on screen is purely visual, imaginative and epic on a big scale, this is possibly a mixture of built sets, CGI and cinematography that make it seem so possible and realistic. The costume designs as well were top notch, with both Ant-Man and Yellowjacket’s designs being close to the source material and keeping in tone of the realism of the MCU. At times, the pace of the film reminded me of the first Iron Man film where the origin of the hero was developed and kept character development present.
Pros:
OVERALL:
Ant-Man is indeed exciting, funny and unexpectedly doesn’t take it self seriously (knowing of the comic’s origins) and does top over Age of Ultron in terms of humour. Ignore the critics dishing the hate on this film, it’s worth the price of an admission ticket and pure entertainment for families and MCU fans.
Director: Peyton Reed
Producers: Kevin Feige
Written: Edgar Wright & Joe Cornish (Story)
Edgar Wright, Joe Cornish, Adam McKay & Paul Rudd (Screenplay)
Based on ‘Ant-Man’ created by Stan Lee, Larry Lieber and Jack Kirby
As we enter the last film for Phase 2 for the Marvel Cinematic Universe, we are taken on a smaller scale and enter the world of Ant-Man. When first announced, Edgar Wright was to helm it but creative differences took the opportunity for Wright to bring his vision to life. However, Peyton Reed took over and Wright still had writing and executive producing credits and helped make the troubled film entertaining as its source.
Ant-Man introduces Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), a former criminal who is recently released from prison and only now wishes for a life free of crime and to be closer to his daughter but his past still manages to affect this life in terms of relationships and work. Looking to be a better figure and support himself, he takes a small heist that ends him in get caught again but gaining the interest of inventor Hank Prym (Michael Douglas in top form) and his daughter Hope (Evangeline Lilly). Prym then offers Lang a chance at redemption when his protégé Daren Cross () is on the verge of inventing and manufacturing a suit that enables size capacity and strength for war purposes, an item that Prym himself has created and kept safe from falling into the wrong hands, thus Lang is offered to wear this and help pull a heist that can stop Cross from enabling danger into not only their lives but the world around them.
Storyline was great with the contributions of Edgar Wright and Joe Cornish and supporting material from Paul Rudd and Adam McKay, the plot features a heist theme that makes the film set to a tone and genre (similar to what The Winter Soldier did, mixing political thriller and the superhero genre together) and packs a lot of humour and slight emotion throughout. The humour is what makes the characters likeable, and actor Michael Peña (who plays as an ally to Lang) helps to deliver some of the best moments of the film’s comedic side, same with Rudd and Douglas.
In terms of visual effects in the MCU, Ant-Man features topping visuals that make it seem Oscar worthy for consideration. When Ant-Man has the capabilities of being small, what we see on screen is purely visual, imaginative and epic on a big scale, this is possibly a mixture of built sets, CGI and cinematography that make it seem so possible and realistic. The costume designs as well were top notch, with both Ant-Man and Yellowjacket’s designs being close to the source material and keeping in tone of the realism of the MCU. At times, the pace of the film reminded me of the first Iron Man film where the origin of the hero was developed and kept character development present.
Pros:
- Casting is great, all the performances from the leading and supporting actors were all spot on and there was strong character development from Paul Rudd, Michael Douglas, Lilly and a great villain role from Corey Stoll
- Impressive and epic visual effects, costume design and music score was just right for the film
- The humour is just there throughout, preventing the film to go down a dark path and keep it fun for younger audiences
- The post-credit scenes and various MCU easter eggs were just exciting and gave a great glimpse of Phase 3 and what’s yet to come
OVERALL:
Ant-Man is indeed exciting, funny and unexpectedly doesn’t take it self seriously (knowing of the comic’s origins) and does top over Age of Ultron in terms of humour. Ignore the critics dishing the hate on this film, it’s worth the price of an admission ticket and pure entertainment for families and MCU fans.