Of all the sub-franchises in the
Marvel Comic Movie Universe, I find Ant-Man to be the most true to
the comic book spirit. This is not a complement. With its hackneyed
plots and characters, overwrought emotional scenes (Ant Man/Scott
just wants to be with his daughter!), and ridiculous scientific
foundation, you can almost see the movie springing right out of a
six-panel, color comic book. That does not make it good.
First of all, “Ant-Man and the Wasp”
was released after “Avengers: Infinity War,” but it takes place
before the events of
“Infinity War.” I can only assume this was done for
business/marketing reasons, and it seems to serve no artistic
purpose. (Addendum: I watched "Infinity War," and "Ant Man and the Wasp" may actually take place more or less at the same time as "Infinity War.") The film starts out with Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) finishing
up 2 years of house arrest for his role in the big airport battle
from “Captain America: Civil War.” Lang is trying to play it
straight so that he can continue to see his daughter. This means no
more ant suit, and no contact with Dr. Hank Pym (Michael Douglas),
who invented the ant suit, or with Pym's daughter Hope Van Dyne
(Evangeline Lilly).
Because of Lang's
exploits with Captain America, Hank and Hope are on the run. Despite
being fugitives, they continue their experiments, hoping to retrieve
Hank's wife, Janet (Michelle Pfeiffer), from the quantum realm. When
Scott Lang has a dream about Janet, he breaks his parole by calling
Hank to report it. Next thing Lang knows, Hope has kidnapped him,
putting his parole in jeopardy, and involving him in their
experiments. Complicating things, Hank's quantum research has drawn
the attention of a shady arms dealer as well as a mysterious villain
who can walk through walls. Soon, Lang is shrinking and growing
again in an ant suit, while Hope wears a winged suit as the Wasp.
I wanted to love
“Ant-Man and the Wasp.” The cast is stellar. Paul Rudd is
charming as always. Judy Greer, as Lang's ex-wife, and Bobby
Cannavale, as her new husband, light up the screen, even though they
don't have big roles here. Michael Douglas and Laurence Fishburne,
who plays Pym's old scientific partner, lend as much gravitas as they
can. Unfortunately, everyone is weighed down by a lazy script that,
even by comic-book movie standards, insults our intelligence. The
characters' motivations only barely make sense, and that's only in
the setting of truly stupid explanations for the science in the
story. As Lang says at one point, “Do you guys just say 'quantum'
in front of everything?”
The big deal about
“Ant-Man and the Wasp” is supposed to be that it's the first
Marvel comic movie to feature a female superhero's name in the title.
The problem is that the Wasp just isn't that compelling a character.
Evangeline Lilly looks good, she fights well, and she hits all of
her lines and marks, but I can't imagine going to see a movie simply
titled “The Wasp.”
2 stars out of 5
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