by Trevor Kirkendall
★★★
We’re about to embark in a phase of Marvel’s Cinematic
Universe that will make or break the studio’s ability to pull in hundreds of
millions of dollars with each outing. This is a phase consisting of many of the
studio’s lesser-known properties. We saw the studio’s success last summer with
“Guardians of the Galaxy.” This summer brings us “Ant-Man.” Non-comic book
readers such as myself will probably take one look at that title and think it’s
nonsense. Despite it’s goofy sounding title, Marvel once again succeeds in
producing a highly entertaining film.
★★★

Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) is a convicted felon being released
from prison after a three-year stint. He wants to live an honest life now for
the sake of his daughter, otherwise his ex-wife Maggie (Judy Greer) and her
fiancé Paxton (Bobby Cannavale) may not let him anywhere near her. But it’s
tough to find a job after being in prison. So he quickly turns back to being a burglar
with the help of his goofy friend Luis (Michael Peña). They end up breaking
into the home of Dr. Hank Pym (Michael Douglas) who has some kind of incredible
shrinking suit hiding in a safe. When Scott puts it on, he’s shrunken down to
the size of an ant.
Turns out, Pym would now like Scott’s help since he
successfully stole the suit. Pym would like Scott to become what he calls the
Ant-Man in order to prevent a copy of the shrinking technology from being sold
by his former protégée Darren Cross (Corey Stoll). Pym thinks that selling this
technology to governments could lead to chaos in the world. Pym and Scott along
with Pym’s daughter Hope (Evangeline Lilly) plan a heist in order to break into
the company and steal the technology from Cross.
There are probably folks out there who know who Ant-Man is,
but there will be many more people in the audience who don’t. We do need an
introduction, but there’s nothing more boring than a standard origin story.
“Ant-Man” appears to have been conceived as a comical heist movie first, with
the Scott Lang/Ant-Man character dropped in after the major plot points were
already worked out. That’s what makes “Ant-Man” such a compelling film to
watch. It’s a well thought out plot without seeming so heavy handed.
This does leave the film lacking in character development
just slightly. It’s not that the characters in “Ant-Man” are boring or
uninteresting, it’s that they’re too familiar. There are so many similarities
between this film and some of Marvel’s earlier works where there’s barely a
distinction between the films anymore. At times, “Ant-Man” seems very similar
to the original “Iron Man” film. That’s not a horrible comparison since “Iron
Man” is still probably one of Marvel’s finest offerings. But Marvel needs to
look into diversifying their origin stories a little bit, especially with so
many coming over the next several years.

Director Peyton Reed (“Yes Man”) is comfortably in control
of the film despite having never worked in the action/sci-fi genre before. I don’t
take any real issues with his handling of the film, but I can’t help but think
how great this film could have been had Wright been sitting in the director’s
chair. He left the project over creative differences with the studio, and he’s
not the first person (nor will he be the last) to tell Marvel, “no.” But that
leads me to wonder how in-control Reed is of this film, or if Kevin Feige is
standing over his should dropping some not-so-subtle hints about what he and
the studio would like to see.
Oh well. We can’t judge the film we wanted to see; we can
only judge the film we did see, and Peyton Reed’s “Ant-Man” is a well-conceived
heist film, filled with all the right amounts of witty humor. I had zero
expectations for this and didn’t know what to expect, but it certainly is
entertaining and a worthy addition to the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Marvel
seems to have found an origin story formula they like and they’re sticking to
it. It’s working fine for now, but they need to expand their creative boundaries
a little more moving forward. Otherwise, their forthcoming slate of features is
going to get old real quick.
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