ironman_rick
Civilian
- Joined
- May 22, 2010
- Messages
- 941
- Reaction score
- 225
- Points
- 53
This film was always a question mark for me due to its premise but given who was originally involved I was willing to give the premise the benefit of the doubt. The biggest issue with this film is that it has the makings of an Edgar Wright film but done by someone else, and because of that the film is an uneven concoction. You can tell where Wrights fingerprint were over this film, and it's unfortunate that film was never made because the worst thing I can say about Ant-Man is that it just feels completely unnecessary. It's competent enough, but barely enough. It's a film that never blends it components as well as it could have.
The biggest issue with the film is that it just feels like it's a bare bones movie. A case of ticking off certain action movie cliches. Hero looking for redemption? Check. Evil corporate bad guy? Check. Old teacher with estranged daughter? Check. Wise cracking supporting character? Check. Training montage? Check. It's all just an itinerary that's being ticked off as the film progresses and worst of all there's long stretches where nothing interesting happens. We're suppose to care about this or that, but it's never presented in a compelling way. It's all just vanilla and for the most part unimportant.
The biggest crime is that the story and pacing really screws up the performances by the two main actors. Rudd works fine as Scott Lang, and Douglas is good a Hank Pym, but they are left hanging with the little they have to work with. Evangeline Lilly feels really miscast in this, she has zero chemistry with either Rudd or Douglas. And as for Corey Stroll's villain - well who cares? It's just another throw away bad guy in the MCU.
What also seems evident to me is that there's a real lack of being comfortable with the concept. When ever a film about someone being shrunk is done it's generally not done in a serious tone, and whilst this film tries to play up the laughs it also tries to add more weight. It tries to straddle the line between serious and funny but never really pulls it off. It just feels awkward. The shrunken sequences early on in the film weren't nearly as well thought out as I thought they'd be, although by films end they seemed to get better.
What's unfortunate about the film is that the ending is actually pretty entertaining, it pretty well thought out, unique, and has some funny moments (albeit maybe too many for its own good). But how we get there feels like a chore, and in some respects it almost feels like it wasn't for much. The other major action sequence involving Falcon feels tact on for no other purpose than to remind people this is set in the MCU. For the most part the ending is the only real highlight of the movie.
So in the end Ant-Man really is a throw away Marvel movie. It's not awful, but it doesn't add anything to the MCU, to the point where it makes me wonder why they bothered to make it. I can understand why Marvel let Wright go because a Wright Ant-Man film would have been widely different to this, but the problem is his marks are still evident in this movie, and I can't help but wonder if that film would have ended up much better.
6/10
I have the same views. In fact, if I wanna be brutally frank...even AOU seemed like a filler movie for CA:CW. A somewhat .... not so "needed" sequel.
Coming back to Ant Man. I have to ask, what was Marvel's intention when they greenlighted this movie ? If they wanted to uplift Antman a tier or 2 (like how Captain America and Thor have moved up in the superhero popularity ranking)...they have failed. They didn't really bring out the coolness of Ant Man's powers.
The fights scenes were not that epic. The Bad Guy (again) was just another run of the million Bad dude in MCU (how many times are they gonna get away with weak villains ?) The way yellow jacket dies (or does he go to microverse) is weak. Once again marvel decides to force humour (this time it is with the 3 stooges....similar to TDW when they gave darcy too much screen time for humour's sake) instead of spending time building up the villain (so that the final battle would have been more epic).
If marvel wants to do a Lone Superhero movie..they have to be more epic. The plot of this movie seems like an episode of Agents of Shield. Lowkey.