The Prince George Citizen

Ho-hum plot, but Ant-Man still fun

- Ann HORNADAY

One of the nicest things about Ant-Man, the 2015 origin story of the eponymous Marvel superhero, was its modesty and congeniali­ty: Sure, Guardians of the Galaxy had already come out, injecting welcome humour into a genre that had all but succumbed to selfseriou­sness and bellicosit­y. But as Guardians and, later, Deadpool doubled down on the snark, AntMan kept things light, its playfulnes­s made all the more endearing by the boyish, twinkle-eyed persona of its star, Paul Rudd.

Returning in the title role, Rudd brings those same exuberant values to bear on Ant-Man and the Wasp, which makes up in brio and adorabilit­y what it might lack in narrative complexity. As the movie opens, Rudd’s “real-life” alter ego, Scott Lang, is finishing up his house arrest since the mayhem of Avengers: Civil War. With only three days to go, he spends his time fooling around on his drum machine, practicing card tricks and amusing his daughter, Cassie (Abby Ryder Fortson), by staging pretend heists with Rube Goldberg-like contraptio­ns and props.

Ostensibly, Lang’s past life of crime will now be erased by the domestic duties of a single dad and the security firm he runs with his former cellmate, Luis (Michael Peña). But before the LoJack comes off, he’s drawn into another adventure with inventor Hank Pym (Michael Douglas). Pym’s daughter, Hope (Evangeline Lilly), and Hope’s long-lost mother, Janet, the Wasp in question who has been miniaturiz­ed and trapped for 30 years in the quantum realm, now might be capable of returning – with Ant-Man’s help, of course.

The plot isn’t the thing in AntMan and the Wasp, which distracts viewers with the usual gizmos that light up, whir, shrink-o-late and supersize with metronomic regularity, as well as a complement of credible bad guys, led by a toothy greed-head named Sonny Burch (Walton Goggins). The joys of the movie lie in its utterly gratuitous but amusing digression­s, whether in the form of Rudd’s constant stream of witty asides, Peña’s motor-mouthed recollecti­on of Lang’s emotional journey under the influence of truth serum, running gags involving close-up magic, Morrissey and the Russian fairy tale figure Baba Yaga, or a hilarious sequence involving a tiny Lang wearing a lost-and-found sweatshirt in an elementary school that puts a similar sight gag in Deadpool 2 to shame.

Much of Ant-Man and the Wasp feels like filler, especially when the fight between the forces of good and evil is triangulat­ed by characters played by Laurence Fishburne and Hannah John-Kamen, who plays a shapeshift­ing wraith called the Ghost in a performanc­e resembling Elsa Lanchester crossed with Alanis Morissette.

Everyone gets their arc in a movie that feels less urgently necessary than shruggingl­y self-accepting: an early chase scene through a restaurant kitchen (watch out for that knife!), a pursuit later on in vehicles constantly changing from Matchbox to full-size (including a flatbed truck used as a scooter) and an entire building reduced to the equivalent of a carry-on bag dutifully reward viewers interested in Honey-I-Shrunk-Paul-Rudd antics and spectacle.

Directed by Peyton Reed from a script by Rudd and a raft of co-writers, Ant-Man and the Wasp serves its purpose with a characteri­stically sunny dispositio­n and occasional flair, situating its various heroes, villains and sidekicks for future installmen­ts and moving the Marvel behemoth ever forward.

Amid a story that seemingly will never end, Rudd brings warmth and modest good humour to one of its most ingratiati­ng and sweetnatur­ed chapters.

Ant-Man and the Wasp is merry and fleet, and no less enjoyable for being instantly forgettabl­e. The buzz might be temporary, but it’s fun while it lasts.

— Two-and-a-half stars

 ?? FILM FRAME-MARVEL STUDIOS PHOTO ?? Paul Rudd gets a turn as Giant-Man in the Ant-Man sequel.
FILM FRAME-MARVEL STUDIOS PHOTO Paul Rudd gets a turn as Giant-Man in the Ant-Man sequel.

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