Times Colonist

Ant-Man and Wasp continues push for gender equality

- CHRISTINA SCHOELLKOP­F

LOS ANGELES — Her character’s name might not be in the title, but Hannah John-Kamen was the talk of the night at the Ant-Man and the Wasp première in Hollywood this week.

John-Kamen, 28, seen this year in Tomb Raider and Ready Player One, takes on the role of Ghost/Ava in the new Marvel flick, earning her name by disappeari­ng and reappearin­g while fighting opponents.

The phantom villain was originally featured in Marvel Comics as an enemy of Iron Man — written as a man. But the Ant-Man and the Wasp writers and producers decided to flip the gender and cast a female supervilla­in to fight the tiny, but mighty, Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) and Hope Van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly).

“I really had the freedom to take him off the page and give her life,” John-Kamen said. “I think having another strong female character in the Marvel Universe that will inspire and empower kids — we need more of that. Why the hell wouldn’t we want more of that?”

The follow-up to 2015’s AntMan takes a big step forward for women in Marvel in more ways than one. Twenty films into the Marvel Cinematic Universe, moviegoers finally see a female character in the title.

Co-writers Gabriel Ferrari and Andrew Barrer explained that with the Wasp’s elevated role, it felt “organic” to have Lilly’s heroine fight a female foe.

“From the beginning, there was a spirit of making sure we were sort of giving everyone in the movie their due, particular­ly Evangeline as the Wasp. It was [director Peyton Reed’s] thing from the very beginning that this is not a sidekick. This is an equal partner. I think that sort of spirit of inclusiven­ess led to certain decisions — like: ‘Why can’t a supervilla­in be a woman?’ ”

Bob Layton, the creator of Ghost for the comics, was also in attendance at the Hollywood première. Expressing his excitement about seeing his characters on the big screen, he made it clear that he had no objection to the film team modifying his original vision. In fact, he wrote the role as a gender non-specific character.

“When Ghost was in Iron Man, the whole idea was you knew nothing about him because he was an industrial spy. He was a ghost. So the fact that they changed genders doesn’t really mean a thing for this,” he said. “I’m totally behind it.”

Layton added with a laugh: “[Producer] Kevin Fiege gave away his secret superpower: gender reassignme­nt. Apparently he can just — boom — touch somebody and change the gender.”

Reed’s film also welcomes stars Michelle Pfeiffer, who plays Michael Douglas’ long-lost wife, and Laurence Fishburne as Douglas’ estranged research partner.

While holding her chin to keep her jaw from dropping, JohnKamen said it’s an honour to call them co-stars. “I was gobsmacked. I’m still starstruck. I’m starstruck standing here, right now.”

When Marvel fans see Ava interact with franchise newcomers and veterans alike, she won’t appear like a typical villain, John-Kamen explains.

“I didn’t approach her that she’s going to be a villain or like a bad, you know, twizzling mustache and world domination person. It’s not that at all. The way she is written, she has a very clear objective. She’s going to fight tooth and nail to get it, but I think the audience is going to maybe be on her side. Maybe ... ”

Moviegoers can choose which side to root for when the sequel drops on July 6. And be sure to watch for that post-credit scene, which the writers tease as a true game-changer for the Marvel Cinematic Universe.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Hannah John-Kamen at the Los Angeles première of Ant-Man and the Wasp this week.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Hannah John-Kamen at the Los Angeles première of Ant-Man and the Wasp this week.

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