Hindustan Times (Patiala)

A buzz-worthy blockbuste­r

- RASHID IRANI

ANT-MAN AND THE WASP Direction: Peyton Reed Actors: Paul Rudd, Evangeline Lilly Rating:

The superheroe­s may be tiny, but Ant-Man and the Wasp is a big winner. In an often earnest Marvel multiverse, this is a light-hearted romp that balances action, humour and emotion.

The sequel to the 2015 blockbuste­r sees two diminutive protagonis­ts team up for a dangerous mission.

Ant-Man (Paul Rudd reprising his signature role), struggling to strengthen ties with his estranged family, reluctantl­y joins the Wasp (Evangeline Lilly) and her scientist father (the ever-reliable Michael Douglas) to rescue her mother (Michelle Pfeiffer, making her Marvel debut) from a subatomic dimension into which she had disappeare­d 30 years earlier.

Although the plot is somewhat laboured, returning director Peyton Reed keeps the pace breezy, and the script packs in loads of laughs and thrills. The effects, particular­ly in IMAX 3D, are truly special.

Reed makes inventive use of the micro / macro perspectiv­e from the vantage point of the insect-sized Ant-Man and his alternate avatar, the 65-ft-tall Giant-Man.

The host of quirky supporting characters includes Michael Pena (as the motormouth­ed accomplice), Walton Goggins (a high-tech baddie) and Hannah John-Kamen (as a ghostly entity capable of slipping through solid matter).

In her few scenes as AntMan’s resourcefu­l young daughter, Abby Ryder Fortson almost steals the show.

A throwback to Marvel’s jaunty Guardians of the Galaxy double bill (2014 and 2017), Ant-Man and the Wasp is a buzz-worthy blockbuste­r. As with most Marvel films, there are a couple of post-credits codas, so don’t hurry out of the multiplex.

 ??  ?? Although the plot is somewhat laboured the script packs in loads of laughs and thrills.
Although the plot is somewhat laboured the script packs in loads of laughs and thrills.
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