Chicago Sun-Times

IT’S THE LITTLE THINGS

New ‘Ant-Man’ film moves the Marvel narrative forward with dazzling effects, intimate story

- RICHARD ROEPER rroeper@suntimes.com | @RichardERo­eper

The thing about Ant-Man is that even when the little guy is essentiall­y saving the universe, he’s still never going to carry the gravitas of a Tony Stark/ Iron Man or the complicate­d storyline of a Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch. I mean, he’s a regular guy with a cool suit who can get super small or really big. Even as far as superhero monikers go, Ant-Man isn’t in the same league as Thor or Black Panther or Hulk or even Spider-Man, man! What scares you more, a spider or an ant?

So here we are in 2023, with Marvel kicking off Phase 5 with the third “Ant-Man” movie and the fifth overall appearance for the character and the 31st movie to date in the ever-expanding MCU, and let’s toss all those numbers aside and celebrate “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a” for knowing exactly what it wants to be, i.e., a mostly comedic placeholde­r in the greater storyline arc. It relies heavily on the strengths of its wonderful

cast, led by the ridiculous­ly likable (and often likably ridiculous) Paul Rudd as Scott Lang/Ant-Man, and a brilliant supporting cast including generation­al icons Michael Douglas, Bill Murray and Michelle Pfeiffer; reliable stalwarts Evangeline Lily, Corey Stoll, William Jackson Harper and Katy M. O’Brian — and a suitably formidable villain played by the greatly talented Jonathan Majors.

Clocking in a relatively breezy 125 minutes and featuring a dazzling array of VFX and CGI, “Quantumani­a” manages to tell an intimate family story against an enormously expansive yet subatomic background.

“Quantumani­a” kicks off with Scott’s personal life thriving, through his romance with girlfriend Hope Van Dyne aka The Wasp (Evangeline Lilly) to his loving relationsh­ip with now-teenage daughter Cassie (Kathryn Newton) to his close connection with Hope’s parents, Hank (Michael Douglas), who is retired but still likes to tinker with ants and science and such, and Janet (Michelle Pfeiffer), who has been released from her 30year confinemen­t in Quantum Realm.

Oh sure, Cassie and Hank and Hope have been secretly messing around with a new device that will help them study the Quantum Realm from a safe distance, but what could possibly go sideways with that?

Before you can say “Special Effects Units,

Assemble!,” the entire quintet is sucked into the microscopi­c yet vast world of the Quantum Realm, and just like that we’re plunged into territory that visually and dramatical­ly often bears more resemblanc­e to a “Star Wars” movie than an “Avengers” offshoot. Scott and daughter Cassie land amidst a band of rebels fighting an uphill battle against a fascist regime, while Hank, Janet and Hope are plunked into a Tatooine-like desert landscape.

As they endeavor to find each other and find a way home, our heroes encounter a number of colorful characters who become either allies or foes, including Bill Murray (effortless­ly doing his Bill Murray thing) as the duplicitou­s Lord Krylar, who apparently has quite the history with Janet; Corey Stoll’s Darren from the first “Ant-Man” film, who now has morphed into the ludicrous and hideous M.O.D.O.K. (Mental Organism

Designed Only for Killing); William Jackson Harper’s Quaz, whose forehead glows as he reads your thoughts, and Katy M. O’Brien’s Jentorra, the fearless freedom fighter leading the rebellion effort.

Mostly, though, Scott and company must contend with Jonathan Majors’ Kang the Conqueror, a time-manipulati­ng, seemingly invincible supervilla­in with a universe-conquering record and megalomani­acal ambitions that make Thanos seem like a small businessma­n. Even though “Quantumani­a” retains a mostly comedic tone throughout, Kang doesn’t know he’s in something of a romp; for him, the stakes couldn’t be greater, and he will destroy entire civilizati­ons for breakfast if it means getting his way. Jonathan Majors alternates between brooding, carefully constructe­d line readings and teethrattl­ing, spittle-spewing, fiercely delivered monologues, as if he’s standing on the stage at the Chicago Shakespear­e Theater. He is magnificen­t. (The flashback sequences explaining Kang’s history with Janet are among the most compelling in the entire film.)

“Quantumani­a” is a mid-tier MCU film, with decent enough battle sequences and some nifty visuals, but we’re here mostly for the popcorn-movie enjoyment of watching Paul Rudd et al., do their thing, and once again, the little guy and gang come through.

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 ?? MARVEL STUDIOS ?? Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), aka Ant-Man, is sucked into the Quantum Realm with teenage daughter Cassie (Kathryn Newton) and girlfriend Hope (Evangeline Lilly) in “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a.”
MARVEL STUDIOS Scott Lang (Paul Rudd), aka Ant-Man, is sucked into the Quantum Realm with teenage daughter Cassie (Kathryn Newton) and girlfriend Hope (Evangeline Lilly) in “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a.”

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