Review: ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania’ is a Disappointing Start to Phase Five | FirstShowing.net

Review: ‘Ant-Man: Quantumania’ is a Disappointing Start to Phase Five

by Manuel São Bento
February 17, 2023

Despite much discussion about MCU’s Phase Four – from its structure to the ever-complicated quantity vs. quality debate – the truth is that it was generally well received. Personally, I prefer this last “Phase” to the other(s), but either way, the adventures of Ant-Man (Paul Rudd) never really impressed me. If the original is a generic yet decent origin flick, the sequel is one of the few movies in the MCU that didn’t get a positive review from me. Considering this and the fact that the “big bad” of The Multiverse Saga is introduced – on the big screen – in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, expectations weren’t exactly easy to define.

One detail that jumps out right away is the script credit. Jeff Loveness is solely responsible for writing Phase Five of the MCU’s first movie… a questionable decision given his lack of experience – Quantumania is his feature film debut credit as a screenwriter. In addition to this, the other two Ant-Man movies brought together several people to write each of the stories, which makes this detail even stranger. Putting someone like this in control of one of the most important films in this entire new saga is, to say the least, perplexing.

Unfortunately, it’s precisely in Loveness’ screenplay that the biggest problems with this lie. Quantumania has its favorable attributes, but I will save them all for last, so I can end on a more pleasant note. That said, the amount of unnecessary, repetitive, and irrelevant exposition is, without a doubt, the most bothersome, detrimental narrative trait. The exposition-driven plot depends heavily on many prolonged conversations to pass on information viewers would easily discover by themselves while also occasionally interrupting with flashbacks that break the pacing of a movie with a tough first half to get through.

The build-up to Kang’s first real appearance – Quantumania is, at heart, a villain’s origin story – starts as something quite tense and interesting, but when the character finally arrives to seize the spotlight, there’s already a certain accumulated fatigue due to the narrative structure being extremely reliant on such explicit information waiting around every corner. A surprise appearance by Bill Murray, for example, is wasted in a single scene that barely adds anything to any character or the main storyline, repeating the fact that Janet (Michelle Pfeiffer) is hiding something, which is addressed countless times before this moment.

Another of my biggest personal issues with Quantumania is a common problem across all many MCU films: tonal balance. When there’s complete control over the transitions between the more dramatic moments and Marvel’s trademark light humor, we are provided with one of the best movies in the franchise. However, when the comedy revolves around the same childish, dated topic – sex jokes – and, at the same time, there’s one of the most fearsome, menacing villains we’ve ever encountered, the transitions can’t possibly work out.

The vast majority of comedic attempts in Quantumania fall flat, with Rudd’s charisma being the ultimate savior, managing to pull off some pretty cringey jokes that would not work with any other actor. Even so, Peyton Reed – the director returns to finish his MCU superhero trilogy – significantly reduces the amount of humor usually present in MCU movies, lessening the negative impact of the inconsistent tonal mix. The final minutes are the perfect example of how much the movie suffers from this particular problem.

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania Review

I must address the lack of serious consequences and performances that fit the supposedly dramatic stakes. In a film where the next Thanos-level villain is initially presented, I cannot be satisfied with a formulaic story where there’s no shock value or emotionally powerful moments. I lost count of the number of scenes in which the heroes are being escorted by guards and always manage to free themselves in the exact same way. Furthermore, Kang deserved a much heavier, more substantial impact on the conclusion of the movie.

Kathryn Newton plays Scott’s daughter, Cassie, in an overly expressive manner, smiling way too much in dramatic scenes, as if nothing that surrounds the character is dangerous or devastating in any way. The actress has amazing talent, so the real issue lies in the lack of direction. Michael Douglas and Pfeiffer don’t suffer so much from this problem due to their experience, dealing better with the tonal shifts, but they don’t come out unscathed either. Rudd and Evangeline Lilly as Wasp definitely stand out, demonstrating excellent chemistry, but I’ll take this opportunity to move on to the positive aspects.

Quantumania’s real MVP is actor Jonathan Majors, and his absolutely phenomenal performance as Kang. I miss the right vocabulary to describe how incredibly powerful the mere presence of this actor is on the big screen. As many issues as I might have with the first half of the film, when Kang originally appears, my mind doesn’t focus on anything or anyone else. Majors draws attention to himself with truly terrifying charisma, elevating every single scene he’s a part of impressively.

If Thanos needed to kill dozens of Asgardians, Loki, and brutally beat Hulk in combat to be taken seriously, Kang earns the same level of respect simply for his threatening stance and frightening speech. Reed may have struggled with the aforementioned issues, but the atmosphere created around Kang is everything it needed to be: mysterious and charged with suspense and uncertainty of what may happen the next minute. Too bad this tense environment is gradually lost as Quantumania unfolds…

Visuals were my biggest concern, even more than Loveness’ unimpressive script overall. The MCU has been receiving criticism – quite fairly – about its visual effects inconsistency, largely due to the overwhelming workload of visual effects artists always at work on what’s coming next. Quantumania inherently places all of the characters in a fictional Quantum Realm, which means that virtually the entire movie is surrounded by green & blue walls. Surprisingly, the visuals hold up and make for a remarkably immersive environment, which I didn’t expect at all.

Add to it the costumes, make-up, sound, and production design, and the similarities to the various worlds seen in Star Wars stories are evident. Quantumania manages to set itself apart with imaginative creature designs and “villages” built in unexpected ways. MODOK (played by Corey Stoll) is possibly the only CGI element that might not work for various viewers – the character’s wacky concept itself is impossible to make realistic – but personally, I appreciate the “silliness” surrounding his design, and the character turns out to have one of the best-developed arcs.

And of course, a superhero flick couldn’t do without its action. Once again, the numerous CGI backgrounds worried me, but the truth is that Reed delivers several memorable action sequences. Quantumania even has uninterrupted long takes featuring excellent stunts that sadly may go unnoticed amid so much (good) chaos that fills the screen in set pieces with a much greater scale than I ever anticipated. For fans of the genre who go to the theater exclusively in pursuit of the entertainment value, they will hardly leave dissatisfied.

Final Thoughts

Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania warrants the divisive response. With immersive visuals, more than satisfying action, and absolutely exceptional performances – except from Newton due to lack of proper direction. However, the excessive, repetitive, unnecessary dialogue driven by exposition, along with a lack of stronger tonal balance – fewer jokes by Marvel standard, but the cringe affects transitions to/from all of the more serious moments – and an underdeveloped narrative devoid of true stakes, character arcs are almost non-existent, make this an overall very inconsistent watch. Still, JONATHAN MAJORS AS KANG! Wow!

Manuel’s Rating: C
Follow Manuel on Twitter – @msbreviews / Or Letterboxd – @msbreviews

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Review: ‘Ant-Man: Quantumania’ Dives Deep into the Quantum Realm | FirstShowing.net

Review: ‘Ant-Man: Quantumania’ Dives Deep into the Quantum Realm

by Alex Billington
February 16, 2023

Down, down, down to the Quantum Realm ye’ go. Marvel Studios is back with their latest, the 31st MCU movie to date so far (with more on the way later this year), yet another sequel – Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. While it technically is a sequel to Ant-Man and the Wasp (2018) continuing the storyline following Paul Rudd as Scott Lang as the superhero known as Ant-Man, it really is more of an introduction to “Phase Five” of the MCU. It’s a huge step forward, or a giant step down into the tiniest of realms. As the title indicates, this is all about “Quantumania” – taking us down to the Quantum Realm, and exploring the inhabitants of this entirely different, strange and unusual world while following the Pym Family and their attempts to escape and return to, well, the “regular-sized” Earth realm. This truly is the MCU’s Star Wars, featuring some spectacularly trippy visuals, turning this sequel into the movie I really wanted to see with the disappointing Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness. Although the script still is the weakest link.

With this many movies in the MCU so far, we all know what to expect with the Marvel formula. The biggest difference this time is that director Peyton Reed, who directed the first two Ant-Man movies, went on to work on directing episodes of Disney+’s Star Wars series “The Mandalorian” inbetween Wasp (2018) and this movie. That experience working in The Volume has certainly paid off, giving him a different edge this time around, allowing him to expand on the visuals and the epic world-creation in Quantumania. This is a place we have never been before. I just wish the script was as good as everything else. Credited to writer Jeff Loveness, the Quantumania script is generic and mostly stale in its pre-packaged story of the Pym Family. Filled with all the usual platitudes about his daughter and his family, whether it’s “all about her” and saving her, or bringing the family back together. It’s a visually spectacular world with a mesmerizing villain, strung along with generic, uninspired plodding for the main Pym Family characters. Yes, we get it, Scott really loves his daughter Cassie and does everything for her. Does he ever think about anything else…? I guess not.

There are a few aspects of Loveness’ script that do work well, however, mainly involving the villain Kang The Conqueror, played by the extraordinary Jonathan Majors. As we all know, the villain in superhero movies has to be as complex and as intelligent as every other main character, or it’s all for nothing, the rest of the movie falls apart. They’ve certainly figured this out already, especially with the “bad guys” from the Black Panther movies. Playing off the original introduction of “He Who Remains” from the end of the First Season of the Loki series on Disney+, Majors returns to play an alternate version of the character (a variant!) – a being known as the formidable “Kang The Conqueror”. His story, how it connects to the Pym Family, and how it plays out over the course of this movie, is the most compelling part of the screenplay. Loveness, who also worked on “Rick and Morty” as a writer, brings in some of that “Rick and Morty” space spice to crank this up a few notches with some wildly imaginative only-in-the-Quantum-Realm twists & turns. This is what I wanted to see more of, mainly with the rest of the Pyms, but Marvel really can’t shake things up too much.

Jonathan Majors in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania

Nonetheless, it’s pretty much an objective truth that Jonathan Majors is a God amongst men – and a key reason why Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is worth watching. He’s just so damn good, bringing his intensely charismatic, complex emotions to this trippy story of Realms and Multiverses and Variants. We’re deep into Multiverse territory now, which has a whole other set of implications that this movie does not explore, but nonetheless it does make the stakes for this particular -Verse interesting. Majors has a, ahem, major role to play in the MCU after being introduced in “Loki” and this is an extension of that role, though more of a re-introduction, establishing some rules and concepts that future MCU movies might play with. I just love that they found and cast Majors in this role, as it’s not an easy role to handle, with so much going on, and I think he’s so damn alluring and so damn devious yet so damn charming that it’s near impossible not to like him. Even though he’s the villain, that appeal is exactly what makes him so wicked. Watch out for this guy. If you’re bored of all the MCU movies, you won’t be bored by Jonathan Majors, I’ll say that much.

Everyone else in Quantumania is pretty much the same MCU character we’ve seen already, with serviceable performances, except for Michelle Pfeiffer as the other stand out. Pfeiffer’s Janet Van Dyne was sucked into and trapped in the Quantum Realm during the events of Ant-Man and the Wasp until she was rescued. But what happened there was a big mystery until it’s revealed in this movie. While it’s all a bit obvious, it is ultimately an important part of the plot, as she was an important part of the QR before departing. Most people don’t seem to miss her down there, which is a bit strange, but this is the Star Wars-esque epicness of this whole other universe. It’s full of tons of characters, factions, entire armies and legions, with a revolution brewing much like in the early Star Wars movies, and time moves at a different speed. Marvel found a safe space to tell this kind of story because the QR exists separately from Earth-616 and everything else that has happened in the other 30 MCU movies. Though with Kang, there is a connection that will expand beyond the QR back into other realms and worlds and this is the big “what’s coming next” tease with Quantumania.

As a fan of psychedelic imagery already, this movie delivers in spades the kind of psychedelic imagery that is necessary when diving into an indescribable place like the “Quantum Realm.” What is it, exactly; how does it work, what are the physics, why do things look this way? None of these questions are answered, but they don’t need to be either, because this is a “you’ve gotta jive with it” kind of place, not a “try to explain it” place. As someone who is growing increasingly tired of the Marvel Studios formula, with all the same beats and story structure over & over, I found some solace in escaping into the QR this time. There’s so much to enjoy in the way of unexplainable visuals, wacky characters aplenty, and fun “let’s just do something crazy” concepts because why not. This is Scott’s attitude anyway! It is VFX galore, sure, but much like Avatar: The Way of Water, it’s enjoyable to spend time in this CGI world, exploring a new Realm. When Kang shows up, that’s when it gets really good, as he is there to add some psychedelic thoughts to our minds, and make us mull over the Multiverse questions he’s going on about. I don’t think this will be the last we will see of him…

Alex’s Rating: 7.5 out of 10
Follow Alex on Twitter – @firstshowing / Or Letterboxd – @firstshowing

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