Marvel reverses scale,
elevates comedy with compact hero 'Ant-Man'
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[July 18, 2015]
By Piya Sinha-Roy
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
After going intergalactic with "Guardians of the
Galaxy," and hanging an entire city from the sky in
"Avengers: Age of Ultron," Marvel is reversing its scale
but still packing the punches with an insect-sized
superhero.
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"Ant-Man," out in movie theaters on Friday, sees a new
addition to Disney-owned Marvel's expanding universe as Paul
Rudd steps into the Ant-Man suit, which allows the wearer to
shrink and gives him super strength.
The film follows the origins of Ant-Man, otherwise known as
Scott Lang. Unlike Iron Man's billionaire alter-ego Tony Stark
or Captain America's patriotic soldier Steve Rogers, Lang is
decidedly less heroic - a deadbeat father and petty criminal who
has spent time in jail.
Lang is recruited by scientist Hank Pym (Michael Douglas) to
wear the shrinkable superhero suit and save the world from the
villainous corporate tycoon Darren Cross (Corey Stoll), with the
help of Hope van Dyne, Pym's feisty daughter (Evangeline Lilly).
"He made some pretty questionable decisions in his life, things
are not working out for him. He has to decide if he's going to
do the right thing," Rudd told Reuters of Lang.
The heart of the film lies in the father-daughter relationships
between Pym and van Dyne, and Lang and his estranged daughter
Cassie.
The diminutive size of Ant-Man allows the film to take on a new
perspective for the often larger-than-life Marvel, with some of
the film's big action scenes taking place in a bathtub, in the
folds of a carpet or among blades of grass.
"It was important to Marvel and they took it very seriously that
they don't want to repeat themselves, they want to try to do
different things," said director Peyton Reed.
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"That appealed to everybody - let's not go big; let's literally go
small."
With the comedic Rudd leading "Ant-Man," the film ups the laughs
with the actor delivering witty, self-deprecating one-liners, while
supporting star Michael Pena often steals the spotlight as Lang's
dim, goofy sidekick Luis.
"Because it's a heist movie, it's a very strong comedic tone that we
were after," Reed said.
Made by Walt Disney Co for a reported $130 million, "Ant-Man" is
projected by BoxOffice.com to earn $64 million in its opening
weekend at the North American box office.
(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy, editing by Jill Serjeant and Alan
Crosby)
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