Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania

  • Canada Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania (more)
Trailer 4

Plots(1)

Scott Lang and Hope van Dyne, along with Hope's parents, Hank Pym and Janet van Dyne, and Scott’s daughter, Cassie, are accidentally sent to the Quantum Realm. The family soon finds themselves exploring the Quantum Realm, interacting with strange new creatures, characters that Janet previously encountered, and embarking on an adventure that will push them beyond the limits of what they thought was possible. (Walt Disney US)

(more)

Videos (9)

Trailer 4

Reviews (7)

D.Moore 

all reviews of this user

English Not groundbreaking, but certainly a more than fine film, which I think is hurt most by how clumsily Marvel has promoted it. So much talk about the start of a new phase, the arrival of the big villain that would make Thanos look like a schoolboy. But in the end, that doesn’t really happen, which, after all the expectations, is a bit of a shame. Even if you know Kang from Loki, you probably won't get the feeling that something big is going on, but he's definitely an interesting character, and he can make visitors to the quantum realm feel the heat. As far as the Ant-Man trilogy goes, I'll still prefer the first film, the second one still seems a bit too chatty, and this third one is completely different than the previous two, but the fact that the same director was in charge of all three makes it probably the third best Marvel trilogy after Iron Man and Captain America. And that’s not bad, at all. ()

3DD!3 

all reviews of this user

English Starship Troopers! A solid digital adventure, without fatalities or major surprises. The trailers that teased a fatal clash are rather a disservice. The Lang and Pym families are sucked into the quantum realm and have to fight a familiar arch-enemy. Douglas shits and wonders why a guy who looks like broccoli is hitting on his daughter. Pfeiffer confesses to quantum infidelity and Paul Rudd teaches his daughter the proper way to punch people, or whatever. The amazing world now, after Avatar: the Way of Water, boggles the mind with its lack of thought, lack of sophistication and the inconsistency of the visual effects – Disney probably should have timed it differently. I was annoyed by the breaking of the rules set in the first and second episodes regarding the quantum realm and augmentation, and MODOK is more annoying than scary. Still, quite an entertaining chapter about perhaps the only happy Avenger. ()

Ads

Stanislaus 

all reviews of this user

English The third Ant-Man, following the example of its MCU predecessors, plays with multidimensional multiverses, but this time this colourful CGI ride didn't work for me. The Quantum Realm reminded me a lot of Star Wars in places with its atmosphere and diverse cast of characters, but that wasn't a bad thing. What struck me the most, however, was the character of M.O.D.O.K. - I haven't seen something so perverse in the cinema for quite some time. Even Weasel from DC wasn't that perverted. Paul Rudd, Evangeline Lilly, Michael Douglas and Michelle Pfeiffer really try, but the script throws ("socialist") sticks under their feet. Bill Murray's cameo was clunky, and I had mixed impressions of both Jonathan Majors and Kathryn Newton. Three (ant-sized) stars! ()

Malarkey 

all reviews of this user

English Comic book worlds can forgive a lot, but the Quantum world just seemed a bit too much to me. In the end, you will find that Ant Man actually has no boundaries and anything can happen in his story within the action. Other comic book characters have those boundaries of realism at least somewhat grounded in something tangible. Not here. The result is that the grandfathers' revolt (Douglas, Murray) are performing various creations in front of a green screen, which then look heavily overproduced, crazy, and actually quite uninteresting on the screen. And those dialogues put in their mouths by some master of film clichés. One of the weakest Marvel movies. ()

EvilPhoEniX 

all reviews of this user

English Weak. Marvel is really fading and it shows with every new movie. This just isn't even funny anymore. It's a world copied from Star Wars and since I don't like that either, nothing has changed. The action looks downright childish and uninteresting, the humor is absent, and Jonathan Majors as Kang didn't impress much either (he was much better in Creed III). I wasn't entertained at all and stopped caring after about an hour. Hopefully Guardians of the Galaxy will be a nice hit and I'm afraid the last one for a while. ()

Gallery (44)