The Audacity of Ant-Man — Blue Ink Alchemy
Scott: My days of breaking into places and stealing stuff are over. So what do you need me to do? Hank: I need you to break into a place and steal some stuff. Scott: ... Makes sense.Marvel's films, at their most successful, strike a very particular balance between humor, action, world-building, and character development. Looking at Ant-Man, it was difficult to see all of those elements in play at first. Now that the trailer covers all of those touchpoints, the project feels a lot more solid, but no less audacious. Going back to the Guardians of the Galaxy comparison, Ant-Man is a relatively unknown character from Marvel's pantheon. We also have Doctor Strange and Captain Marvel coming. But a sorcerer and an Air Force pilot given super-powers that are on par with DC's Superman is a bit easier for new audience members to internalize than a guy whose power is shrinking to insect-size and talking to other insects. Putting that character into a major motion picture with all of the monetary and marketing support of Marvel Studios requires supreme confidence and a very well-organized plan, in which Ant-Man plays a part. Marvel is not the sort of studio that is willing to rest on its laurels with derivative sequels and other means of generating cash. New characters, new directions of story, and long-range plans aimed to both build an expansive universe and please their fans. I don't know what part Ant-Man has to play within this plan, but Marvel is sticking to it, and despite the scale to which this new hero tends to shrink, my guess is that his part will be anything but small. It's an audacious plan, an ambitious plan, and if anybody can pull it off, it's the House of Ideas. Until the day Coulson becomes a Black Lantern, Make Mine Marvel!
Blue Ink Alchemy
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