Ant-Man

O filme segue o bioquímico Hank Pym que na sua última descoberta, conseguiu criar uma fórmula de alterar os tamanhos de objetos (e pessoas). Apesar do primeiro teste dar para o torto, ele desenvolve um instrumento que o ajuda a comunicar e controlar insetos. O elenco é composto por Paul Rudd, Michael Douglas, Evangeline Lilly, Patrick Wilson e Corey Stoll.
⭐⭐⭐⭐½ — Ant‑Man — Small hero, big heart
Ant-Man is a rare Marvel film that thrives not by going bigger, louder, or darker, but by leaning into charm. Paul Rudd’s Scott Lang is the perfect everyman superhero: funny without being smug, flawed without being cynical, and instantly likeable. He grounds the film in a way that makes the absurd premise not just acceptable, but genuinely endearing.
Tonally, this is one of Marvel’s stronger balancing acts. The humour lands consistently, but it never overwhelms the story. It’s far more restrained and character-driven than something like Thor: Love & Thunder, and it doesn’t lean so heavily on sarcasm that it turns into a self-parody à la Deadpool. The comedy serves the characters first, which makes the action and emotional beats land more cleanly.
As for the endless physics complaints — they miss the point entirely. This is a universe with gamma-radiated giants, flying metal suits, gods, and magic. If you can accept the Hulk or Iron Man, then quibbling over the exact science of shrinking feels beside the point. The internal rules of the world are consistent enough, and that’s all the film needs to work.
Overall, Ant-Man is one of the better MCU entries precisely because it knows what it is. It’s fun, clever, heartfelt, and refreshingly modest in scope. Paul Rudd was inspired casting — it’s genuinely hard to imagine anyone else pulling off this blend of goofy charm and reluctant heroism quite as well.
🍿🥤 Pairing: Popcorn and something fizzy — light, satisfying, and perfect for a movie that doesn’t take itself too seriously while still doing everything right.
⭐⭐⭐⭐½ — Ant‑Man — Small hero, big heart
Ant-Man is a rare Marvel film that thrives not by going bigger, louder, or darker, but by leaning into charm. Paul Rudd’s Scott Lang is the perfect everyman superhero: funny without being smug, flawed without being cynical, and instantly likeable. He grounds the film in a way that makes the absurd premise not just acceptable, but genuinely endearing.
Tonally, this is one of Marvel’s stronger balancing acts. The humour lands consistently, but it never overwhelms the story. It’s far more restrained and character-driven than something like Thor: Love & Thunder, and it doesn’t lean so heavily on sarcasm that it turns into a self-parody à la Deadpool. The comedy serves the characters first, which makes the action and emotional beats land more cleanly.
As for the endless physics complaints — they miss the point entirely. This is a universe with gamma-radiated giants, flying metal suits, gods, and magic. If you can accept the Hulk or Iron Man, then quibbling over the exact science of shrinking feels beside the point. The internal rules of the world are consistent enough, and that’s all the film needs to work.
Overall, Ant-Man is one of the better MCU entries precisely because it knows what it is. It’s fun, clever, heartfelt, and refreshingly modest in scope. Paul Rudd was inspired casting — it’s genuinely hard to imagine anyone else pulling off this blend of goofy charm and reluctant heroism quite as well.
🍿🥤 Pairing: Popcorn and something fizzy — light, satisfying, and perfect for a movie that doesn’t take itself too seriously while still doing everything right.




















