Tag: ant-man

  • ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’ Kicks Off Filming With Teaser Video, New Logo

    It’s the first day of school film production on “Ant-Man and the Wasp” and director Peyton Reed has a spiffy new logo to show off.

    Marvel announced the start of production in Atlanta on the sequel, which brings back Paul Rudd as the former thief turned titular superhero and Evangeline Lilly as Hope Van Dyne, who will take on the mantle of the Wasp. The video shows two mini director shows with the heroes’ names on it, which proves this partnership is one between equals:

    Reed also tweeted a better look at the new logo:

    “Ant-Man and the Wasp” unveiled some big news a couple of weeks ago at San Diego Comic-Con by announcing the addition of Michelle Pfeiffer as Janet Van Dyne, wife of Hank Pym (Michael Douglas) and mother of Hope. Janet once fought as the Wasp alongside Hank, but was believed to be lost in the sub-atomic realm.

    Here’s the movie’s official synopsis:

    From the Marvel Cinematic Universe comes a new chapter featuring heroes with the astonishing ability to shrink: “Ant-Man and The Wasp.” In the aftermath of “Captain America: Civil War,” Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) grapples with the consequences of his choices as both a Super Hero and a father. As he struggles to rebalance his home life with his responsibilities as Ant-Man, he’s confronted by Hope van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly) and Dr. Hank Pym (Michael Douglas) with an urgent new mission. Scott must once again put on the suit and learn to fight alongside The Wasp as the team works together to uncover secrets from their past.

    “Ant-Man and the Wasp” is scheduled to hit theaters July 6, 2018.

  • ‘Ant-Man and The Wasp’ Casts Randall Park as Jimmy Woo

    ENTERTAINMENT-US-CINEMA-SNATCHEDThere are dozens of things happening at once in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, but one film we’re definitely excited for is “Ant-Man and the Wasp,” opening almost exactly one year from now.

    Paul Rudd, Evangeline Lilly, Michael Peña, David Dastmalchian, and Michael Douglas are returning to their “Ant-Man” roles, and it has now been confirmed that “Fresh Off the Boat” and “Veep” star Randall Park will be joining them, in the role of S.H.I.E.L.D. Agent Jimmy Woo.

    Tracking Board first shared the news, adding that another new character — played by Hannah John-Kamen — still remains a mystery.

    The plot is still a mystery too, but we know it’ll feature Paul Rudd’s title character, aka Scott Lang, with Evangeline Lilly stepping up to share top billing as the Wasp, aka Hope van Dyne. Lilly is also confirmed to be returning for “Avengers 4.”

    Back in February, Michael Douglas confirmed his return as Dr. Hank Pym, and also revealed that filming would start in July 2017 (aka right around now) for the July 2018 release date.

    Peyton Reed directed 2015’s “Ant-Man” and he’s also returning for the sequel, which is scheduled to open July 6, 2018.

    Speaking of Paul Rudd’s Scott Lang/Ant-Man, he’s still busy filming “Avengers: Infinity War,” which opens May 4, 2018, two months before “Ant-Man and the Wasp”:

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  • (Almost) Everything We Learned From Last Night’s Marvel Open House

    On Monday night, I was invited, along with a handful of other journalists, to an “open house” at Marvel Studios’ offices on the Disney lot in Burbank. Honestly I didn’t know what to expect. Open house could have meant anything. They could have been showing off their new couches and conference rooms for all we knew. (And seriously, nobody knew a thing.) We got into groups and went on the tour of the offices, which is strikingly cool from the moment you get off the elevator. There were giant murals on the wall; in the waiting room were several Iron Man suits, lit up and looking impressive. Towards the reception desk were costumes from “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” (more on that in a minute).

    It can’t be stressed just what a transformation this space has undergone. When the offices moved from Manhattan Beach to Burbank, they were a cluster of nondescript workspaces with little flare and barely any cohesion. If you got off at the Marvel floor in the Frank G. Wells building (named after the beloved Eisner-era executive who died tragically in a helicopter crash), chances are you wouldn’t even know it’s the Marvel floor. Not anymore.

    We made our way into a massive room. On one side was a ping-pong table. On the other side was a model of Disneyland’s Main Street. It’s unclear what era it was from, because of the placement of the Astro-Orbiters (remember, it used to be on top of the PeopleMover platform); maybe it was a hodgepodge. It was very detailed; there were lit-up Electrical Main Street Parade floats in a backstage area and on the far side of the model fiber-optic fireworks glittered. (The model is President of Marvel Studios Kevin Feige’s.) Elsewhere, there was a life-size Baby Groot under a bell jar and a replica of Thor’s hammer. We sat down on modern couches and watched a sizzle reel from “Black Panther,” which finishes shooting tomorrow.The reel was a combination of interviews, footage from the set, and conceptual artwork. Several people talk about how advanced the nation of Wakanda, first glimpsed at the end of “Captain America: Civil War,” is, with vehicles that look like space ships flying around, and advanced armor (including what looked like some kind of robotic rhinoceros — yes, please). Michael B. Jordan, who plays the villain, says that the movie will be “honest and gritty.”

    Later in the tour we walked into the screening room on the first floor of the building and watched dailies from the film. There was a scene where Lupita Nyong’o seriously beat up some soldiers, another featured traditional warriors on a large boat, and most tellingly was a sequence where Chadwick Boseman walks into a water-filled arena overseen by Forest Whitaker shamanistic Zuri. (It has been debated whether or not the more magical elements of the Black Panther character would be present in the film; judging by this the answer is probably.) The footage, while raw, seemed to have that lived-in, slightly off-center, still-elegant long take feel that brilliant filmmaker Ryan Coogler brought to the unexpectedly great “Rocky” spin-off “Creed.”

    Another, longer sequence featured Klaue (Andy Serkis), last seen getting his arm severed in “Avengers: Age of Ultron,” walking into a casino or nightclub. Klaue is soon greeted by Everett Ross (Martin Freeman), a member of the Joint Counter Terrorism Center (also last seen in “Captain America: Civil War”), and the two have some surprisingly comedic back-and-forth. Everett makes a great joke about Klaue dropping a mixtape. It turns out Klaue really is dropping a mixtape and asks Ross for his email address. It’s very funny. Of course, soon after Klaue shows up a giant action sequence breaks out and T’Challa (aka the Black Panther) leaps into action. I’ve heard the movie described as Marvel’s 007 movie and this sequence certainly reinforced that. It also reinforced the fact that “Black Panther,” despite its more serious subject matter and cultural sensitivity, will still have all the fun, excitement, and humor of the very best Marvel movies. February 2018 can’t come soon enough.

    After watching the “Black Panther” sizzle we walked up to the art department.

    Hanging on the walls was artwork from “Black Panther” (including a teasing glimpse of Jordan’s character), “Thor: Ragnarok,” and “Spider-Man: Homecoming.” On a large, vertically turned monitor was a pre-production sketch of Thanos, the Marvel Cinematic Universe-wide big bad that was teased way back at the end of the first “Avengers” in 2012. Looking at the image, it struck me that this was the first time we’ve really seen the character standing up. Most of the time he’s been in that regal floating throne. Taking him all in he looks big and burly and truly imposing. On one hand is the Infinity Gauntlet, the glove that will (at some point) hold the Infinity Stones, those mystical doodads that everybody from Thor to the Guardians of the Galaxy have been clamoring over for the last five years of Marvel movies. If this is the guy every hero has to face, well, be worried for the heroes.In the next art room there was even more art and, oh yeah, “Ant-Man and The Wasp” director Peyton Reed. This was a huge surprise. I didn’t think we’d actually be meeting any of the filmmakers on our tour; I probably would have tucked my shirttail in if I had known this. Reed, who also directed the sorely underrated first “Ant-Man,” showed off some preliminary artwork from the new film, including both old and new versions of the Ant-Man suit (with the “Captain America: Civil War” being the in-between iteration). Reed teased Pym’s new lab (“Where is he working?”), further far-out adventures in the quantum realm (the Marvel Cinematic Universe equivalent of the comics’ micro-verse), and new technology that allows Ant-Man and the Wasp to shrink not only themselves but also those around them. One of the most striking pieces of artwork was Luis’s van from the first film in the jaws of a dog. It looks terrific; really beautiful and weird like the best parts of the first movie with a larger emphasis on playful psychedelic. Reed was as charming and accommodating as always and nimbly avoided answering certain questions.

    Elsewhere on the wall was artwork of Brie Larson in her “Captain Marvel” costume. But everyone was pretty tight-lipped on that.Our next stop was the visual effects review review room. Standing in the corner, tall and grey and dressed like he was waiting outside of a Los Feliz coffee shop, was Taika Waititi, the super-genius director of “Thor: Ragnarok.” “Today we’re going to introduce you to a character that nobody knows is in the movie,” he said. That character is Korg, a giant rock man who featured prominently in the “Planet Hulk” comic book arc that “Thor: Ragnarok” borrows from. Fighting alongside Korg is his sidekick, Miek, who is a larva inside of a robotic exo-skeleton suit. It’s honestly one of the weirdest things you’ve ever seen and a huge departure from the character, who is way more insect-like in the comics. (As if anyone thought Waititi was going to follow anything verbatim.)

    We got to watch a sequence where Thor (Chris Hemsworth) is talking to Korg before entering the gladiatorial arena that you see at the end of the teaser trailer. Korg is tall and craggy but speaks in a lilting New Zealand accent. He tells Thor that he was banished because, “I tried to start a revolution but didn’t print enough pamphlets.” The two characters walk for a while before Korg admits that the hallway is just a circle. Afterwards Taika, who also voices the character and provided the motion capture, says that he based the character on “Polynesian nightclub bouncers,” people that had the most genial-sounding voice but you really don’t want to mess with. (He didn’t use the word mess.) His goal was to turn this hulking brute into “the most lovable character in the film.” Based on the footage I saw, that seems like a pretty achievable goal.Finally we went into the main theater on the ground level and watched visual effects dailies from “Spider-Man: Homecoming” and the aforementioned “Black Panther” stuff. Visual effects dailies are when they review shots from various effects houses (there were at least a half dozen effects houses credited with the Spider-Man work, including Sony Pictures ImageWorks). Most of these shots were just a few seconds long and many took place in sequences already teased in the trailer — Spider-Man foiling bank robbers dressed as the Avengers, him climbing to the top of the Washington Monument. We did see a really impressive long shot of him putting on his suit in an alleyway, presumably coming home from school. It’s unbroken, tracking through the alley, as he puts on the suit that is, at first, pretty baggy and then snugly fitted to his body. A producer noted that the size of a rat that scampers away will be bigger and there’s still discussion as to how disgusting to make a bag of trash that opens once he web-shoots his bag to the side of the bin. “If we add in some sound effects we can make it really gross,” the producer says cheerfully.

    Other shots that we saw included a shot with Shocker (Bokeem Woodbine), a moment where Vulture (Michael Keaton) sits crouched on a building looking like a looming gargoyle (mirroring a piece of artwork we saw earlier), and, maybe most tantalizingly, Donald Glover playing a heretofore-undisclosed character being handed a glove made from a piece of a discarded Ultron robot by one of Vulture’s gang. It still doesn’t answer who he’s playing, exactly, but at least we can definitively say he’s not Miles Morales. So there’s that.

    After our tour we walked across the lot to the main theater and watched a little film called “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2.” I can’t say much more (embargoed!) but just know that the smile that was plastered across my face during the open house didn’t leave for the rest of the night.

  • Judy Greer Says Hello to ‘Wilson,’ Refuses to Say Goodbye to ‘Archer’

    'Wilson' New York Screening - ArrivalsFilm and television actress, motion capture performer, voice actress — it certainly seems like Judy Greer‘s doing it all. But she’ll have you know: she wants more.

    After a long windup primarily as that actress stealing scenes on some of your favorite big- and small-screen comedies, including “Arrested Development,” “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” and “Californication,” Greer’s career blew up even bigger with her dramatic turn in “The Descendants,” followed by a string of blockbuster turns in films including “Jurassic World,” “Tomorrowland,” “Ant-Man,” and “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” (she reprises her mo-cap role as chimp Cornelia in this summer’s “War for the Planet of the Apes“).

    And, of course, for the past seven seasons she’s been the voice of kink-minded heiress/receptionist Cheryl Tunt on FX’s animated spy comedy “Archer,” which recently revealed it would end after three more eight-episode seasons.

    Adding to her always-packed schedule was “Wilson,” a film adaptation of the acclaimed graphic novel by award-winning writer and illustrator Daniel Clowes (“Ghost World,” “Art School Confidential“), who also penned the screenplay, in which she plays a sweet-natured pet-sitter who becomes drawn into the world of a misanthropic, socially maladjusted man who becomes obsessed with his own legacy after the death of his father and the discovery of his long unknown daughter.

    Greer joined Moviefone for a chat about her continually wide-ranging career — and to concede that she’s still not yet ready to face the news of “Archer’s” impending finale.

    Moviefone: I was a fan of the graphic novel, and was really pleased to see how you all captured so much of it with the film, but also broadened it out — and you’re a big part of that: you brought that character to life in a way that she wasn’t on the page. Tell me a little bit about looking at that source material, then seeing the script, and kind of figuring out how you were going to bring her alive.

    Judy Greer: I like to build my characters kind of from the outside in. I like to know what I’m wearing, and what I look like, and where I am. I would have to say that, besides the work I did on the script that I do, I’m really influenced by like, in this movie specifically, being in Minneapolis, and by how she dressed, and what her house looked like, and the people she was around.

    I found, like, a softness. I feel like Shelly’s a really grounding force in Wilson’s life, but I think Shelly herself is a very airy person. She’s very easygoing, and I think she’s very good for Wilson, because she just sort of allows Wilson to be Wilson. She doesn’t really … not take any sh*t from him, but she doesn’t allow him to drive her crazy, which is why I think he does really well with her, and I think he kind of grows up a little bit with her too.

    I think Wilson and Pippi are like just the best couple ever. I think they are true lovers, but I don’t know that I think they should be together, which is what I find heartbreaking and beautiful about the movie, and that they’ll just have to kind of love each other forever, but separately.

    I like how, in the graphic novel, it’s sort of like when Shelley gets involved with Wilson we’re feeling, “Oh please, no, no, no …” But in this, she brings a sort of redemptive quality to who he could be going forward. I thought that must have been fun to figure out how to play with Woody, given Wilson’s toxic qualities.

    Yeah. It was fun, because in some ways, I feel like Woody and Shelly are very similar, and Wilson and Woody are very, very different. I don’t know. I would be curious to hear what Woody would say about that. Wilson has a freedom with her that I think he doesn’t really have with anyone else.

    What’s funny is, everything sort of happens exactly how it should, I think, in filmmaking. Laura Dern‘s last day of work was the day before my first day of work. Woody said he was so sad to see Laura go. He loved working with her so much, and it was just like hard for him that she was finishing. Then he said then I showed up, and then we started having a lot of fun together.

    And it was a really sweet thing to say, because I think that kind of happens in the movie, too. He can’t stand to see Pippi go, but then there’s like, here’s this other nice person that can maybe be helpful to me. So it was very serendipitous of a shooting schedule.

    There was a period where we’d see you in so many different kinds of movies, and then “The Descendants” felt like a really big moment that kind of helped you, maybe, have even more choices. How are you feeling about your ability to choose what you want to do, the roles that come your way, and just your overall career path and vision right now?

    I always want more. I think, in general, I have high expectations. “The Descendants” kind of was a game-changer for me in the way that mostly the people who give me jobs see me. I think I was seen as a comedic actress, and then even though I had done dramatic roles in the past, that one was just different. It was on a whole other level — the film, not my performance — but just like the scope of the movie, and Alexander Payne, and George [Clooney], and Shay [Woodley]. So it was just different, and it really afforded me a lot of opportunities.

    It was life-changing. It was really great. It was, for me, my dream to work with Alexander Payne. I didn’t even know what I needed to do after that. I was like, “Well that’s it. I’ve done what I wanted to do. So everything else now is total gravy.” But I’ve been really happy with the roles and the auditions that have come my way. I feel like I do have some opportunity to pick and choose a little bit.

    I always see things, I watch things, and I’m like, “Oh, I’d love to do something like that,” or “I’d love to do something like this.” So I don’t know; I’m never totally ready to say, “Yeah, this is it, this is what I wanted,” because I think that would be weird, too, if you’re an artist, to like limit yourself in that way. I’m intrigued with what’s next. I’m curious about what else is out there and how can I stretch myself? How can I find people to inspire me, and how do I make it so I can work with them?

    Now that there’s so much television, there’s so many more opportunities all the time, but in a way that there wasn’t before, when you just had your networks and your cable shows. So I don’t know. I feel very hopeful about the future, but no, I’m not ready to say like, ‘This is great, and I’m happy.” Who would ever say that? I wish I could say that, by the way! I’m always lamenting to my husband, where I’m like, “I wish I didn’t want more. Why can’t I just be satisfied? Why?”

    You do have a couple of choice franchise films to your credit, and presumably, we’ll see you in another “Ant-Man” movie, and definitely in another “Apes” movie. Tell me what got you excited about playing in both of those worlds, the Marvel world, and the “Planet of the Apes” world, and keeping in them hopefully going forward.

    I wanted to see what it was like on the other side, and do like a big giant franchise movie. I remember having a conversation with my agent about it. Like, “I kind of want to try and be in like big movies. Can we try that?” Then it was, like, insane, and then I got “Jurassic World,” and “Ant-Man,” and “Planet of the Apes, and I was like, “Whoa, OK, cool.”

    I wanted to be in a Marvel movie because it’s a whole thing. To be honest, I really wanted to work with Peyton Reed and Paul Rudd and Bobby Cannavale. I just really wanted to work with them. “The Break-Up” is one of my favorite movies. Paul Rudd is a genius. Bobby is a genius. It could have been “Ant-Man,” or it could have been anything else, I would have wanted to be in that movie. The best is that it’s a big old Marvel movie, and I was really happy to see Paul Rudd playing a superhero, because he is a superhero.

    Then with “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes,” that is like a movie that my husband was obsessed with me being in. I was too. I’ve been a huge fan of the franchise. He’s just the most giant fan of the franchise, and it was just something that I thought, doing motion capture work would be a whole different acting experience. I’m always trying to stretch myself and better myself. It was totally different, and having scenes with Andy Serkis. Andy Serkis and Woody Harrelson, two of the greatest actors out there — I got to work with both of them!

    It was just a huge couple years for me. Yeah, those were kind of the reasons I wanted to do them. I don’t want to, like, naysay the big franchise movies, but I find myself more attracted to the people I’m working with, than the scope of the project, if you will.

    Through it all, you’ve been right there with your team over at “Archer.” And now we know that there is probably an endpoint ahead. Obviously, you all love working on the show. Tell me your feelings when you learned, OK, there is going to be a definitive full stop at some point soon.

    We’re in denial. I don’t think there will be. We’re still trying to find ways to figure out how to make Adam [Reed] write more. I don’t know — it’s too upsetting to really think about, so we don’t. I don’t. I don’t like it.

    All good things must come to an end, and Adam writes every episode. He must be exhausted from it. It’s just such a good thing on so many levels, and it’s made me so happy. I think it’s such a great show, and it’s so smart — so consistently smart and funny that I shudder thinking that it’s going to be over.

    Maybe we can get some “Archer” movies out of Adam.

    I swear, I hope so. I really hope so.

    Lastly, tell me about your plans to expand right now beyond acting.

    I directed a movie that is almost finished. It’s an independent movie, so we don’t have distribution yet. That’s next. It was an incredible experience, and I kind of got bit by the directing bug, and now it’s like all I want to do all the time.

    It’s called “A Happening of Monumental Proportions.” It follows several people through their day and their life in Los Angeles. It’s a comedy. It’s a comedy about loss, and trying to make it through your day. The sort of general plot is that a man gets fired on the day that he has to speak at his daughter’s career day at school, and like how does he stand in front of her class and deal with that?

    I know it’s a beautiful script. I hope I made it a beautiful movie, but it’s really funny, and I have an amazing cast. I just was inspired by sort of the smallness of the story, and I really like movies about people just trying to make it through their day, and people who are just real people.

  • ‘Ant-Man 2’: Michael Douglas Confirms Return & Filming Start Date

    Michael Douglas is officially returning as Dr. Hank Pym for Marvel’s “Ant-Man” sequel, called “Ant-Man and the Wasp.” Paul Rudd (Scott Lang/Ant-Man) and Evangeline Lilly (Hope van Dyne) are on board as the title characters, with Michael Pena also set to return as Luis.

    Douglas was expected/hoped to be back, but he confirmed the news today on Facebook, and also revealed they’d start filming this July 2017 for the July 2018 release date:

    Peyton Reed directed the 2015 Marvel film, and he’s back to direct “Ant-Man 2.” Moviefone talked to Reed late last year, as he was about to head into pre-production on “Ant-Man and the Wasp.” Here’s a section of that Q&A:

    Lastly, what do you want to do with the Wasp now that we’re in this great moment for female superheroes and you’re going to have an opportunity to do something fun and cool with one of the premiere Marvel superheroines — one of the very first. What are you excited about in collaborating with Evangeline, to carry the Wasp forward?

    Well, I’m just personally excited to get to introduce yet another character into the Marvel Universe. After Ant-Man, now we get to see Wasp, so really designing her look, the way she moves, the power set, and figuring out, sort of, who Hope van Dyne is as a hero — because we know her in a certain context in the first movie, but now she’s going to have her coming out party — that’s exciting!

    Evangeline Lilly’s The Wasp is also expected to be in “Avengers 4,” the 2019 movie coming after next year’s “Avengers: Infinity War.”

    “Ant-Man and the Wasp” is scheduled for release on July 6, 2018.

    [via: Collider]

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  • Peyton Reed Teases ‘Crazy Stuff’ in ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’

    ant-man and the waspHere’s something to grow on, Ant-Man fans: even after the superhero’s surprise growth spurt in Marvel‘s “Captain America: Civil War,” filmmaker Peyton Reed promises he’s got plenty more tales to astonish for the sequel, “Ant-Man and the Wasp.”

    When Moviefone caught up with director Reed, who helmed the first installment of the insect-sized superhero’s adventures with last year’s “Ant-Man,” he was about to head into pre-production on the follow-up film, which is slated to hit theaters in July 2018. And, as he reveals, this one’s going to dig much deeper into exactly what kind of heroes Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) and Hope Van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly) will become.

    Moviefone: What does seeing a new Marvel movie like “Doctor Strange” do for you, creatively? What kind of stuff does it stir up?

    Peyton Reed: Well, it’s a mixed bag. Because, as a comics fan growing up, to see all these heroes brought to life on the screen in such huge fashion is always exciting. As the director of a movie that’s coming like three, four, five movies later, the bar is always raised, and it’s great. It’s a challenge.

    Because they’re always making technical breakthroughs, and also just story breakthroughs, one of the great things about Marvel is you want to do movies that are doing something different and not treading on what the other movies are doing. So it’s always exciting because they manage to top themselves.

    Where are you in your creative efforts for the next one? Have you broken your story?

    We’re in the writing phase right now and we start official prep this month. So it’s sort of long-lead prep, but we’re starting to get into all of the visual development stuff, and it’s really exciting.

    Tell me about how Paul Rudd adds his voice in this early startup process, because he is so much of what makes Ant-Man Ant-Man.

    Well, he is Ant-Man on screen, but he also was one of the screenwriters on the first movie, and, for me as a director, that’s great because he’s so invested in the character, and so he’s a part of the writing process on this movie, as well.

    And it’s great because when you make a movie with someone, it’s a very close relationship. So we’re going into this movie already having forged that bond, and we’re playing with a lot of ideas, and we’re coming up with some crazy stuff!

    Is your tendency to be like, “OK, let’s grab what we can in the Marvel Universe and have some fun with it,” or do you want to keep the “Ant-Man” corner of the universe a little more Ant-Man-centric?

    No, I think we like our little Ant-Man corner of the universe. Because it’s a whole different vibe tonally, but also just in terms of who Scott Lang, who Ant-Man is: he is a guy who is maybe not so sure he wants to be like this Avenger-style, full-on superhero.

    He’s got a kid, and this is the inner conflict with him, and he’s very much just like a normal guy who has come into contact with some incredible power. So, we like that aspect of kind of like it being its own little corner of the universe.

    The flipside of that is that we heard that Evangeline Lilly and the Wasp are going to be in “Avengers 4.” Tell me about sharing your characters. What’s fun about letting one of your heavy-hitters go into somebody else’s movie.

    Again, that is one of the sort of things where it’s a mixed bag. When I first found out — gosh, I don’t know, two years ago, a year-and-a-half ago — that “Civil War” was going to get the Giant-Man premiere, I was like “No!” But, now, I’ve since recovered, and we have a lot more in store for Scott Lang in this movie.

    We get to see the Wasp debut — we’re all about the Wasp and Ant-Man. So I like it, because we spend a lot of time with our different writers and directors, and there’s a lot of crosstalk, and I love that.

    Lastly, what do you want to do with the Wasp now that we’re in this great moment for female superheroes and you’re going to have an opportunity to do something fun and cool with one of the premiere Marvel superheroines — one of the very first. What are you excited about in collaborating with Evangeline, to carry the Wasp forward?

    Well, I’m just personally excited to get to introduce yet another character into the Marvel Universe. After Ant-Man, now we get to see Wasp, so really designing her look, the way she moves, the power set, and figuring out, sort of, who Hope van Dyne is as a hero — because we know her in a certain context in the first movie, but now she’s going to have her coming out party — that’s exciting!

  • ‘Avengers 4’ Will Bring in Evangeline Lilly as the Wasp

    Premiere Of Marvel's "Ant-Man" - ArrivalsWe still have 2018’s “Avengers: Infinity War” between now and 2019’s “Avengers 4,” but details are already coming out about the fourth film in the Avengers series.

    Actress Evangeline Lilly, who portrayed Hope van Dyne in 2015’s “Ant-Man,” recently opened up to Blastr about her upcoming involvement in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. She laid out the plans for her soon-to-be-superhero character, starting with the “Ant-Man” sequel, “Ant-Man and the Wasp.” With the film slated to debut after “Avengers: Infinity War,” she won’t appear in the third film in the Avengers series. However, we can expect to see her become the Wasp in time for “Avengers 4.”

    Lilly explained that “Ant-Man and the Wasp” will be used to develop her character before she teams up with the Avengers.

    “I’m excited because it’s essentially going to be the origin of the Wasp,” Lilly told Blastr of the upcoming sequel. “Of course, we’re going to see the Wasp for the first time take on the mantle and put on the suit and fly about and do her thing.”

    She explained that appearing in the fourth Avengers film instead of the third will be better for her character. “The Wasp won’t be in the first part,” Lilly said, “she’ll be in the second part because they really want to preserve that reveal for ‘Ant-Man and the Wasp’ so that they can give it its due time.”

    The news will may be a little disappointing for fans hoping to see her as the Wasp sooner rather than later, but never fear, because — as always — there will be more than enough heroes to keep “Avengers: Infinity War” exciting.

    “Avengers: Infinity War” is scheduled to hit theaters on May 4, 2018, followed by “Ant-Man and the Wasp” on July 6, 2018, and then “Avengers 4” will follow in 2019.

    [via: Blastr]

  • Paul Rudd Breaks for Drama While ‘Trying to Crack’ the Marvel Cinematic Universe

    Between his size-changing superheroics in “Marvel’s Ant-Man,” his hilarious turns in the Judd Apatow-verse, and his enduringly dreamy Baldwin-ism in “Clueless,” it may surprise you to learn that Paul Rudd got his start flexing his dramatic muscles in works by Neil LaBute, John Irving, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and William Shakespeare.

    In his new film, “The Fundamentals of Caring,” premiering on Netflix today, June 24th, after its purchase following a debut at the Sundance Film Festival, Rudd returns to his more serious-minded roots — though not without a share of laughs. Based on the admired seriocomic, semi-autobiographical novel by author Jonathan Evison, the film provides a change-of-tone showcase for Rudd after his recent stints in lighthearted comedies and comic book fare.

    In the grounded, emotionally-driven movie, Rudd plays Ben, a man who’s trying to turn a haunting person tragedy into a new career purpose as a full-time caregiver; his first charge is Trevor, a sharp-tongued teenager who muscular dystrophy has kept him isolated for much of his life. Together they embark on a road trip that promises to be either disastrous or transformative.

    “What you learn when you watch Paul is he’s always doing something on camera,” says the film’s screenwriter-director, The Late Show With David Letterman” and created the TV series “Ed.” “There’s always something going on inside, and that comes right out of him.”

    “So I was never worried about the comedy because he’s Paul Rudd, and because I had Paul Rudd, I was then not worried about the dramatic stuff either,” Burnett continued. “His performance in this is very nuanced. He’s playing a tragic guy, but he never leans into that tragedy.”

    “He’s a classically trained actor — the guy knows his sh*t!” agreed Rudd’s co-star Craig Roberts, who plays Trevor. “The guy is a very good actor. He’s just so, like Rob says, he just so happens to be one of the funniest people at the same time. But he has this accessibility that not many actors have. He’s very, very likable. I keep comparing him to Jack Lemmon. Just so charming. When he says something, you truly believe that he means it. That’s a crazy gift to have.”

    So is Rudd’s facility with an improvised one-liner, says Roberts. “That guy is quick!” he marvels. “It’s scary working with him, at the same time as it being exciting. You have to be on your game — drink a lot of coffee!”

    At the movie’s premiere in Hollywood, Rudd joined Moviefone to talk a bit about smaller-scale moviemaking, his comedy obsessions, and his creative stake in the next Ant-Man movie.

    Moviefone: Coming out of “Ant-Man,” something that big, tell me what that meant to you … to be able to do a movie like this. This is the kind of movie they say Hollywood doesn’t really make anymore: intimate, small-scale, character-driven.

    Paul Rudd: Well, it seems like it’s just harder for any movies to get seen and made — I guess they’re still getting made, it’s just, yeah. It seems like movies now become big event pictures, and that kind of middle one gets pushed to the side a little bit. But yeah, it’s nice to do a kind of a smaller film that’s character-based.

    Working with Rob Burnett — you’re a serious student of comedy, so I’m sure you knew his lineage extremely well.

    Sure! Oh absolutely. Yeah, yeah. Absolutely.

    Were you quizzing him all the time about comedy theory?

    No, I quizzed him all the time with Letterman stories. I wanted to know certain things in the show. “What was it like to film this piece?” He’s a company man, he’s not going to divulge too much. I’m saying, “It was really cool. You directed that great remote piece with David Letterman and Steve Martin. What is that like? What was that day like?”

    He would just tell me what it was like and how he couldn’t believe he was there and he’s telling me, “These guys … this is what you need to do.” Yeah I mean, I’m a huge Letterman fanatic. I was really interested in those stories.

    As far as the theory, I think, in a way, because I grew up with that Letterman influence, I already feel like Rob, and I have kind of a similar understanding of comedy theory or joke theory or playing against the joke. Certainly with this kind of material. I felt like we were always on the same page. I could tell when I read it the first time through. That’s why I wanted to do it. I thought, ‘Wow, these jokes have been written with a very deft hand.’

    What are you excited about in terms of your creative stake in “Ant-Man and The Wasp,” not just as an actor, but as part of the storytelling process?

    Yeah, it’s a challenge and it’s exciting. It’s been … it’s a lot of work, but it’s also really cool to have an understanding of the world. I approach the story and all the characters from a much different place than I would if I were just acting in it. So I’m learning a lot more about the Marvel world, but I’m loving trying to crack these stories and these characters.

    “The Fundamentals of Caring” is available now on Netflix.

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  • Fans Love The Hulk and Ant-Man’s Epic Coke Mini Ad

    Paul Rudd was booked solid this Super Bowl Sunday, with a cameo as the guy everyone loves (it’s true!) in that “Bud Light Party” ad, and then as Ant-Man in the Coke Mini ad. His Ant-Man was also shown in the new “Captain America: Civil War” trailer


    … but the Coke Mini commercial gave him some lines and let him help The Hulk open the can. ‘Cause it really does take tiny fingers to open those things. As Ant-Man put it, “Oh, you poor sad Hulk. Hold on.” Imagine watching The Hulk try to open the plastic bags at the grocery store. He has no future as a bagger.

    Here’s the ad, showing superheroes once again blithely trashing a city (tsk tsk):


    His little pinkie raise! The commercial debuted during last night’s Super Bowl and it already has about 1.7 million YouTube views. And, for once, the fans seemed to agree on its awesomeness, some saying it was the best Coke ad ever and others calling for more Ant-Man vs. Hulk battles over things like the last slice of pizza.

    Here’s just one great response:


    Team Hulk on this one. It was in Bruce Banner’s fridge, after all.

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