I'll be happy if it all leads up to Ant-Man (Scott Lang) and Wasp (whoever she is) becoming Avengers.
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This is not your father's Ant-Man. I don't get why Hank Pym has to be pushing 70 instead of being closer in age to Tony Stark. And what's wrong with Janet Van Dyne as a character? Instead, old Hank has a daughter named Hope? Marvel is really reinventing the wheel here.
And what's wrong with Janet Van Dyne as a character?
What I'm wondering.
I actually like that it keeps the door open for a 60s-70s "Ant-Man and the Wasp" period piece (ala the 40s set "Agent Carter") featuring the adventures a younger (and recast) Hank Pym and Janet Van Dyne.![]()
This is not your father's Ant-Man. I don't get why Hank Pym has to be pushing 70 instead of being closer in age to Tony Stark. And what's wrong with Janet Van Dyne as a character? Instead, old Hank has a daughter named Hope? Marvel is really reinventing the wheel here.
I think it's likely that the reason Pym's daughter has that name is that her mother is Janet, and there's likely a divorce involved. A similar incident may be part of this Pym's distant backstory.
I sort of wonder if the Hank Pym, wife-beater, stories (esp. the Ultimates) didn't poison that particular character for the studio.
yeah, i realize Pym's still in the movie but having him as a supporting character is less risky for your multimillion dollar movie than the potential bad publicity when Fox, MSNBC or someone else decides to gin up a phony controversy about how Marvel's latest movie is the story of a wife-beating superhero.
Hank was a wife-beater in the comics? So what? Jimmy Olsen was a giant turtle boy in the comics, but that's ignored by the movies and TV.
I agree. And Gwen Stacy should never have been killed off in either the comic books or this year's The Amazing Spider-Man 2. Now that franchise is sinking before our eyes.Hank being a wife beater in the comics was stupid, and I bet some Marvel comic people nowadays regret that they have to keep that baggage with the character. The movie version doesn't need that kind of stuff.
Hank was a wife-beater in the comics? So what? Jimmy Olsen was a giant turtle boy in the comics, but that's ignored by the movies and TV.
I'm not so much concerned about continuity for the sake of continuity as I am about there being a rare opportunity here in comic book adaptation to show superheroes coping with personal demons that many people in the real world have to deal with. More people IRL have to cope with domestic abuse than have to cope with the fallout of having been turned into a giant turtle.
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