How Ant-Man And The Wasp: Quantumania's Kang Will Define the Future of the Online free 


We break down how Jonathan Majors' Ant-Man villain could shape the events of Phase 5 and Phase 6, leading to Avengers: The Kang Dynasty and Avengers: Secret Wars.


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plot points from the first season of Loki. The film’s characters and primary setting in the Quantum Realm are continuations of the previous Ant-Man films, but it sacrifices a more narrowed focus on the stories of Scott Lang (Paul Rudd) and Hope van Dyne (Evangeline Lilly) to further expand the MCU into the multiverse. Some of the franchise’s soul feels lost in the process of better serving the MCU’s greater agenda. We never even get a chance to hear Michael Peña’s 


Loki featured Majors’s first MCU appearance; he played an alternate version—or variant—of Kang known as He Who Remains, and Quantumania now bridges that multiversal narrative to the main universe of the MCU. Above all else, the 31st movie in the MCU is positioned to set up th 


For Ant-Man, there were a lot of editorial changes happening toward the latter third and fourth of the project that were just too late. There’s a point of no return. Why certain things were changed, why certain notes were nitpicked longer than they should have been — that’s on Marvel. But it definitely did cause a lot of tension, turmoil, and weight on everybody at [company name redacted].

Unfortunately, it is noticeable that there were shortcuts. Certain things were used to cover up incomplete work. Certain editorial cuts were made to not show as much action or effects as there could have been — likely because there just wasn’t enough time to render everything. There was a lot of shortening and rolling of shots (rolling is when you don’t shorten or lengthen a shot — you just move it a few frames in the cut). It really did feel like certain scenes were trimmed or otherwise altered to either save money, save time, or cover up the inability to get it done.

Despite all the hype around Kang, at the end of Quantumania, the villain is defeated by a bunch of supersized ants and a giant floating head with tiny legs. And then he’s defeated again by Ant-Man and the Wasp. For a guy who’s been billed as the next Thanos, it doesn’t make for the most menacing debut, even if Majors’s terrific (and very sinister) performance serves as the film’s brightest spot by far.

But there’s something of a cardinal rule when it comes to characters dying in the MCU: If there isn’t a body, they’re probably not dead. (Or in the case of M.O.D.O.K., I guess, a massive head with tiny legs. And thankfully, we saw that


And speaking of Quantumania, all the ballyhoo about Kang’s debut is tempered by his seeming demise in the film’s climax. How can he be the primary antagonist of the Multiverse Saga if he’s dead?

He presents one possible solution as he often mentions time works differently for him – an ability he shares with his comic book counterpart – but another answer comes from the fact that he recognizes only one true threat to his aims: himself.