Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania's reviews
Media reviews
The Wrap
'Quantumania' may not swing for the fences as ambitiously as recent entries like "Wakanda Forever" or 'Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness', but it does take the wildly disparate tones and plot threads that are seemingly endemic to this series and turn them into an entertainingly cohesive whole. To be continued, obviously.
Collider
There's a fascinating world to explore here, and Ant-Man finally gets close to the full realization of the potential of his character and this concept, but it all, unfortunately, gets overtaken by the Conquerer. Quantumania is a promising, but shaky start for Phase 5 of the Marvel Cinematic Universe, it's just a shame it comes at the sake of the little guy.
Empire
'Quantumania' isn\'t as wacky as it should be, and the humongous stakes feel oddly small. But where else do you get a wild Jonathan Majors, an intense Michelle Pfeiffer and talking broccoli?
Indiewire
Maybe the pictures should get small again; it might be the only way to save an MCU that seems dangerously close to getting too big to do anything but fail.
New York Post
Sorry to Raid on your parade, "Ant-Man" fans, but the third chapter is a pile of dirt.
Time Out
There\'s a lot more Majors to come in future Marvel films and he\'s really the only thing here that makes a continued story look even vaguely enticing. With this functional sequel Marvel is still on a dud streak. They now have the whole multiverse to explore. But can they settle into a reality where their films are fun again?