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Title: Peyton Reed says he'll show you how Ant-Man is cool
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Ant-Man shrinks and controls ants. "We’re going to show you absolutely how that’s cool," director Peyton Reed says. (Marvel) ...
Ant-Man shrinks and controls ants. "We’re going to show you absolutely how that’s cool," director Peyton Reed says. (Marvel)

There are the superheroes everyone knows and loves, the ones kids dress up as for Halloween, the ones whose logos and square-jawed faces are emblazoned on everything from lunchboxes to dorm-room posters to tighty-whities.
And then there is Ant-Man.
The Marvel Comics hero — whose suit enables him to shrink to microscopic size and communicate with ants — boasts an illustrious nearly 50-year history and was a founding member of the Avengers. But in terms of mainstream awareness, Ant-Man is to marquee heroes like Batman and Spider-Man roughly what a bug is to an elephant.
Marvel Studios President Kevin Feige has a simple explanation for that: "He hasn't had a movie yet. He hasn't made his debut."
With "Ant-Man," in theaters July 17, the character is finally ready for his (extremely zoomed-in) close-up. The film stars Paul Rudd as Scott Lang, a thief and ex-con who becomes the protege of Hank Pym (Michael Douglas), creator of the Ant-Man technology. Together, the two work to thwart rival inventor Darren Cross (Corey Stoll), who has developed his own, even more powerful Yellowjacket suit.

As befitting an unconventional superhero, "Ant-Man" is far from a typical origin tale, according to director Peyton Reed, best known for such comedies as "Bring It On" and "Yes Man."
"It's a sort of a dual redemption story between two guys and their daughters with the structure of a heist movie with a science-fiction concept but with a real comedic rhythm to it," Reed said. He laughed. "You know, one of those movies."

If that log line sounds complicated, the history of the project is even more tangled. The idea of an "Ant-Man" movie first arose in the late 1980s but didn't pick up steam until 2006, when Marvel hired Edgar Wright — the director of quirky genre deconstructions like "Shaun of the Dead" and "Hot Fuzz" — to bring his own script, co-written with Joe Cornish, to the screen.
After years of development, the film was on the brink of starting production in May 2013 when Marvel and Wright jointly announced that Wright was leaving the project due to "differences in their vision of the film." With a release date in place but no director or approved script, comic-book fans — many of whom had been excited over the prospect of Wright's film — wondered if "Ant-Man" could end up being squashed.

"There was a lot of scrambling to just figure out what the next step would be," said Rudd, who quickly helped recruit writer-director Adam McKay, with whom he'd worked on the "Anchorman" films, to collaborate on a new draft of the script. Within weeks, Reed — who had earlier been in the running to helm "Guardians of the Galaxy" — signed on to direct the film.
"It's easy to look at that time and say it was chaotic," said Rudd, who put in months of training to develop a more superheroic physique. "But while [Wright's exit] was obviously a personal bummer — I'm an Edgar fan and I'm here because of him — there are also a lot of positive things that happened as a result. No. 1 being that we got Peyton."
Paul Rudd

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