The Antman

The Antman

5

2003-01-15

“The Antman” is a lovingly-made but sluggish monster-movie parody, done with German-speaking actors on a sparse soundstage standing in for 1950s Mexico. Promising concept is bolstered by colorful performances by Gotz Otto and Lars Rudolph, and the filmmakers have fun with pic’s look, right down to tacky lighting worthy of Roger Corman. But Marc Meyer’s script isn’t fast or funny enough to keep pace with energetic visuals. The first in a projected series of B-movie homages grouped as “Planet B,” the producers might want to call in Joe Dante to supervise the rest, as “Antman” seems unlikely to crawl very far beyond its native borders

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The Antman

Storyline

“The Antman” is a lovingly-made but sluggish monster-movie parody, done with German-speaking actors on a sparse soundstage standing in for 1950s Mexico. Promising concept is bolstered by colorful performances by Gotz Otto and Lars Rudolph, and the filmmakers have fun with pic’s look, right down to tacky lighting worthy of Roger Corman. But Marc Meyer’s script isn’t fast or funny enough to keep pace with energetic visuals. The first in a projected series of B-movie homages grouped as “Planet B,” the producers might want to call in Joe Dante to supervise the rest, as “Antman” seems unlikely to crawl very far beyond its native borders

Released

2003-01-15

Runtime

94

Director

Christoph Gampl

Budget

$800000

Revenue

$0

Genres

Science Fiction

Comedy

Horror

Language

Deutsch

Production

TTD Checkpoint Berlin Filmproductions GmbH

Cinemedia

Studio Babelsberg

Casts

  • Image 2

    Götz Otto

    Götz Otto
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    Yasmina Filali

    Yasmina Filali
  • Image 2

    Lars Rudolph

    Lars Rudolph
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    Elisabeth Volkmann

    Elisabeth Volkmann
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    Gojko Mitić

    Gojko Mitić
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    Wolfgang Hess

    Wolfgang Hess