Part of what has made Scott Lang such an endearing and well-liked character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe has been how grounded the hero has remained even in the face of the most outrageous events. As Ant-Man, he’s talked to ants, entered the Quantum Realm, and traveled through time, and yet, he’s never lost his charm or the ability to process otherwise surreal and traumatic situations. This was also why he, in the MCU, was the perfect choice to write a novel that served as a memoir of his time as Ant-Man and a glimpse at the larger universe.Look Out for the Little Guy was written by Lang in the MCU but was actually penned by Rob Kutner once the book crossed the multiverse and entered the real world. From beginning to end, Kutner managed to capture everything that made Lang such a loveable character from his love for his daughter, Cassie to his respect for Hank Pym and his love for Hope Van Dyne. But the one thing that was most prevalent in the novel was Lang’s inherent imposter syndrome as he felt he wasn’t the right person to write a novel about The Infinity Saga. In fact, that same imposter syndrome served as a revelation that Scott Lang’s best-selling novel wasn’t even his idea to write.The Blip and the subsequent five years of adjustments were some of the most harrowing situations the universe had ever faced in the MCU. While Avengers: Endgame captured how the heroes dealt with such a devastating blow of half the population being erased from reality, humanity was only lightly touched on. From that perspective, for as little as the audience knew about what the humans of the MCU during The Blip, the civilians in the universe knew just as much about what the Avengers endured. As a result, someone needed to tell the story of what the Avengers went through and what they had to accomplish to bring back all the lives lost when Thanos snapped his fingers.RELATED: Loki Season 2 Is The MCU’s Most Important Upcoming Release
Part of what has made Scott Lang such an endearing and well-liked character in the Marvel Cinematic Universe has been how grounded the hero has remained even in the face of the most outrageous events. As Ant-Man, he’s talked to ants, entered the Quantum Realm, and traveled through time, and yet, he’s never lost his charm or the ability to process otherwise surreal and traumatic situations. This was also why he, in the MCU, was the perfect choice to write a novel that served as a memoir of his time as Ant-Man and a glimpse at the larger universe.
Look Out for the Little Guy was written by Lang in the MCU but was actually penned by Rob Kutner once the book crossed the multiverse and entered the real world. From beginning to end, Kutner managed to capture everything that made Lang such a loveable character from his love for his daughter, Cassie to his respect for Hank Pym and his love for Hope Van Dyne. But the one thing that was most prevalent in the novel was Lang’s inherent imposter syndrome as he felt he wasn’t the right person to write a novel about The Infinity Saga. In fact, that same imposter syndrome served as a revelation that Scott Lang’s best-selling novel wasn’t even his idea to write.
The Blip and the subsequent five years of adjustments were some of the most harrowing situations the universe had ever faced in the MCU. While Avengers: Endgame captured how the heroes dealt with such a devastating blow of half the population being erased from reality, humanity was only lightly touched on. From that perspective, for as little as the audience knew about what the humans of the MCU during The Blip, the civilians in the universe knew just as much about what the Avengers endured. As a result, someone needed to tell the story of what the Avengers went through and what they had to accomplish to bring back all the lives lost when Thanos snapped his fingers.
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