When it used to be introduced that Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania would now not most effective famous person Kang the Conquerer but kick off Phase Five of the Wonder Cinematic Universe, you needed to consider now not most effective wouldn’t it have finish credit score scenes, however that the ones scenes could be bangers. And the movie does now not disappoint.
Quantumania is now in theaters and, as you’ve almost certainly heard, it’s were given Wonder’s conventional two end credit scenes—one within the heart and one on the very finish. However what units Ant-Guy and the Wasp: Quantumania aside is that its end credit scenes are probably essentially the most vital in an overly, very very long time. So let’s discuss them. Clearly, main spoilers to practice.
To totally recognize the primary finish credit scene, you must return to the film itself. Within the movie, Kang says a couple of occasions that he’s been exiled to the Quantum Realm. It’s a spot indifferent from all area and time, so as a result of he can see and trip via all of time, it’s the one position that may hang him. That opens up a couple of questions. Who despatched him there? Why? The “why” is replied within the movie. Kang skipped to the top of time and noticed how the whole thing ends. He doesn’t cross into specifics however he says it ends with “numerous me.” This Kang, it seems that, didn’t like that. He’s a novel power and needs to be essentially the most tough Kang so, with the information of what the long run holds, he started touring the multiverse, destroying Empires, Avengers, and timelines by the use of incursions. Precisely what he was hoping to succeed in excluding simply inflicting chaos is unclear however we all know what came about subsequent. It annoyed the opposite Kangs who’ve a bigger plan he used to be looking to reduce to rubble.
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That knowledge is crucial to the first end credits scene. That’s when we see three different Kang variants meeting up: Rama-Tut, Centurion, and Immortus—all references to alternate versions of Nathaniel Richards, the man who became Kang, in the comics. They’re meeting to discuss the fact Kang the Conquerer, who they banished to the Quantum Realm, is dead. This is a huge deal. Kangs don’t die easily, especially not ones these very powerful Kangs wanted gone. However, the bigger deal is the person who killed him. A human being. An Avenger. And with the knowledge that humanity and the Avengers are beginning to learn about and use to travel the multiverse these Kangs believe they control, they say they need to speed up their timeline. Again, we don’t know for what exactly but we know that the trio calls every Kang that exists across the multiverse for a meeting. These are the “a lot of me’s” that Kang the Conquerer referred to earlier, and from the comics, it’s called the Council of Kangs—beings who are coming to take over the rest of the universe to start, we think, a “Kang Dynasty.” It’s our first and best look yet at the threat the MCU is facing in the Multiverse Saga.
What’s so cool about this scene, besides seeing Jonathan Majors as so many different Kangs, is that it answers one of the film’s biggest questions (who banished Kang) and adds some additional context to Scott Lang’s confused mindset at the end of the movie. He’s not sure that beating Kang really solved all the problems and he’s right. Something bad is happening and here we get a taste of it. It’s a smart tease in addition to being a good punctuation to end the movie.
Scene two is more straightforward but also related to all of this. At an undisclosed time and place, a man named Victor Timely is performing in front of an audience. Timely is, appropriately, talking about time. He says it’s based on lies and believes he can shape it. In the audience watching this is none other than Loki (Tom Hiddleston), who is with Mobius (Owen Wilson). Loki tells Mobius that Timely is “him,” referencing a being he met as another Kang variant, He Who Remains. Mobius doesn’t think Timely is as scary as Loki has described but, in fact, Loki—and we—know he is.
This scene is from season two of Loki, though it’s unclear when in the season this is (probably the middle since Mobius and Loki seem to be buddy-buddy again, despite Mobius not knowing him at the end of last season). The bigger question though is that in the comics, Timely was a secret disguise of Kang Prime, the mayor of a self-established and self-named town in 1901 who used the persona to live on Earth and become a titan of industry. Is this Timely like that? A time traveler from across the galaxy? Or just another variant? Hopefully, we find out later this year on Loki.
Check back soon for more spoiler discussions of Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania. It’s in theaters now.
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