MINIONS & MONSTERS:
THE MINIONS GO HOLLYWOOD IN VERY FUNNY PREQUEL…TO A PREQUEL!
By Nico Beland
Movie Review: *** out of 4
UNIVERSAL PICTURES
Something big is coming in Minions & Monsters
Gru’s Minions have returned and this time, they’re invading the film industry in Minions & Monsters, the latest installment of Illumination’s Despicable Me franchise and the third Minions movie after 2015’s Minions and 2022’s Minions: The Rise of Gru. As I’ve said in my reviews for the other Despicable Me and Minions movies, the franchise is pretty hit-or-miss with a lot of reliance on silly gags and slapstick for the kids, but they’re often mixed with genuine heart, particularly with ex-supervillain Gru and his family.
For the most part, I think the formula works well enough, though there have been times where the tone is inconsistent and uneven, like the first Minions and Despicable Me 3 and 4. I consider these the weakest in the series, but they have their moments. The second Minions movie, The Rise of Gru, was honestly pretty funny and had decent comedic timing and visual gags; not a great movie, but a surprisingly good comedy that greatly improved upon the first Minions.
So, now we have a third Minions movie, and the marketing wasn’t really doing it for me; it just seemed like more of the same: Minions doing silly things with a bunch of slapstick, except now it has monsters. But I was cautiously optimistic because I did enjoy the last movie quite a bit, so perhaps the Minions in Old Hollywood might be able to recreate that magic…Actually, it does.
Again, Minions & Monsters isn’t a great film, nor would I consider it one of the all-time best comedies, but I found it incredibly funny with a lot of nods to silent films and classic cinema. It’s easily my favorite out of the Minions movies and right up there with the first two Despicable Me films.
The film is set in 1920s Hollywood and follows the Minions (All voiced by the film’s director, Pierre Coffin) on their quest to serve the most diabolical villain in the world and, through several missteps, fail at keeping a job. They find themselves mistaking a movie set for a train heist and discover the magic of cinema with help from film director Max (voiced by Christoph Waltz-Inglourious Basterds, Django Unchained, Guillermo del Toro’s Frankenstein) who casts the Minions in several silent pictures.
But when the studio heads begin transitioning from silent film to talkies and the Minions are unable to speak fluent English, they are fired, with one aspiring filmmaker Minion, James, not wanting to give up his passion and begins making a film of his own. However, his production needs giant monsters, so he summons a monster known as Goomi (voiced by Trey Parker-South Park, Team America: World Police, The Book of Mormon; who also voiced Baltazar Bratt in Despicable Me 3) to recruit monsters for his big movie, only for them to run amok in Hollywood.
The film also features the voices of Allison Janney (American Beauty, I, Tonya, Bad Education; who also had a voice role in the first Minions) as Olivia, Jesse Eisenberg (Zombieland 1 and 2, The Social Network, A Real Pain) as Dort, Jeff Bridges (Tron franchise, The Big Lebowski, Iron Man) as Frank and Elwood Bright, Zoey Deutch (Everybody Wants Some!!, Zombieland: Double Tap, Nouvelle Vague) as Debbie, Bobby Moynihan (The Secret Life of Pets 1 and 2, DuckTales (2017), Hoppers) as Phillips, Phil LaMarr (Futurama, DC Animated Universe, Samurai Jack) as Howard, and the man who created Jar Jar Binks as himself.
Overall, Minions & Monsters is pretty much what you’d expect: the Minions doing silly and goofy things in the Golden Age of Hollywood with monsters. It’s not particularly deep or emotionally rich, but as a light-hearted, wacky comedy, I laughed quite a bit during this film and not just chuckles and small laughs, genuinely hard laughs.
There are so many parodies and homages to classic films in this that just had me smiling and laughing every time one would come up, from nods to Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, and Charlie Chaplin movies to the famous Rosebud scene from Citizen Kane. They even do an entire chase sequence with a monster that’s edited like it’s from a silent comedy film, complete with silly music.
There’s also an entire B-plot involving a “Robot” named Dort that a bunch of Minions ally with because he claims to be the conqueror of the world that’s probably there to pad out the runtime, but I giggled quite a bit at how strange and odd his scenes are. Also, completely forgot it was Jesse Eisenberg doing his voice; I’m shocked he doesn’t do much voice acting in animation; he’s got a perfect voice for it.
Speaking of voice acting, Trey Parker once again continues to be a treasure in the Despicable Me/Minionsfranchise, but where Balthazar Bratt in Despicable Me 3 sounded like a supervillain Randy Marsh, Goomi has the voice of a high-pitched South Park child voice, and his delivery is freaking hilarious. But unlike Despicable Me 3, he has a consistently good movie surrounding his vocal performance this time around.
There’s not a whole lot to say about this movie; Minions & Monsters is a funny movie that kids will surely enjoy, and even adults will get some good laughs out of. This is the Minions formula really working, where you put them in different situations and hilarity ensues. It knows people are there just to laugh and have fun, and it delivers just that; if you wanted something more, then you would have gotten a ticket to see Toy Story 5 next door instead.













































































































































































































































































