• Latest
  • Trending
Minions & Monsters Review

Minions & Monsters Review: Hollywood Eats the Pest

Peter Asher: Everywhere Man Review

Peter Asher: Everywhere Man Review: Pop History From the Studio Glass

Our Father Review

Our Father Review: Faith, Punishment, and the Locked Door

Dark Scrolls Review

Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

Lucy Lost Review

Lucy Lost Review: Wartime Fear in a Storybook Frame

Jenna Ortega

Jenna Ortega Is an Artificial Friend in Taika Waititi’s Klara and the Sun Trailer

1 hour ago
download 3 1

Ken Russell’s Banned Masterpiece The Devils Finally Gets Its Theatrical Release

1 hour ago
Quentin Tarantino

Quentin Tarantino and Kylie Minogue Film Surprise Welsh Movie in Porthcawl

1 hour ago
Timothée Chalamet, Selena Gomez

Timothée Chalamet Makes Animation Debut Alongside Selena Gomez in Illumination’s Not Alone

1 hour ago
Alley Cats

Ricky Gervais Goes Feline: Netflix Drops First Trailer for Animated Comedy Alley Cats

2 hours ago
House of the Dragon

Harry Collett on Jace’s Death in House of the Dragon Season 3: “I Got Goosebumps Reading the Script”

2 hours ago
Basic Psych Review

Basic Psych Review: Professional Ethics Meet Domestic Panic

Underland Review

Underland Review: The Earth Keeps Its Secrets

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Monday, June 22, 2026
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jenna Ortega

    Jenna Ortega Is an Artificial Friend in Taika Waititi’s Klara and the Sun Trailer

    download 3 1

    Ken Russell’s Banned Masterpiece The Devils Finally Gets Its Theatrical Release

    Quentin Tarantino

    Quentin Tarantino and Kylie Minogue Film Surprise Welsh Movie in Porthcawl

    Timothée Chalamet, Selena Gomez

    Timothée Chalamet Makes Animation Debut Alongside Selena Gomez in Illumination’s Not Alone

    Alley Cats

    Ricky Gervais Goes Feline: Netflix Drops First Trailer for Animated Comedy Alley Cats

    House of the Dragon

    Harry Collett on Jace’s Death in House of the Dragon Season 3: “I Got Goosebumps Reading the Script”

    Jeremy Clarkson

    Jeremy Clarkson’s Prostate Cancer Is in Remission: “I Am Without a Doubt the World’s Luckiest Man”

    Toxic A Fairytale for Grown-Ups

    Yash’s Toxic Locks August 26 Release, Targeting India’s Biggest Multi-Holiday Weekend

    Tony Leung

    Tony Leung on AI and Cinema: “There’s No Soul. I Don’t Think It’s an Art.”

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Peter Asher: Everywhere Man Review

    Peter Asher: Everywhere Man Review: Pop History From the Studio Glass

    Our Father Review

    Our Father Review: Faith, Punishment, and the Locked Door

    Minions & Monsters Review

    Minions & Monsters Review: Hollywood Eats the Pest

    Lucy Lost Review

    Lucy Lost Review: Wartime Fear in a Storybook Frame

    Basic Psych Review

    Basic Psych Review: Professional Ethics Meet Domestic Panic

    Underland Review

    Underland Review: The Earth Keeps Its Secrets

    Out Laws Review

    Out Laws Review: Colonial Law Meets Living Courage

    Weekend at the End of the World Review

    Weekend at the End of the World Review: Two Fools Meet the Void

    Olivia Review

    Olivia Review: Grief Wanders Through Blood and Wind

  • Game Reviews
    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

    Craftlings Review

    Craftlings Review: Tiny Workers Build a Smarter Puzzle Machine

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review: Style Survives the Switch

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review: Arcade Rally With Real Bite

    Secret Paws - Cozy Apartments Review

    Secret Paws – Cozy Apartments Review: Tiny Cats, Big Perspective Tricks

    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review: Bancho Takes the Grill Outside

    Mousebusters Review

    Mousebusters Review: Rodent Scale, Human Sadness

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Jenna Ortega

    Jenna Ortega Is an Artificial Friend in Taika Waititi’s Klara and the Sun Trailer

    download 3 1

    Ken Russell’s Banned Masterpiece The Devils Finally Gets Its Theatrical Release

    Quentin Tarantino

    Quentin Tarantino and Kylie Minogue Film Surprise Welsh Movie in Porthcawl

    Timothée Chalamet, Selena Gomez

    Timothée Chalamet Makes Animation Debut Alongside Selena Gomez in Illumination’s Not Alone

    Alley Cats

    Ricky Gervais Goes Feline: Netflix Drops First Trailer for Animated Comedy Alley Cats

    House of the Dragon

    Harry Collett on Jace’s Death in House of the Dragon Season 3: “I Got Goosebumps Reading the Script”

    Jeremy Clarkson

    Jeremy Clarkson’s Prostate Cancer Is in Remission: “I Am Without a Doubt the World’s Luckiest Man”

    Toxic A Fairytale for Grown-Ups

    Yash’s Toxic Locks August 26 Release, Targeting India’s Biggest Multi-Holiday Weekend

    Tony Leung

    Tony Leung on AI and Cinema: “There’s No Soul. I Don’t Think It’s an Art.”

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Peter Asher: Everywhere Man Review

    Peter Asher: Everywhere Man Review: Pop History From the Studio Glass

    Our Father Review

    Our Father Review: Faith, Punishment, and the Locked Door

    Minions & Monsters Review

    Minions & Monsters Review: Hollywood Eats the Pest

    Lucy Lost Review

    Lucy Lost Review: Wartime Fear in a Storybook Frame

    Basic Psych Review

    Basic Psych Review: Professional Ethics Meet Domestic Panic

    Underland Review

    Underland Review: The Earth Keeps Its Secrets

    Out Laws Review

    Out Laws Review: Colonial Law Meets Living Courage

    Weekend at the End of the World Review

    Weekend at the End of the World Review: Two Fools Meet the Void

    Olivia Review

    Olivia Review: Grief Wanders Through Blood and Wind

  • Game Reviews
    Dark Scrolls Review

    Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

    Craftlings Review

    Craftlings Review: Tiny Workers Build a Smarter Puzzle Machine

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review

    Devil May Cry 5: Devil Hunter Edition Review: Style Survives the Switch

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review

    Super Woden: Rally Edge Review: Arcade Rally With Real Bite

    Secret Paws - Cozy Apartments Review

    Secret Paws – Cozy Apartments Review: Tiny Cats, Big Perspective Tricks

    33 Immortals Review

    33 Immortals Review: Big Raid Energy, Small Upgrade Sparks

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review

    Dave the Diver: In the Jungle Review: Bancho Takes the Grill Outside

    Mousebusters Review

    Mousebusters Review: Rodent Scale, Human Sadness

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review

    EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
Minions & Monsters Review

Lucy Lost Review: Wartime Fear in a Storybook Frame

Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

Home Entertainment Movies

Minions & Monsters Review: Hollywood Eats the Pest

Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi by Shahrbanoo Golmohamadi
44 minutes ago
in Entertainment, Movies, Reviews
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on TelegramSummarize with ChatGPTSummarize with Perplexity

A banana-yellow creature who cannot speak intelligibly is a perfect comic instrument for a story about silent cinema’s extinction. Minions & Monsters sends James and Henry, two misfit members of Illumination’s babbling species, into 1920s Hollywood, where their bodily chaos becomes art by accident.

Pierre Coffin, directing solo and again voicing the entire Minion tribe, understands the franchise’s basic social fact: these characters are funniest when they overwhelm polite systems. In Gru’s orbit, they often act as garnish around a family-villain plot. Here, they become the infestation itself, an army of denim-clad impulse without supervision. The film’s best joke is structural. Silent cinema accepts them because it cannot hear them. Sound cinema rejects them because it finally can.

This gives the seventh film in the wider Despicable Me universe a sharper engine than the series usually receives. It remains proudly juvenile, soaked in gibberish, pratfalls, and weaponized stupidity. Yet for a long stretch, its stupidity has cultural literacy. That is a dangerous sentence to write about the Minions, but the film earns it.

The Anarchy Has a Shape

James and Henry are not deep characters, and the film is wise enough not to pretend otherwise. Their distinction comes through action: they disrupt rituals, sabotage villains through eagerness, and turn obedience into carnage. Their early travels with the tribe offer the franchise’s familiar premise, the search for a despicable master, but the repetition has a new rhythm because every potential authority figure is treated as temporary furniture waiting to collapse.

The comedy is frequently grisly in the sugar-coated way this series favors. A sudden beheading lands with cheerful brutality. A prehistoric stone Lego brick becomes an instrument of agony. These are little rituals of anti-authority, executions performed by accident. The film’s politics, such as they are, remain hilariously unserious: hierarchy exists so small yellow workers can destroy it while trying to serve it.

The bond between James and Henry softens the machinery. Their friendship carries a faint ache of exclusion, since they are too chaotic even for a species built from chaos. They also want to tell stories. That desire gives their mischief direction. A Minion staring solemnly into artistic yearning would be a felony.

Also Read

  • Best Christmas Movies
    30 Best Christmas Movies to Watch This Holiday Season
  • Best 2025 Movies
    Gazettely's 30 Best Movies of 2025
  • 30 Best Action Movies Ever
    30 Best Action Movies Ever: A Definitive History…
  • 30 Best Drama Movies
    30 Best Drama Movies to Watch Before You Die
  • Best Horror Movies
    30 Best Horror Movies: The Horror Hall of Fame
  • Best Comedy Movies of All Time
    30 Best Comedy Movies Ever: The Ultimate List for…

James and Henry’s creative ambition works because it appears through mess: a hijacked movie set, an improvised performance, a dream of directing monsters before anyone has checked if they should be trusted with a camera.

Hollywood Eats the Pest and Calls It Talent

The opening frame places viewers on a Universal Studios tour, with Allison Janney’s guide marching families through memorabilia until the past cracks open. The device is thin, but the details have bite: vintage Universal logos scroll backward through studio time, a George Lucas gag treats mythmaking as museum property, and Hollywood history becomes a showroom where industrial memory is both sacred and absurd.

Minions & Monsters Review

The film locks into form when the Minions stumble onto a Western shoot run by Max, voiced by Christoph Waltz with peevish control. Max has the vocal posture of a man whose monocle would fall into his soup given the chance. His film set, designed for old frontier heroics, becomes a playground for the Minions’ destructive timing.

The sequence begins as a production accident, then mutates into a desert chase, then a runaway-train disaster. It is the cleanest set-piece in the film because each escalation has a visual cause. A horse bolts. A prop becomes a hazard. A shot goes wrong, then the wrongness photographs beautifully.

Jeff Bridges voices the studio bosses who recognize profit inside the wreckage. Hollywood does not reject chaos. It packages chaos if chaos sells. Soon the Minions are silent-era celebrities, living in a studio-funded mansion, churning through comedies and genre pictures, and launching merchandise with the shameless speed of an industry that has always known children are a market before they are an audience.

The pastiches have real affection behind them. Modern Times, Safety Last!, Citizen Kane, and the Universal monster tradition all pass through the Minion filter. A thriller poster titled Look Behind You, and Then Down captures the film’s best gag-writing: short, visual, stupid in exactly the right register. They understand why the Minions belong there. Silent slapstick turns bodies into arguments. A fall, a chase, a panicked glance, a ladder in the wrong place: these are complete sentences. The Minions have always spoken that language fluently.

Gibberish as Film History

Coffin’s vocal work remains a strange feat of comic semiotics. The Minions’ speech is nonsense built from recognizable fragments, a stew of toddler rhythm, Italian exclamations, stray European syllables, and pure throat music. “Bellissima!” and “Moviosa!” register less as words than as emotional weather. Their meaning comes through pitch, speed, and physical context. A shriek near a collapsing train needs no translation.

Minions & Monsters Review

That is why the sound-era turn is such a fine joke. For once, the franchise’s most obvious irritation becomes the story’s organizing principle. Talking pictures do not simply end the Minions’ Hollywood reign; they expose the absurdity that silent cinema had gracefully hidden. The film borrows the grand anxiety of Singin’ in the Rain, then miniaturizes it into a gag about market incompatibility. These stars cannot survive sound because sound reveals what they are.

The voice cast around them sharpens the joke without smothering it. Waltz gives Max a brittle dignity that keeps cracking under assault. Bridges supplies the studio heads with a warm, corrupt majesty, making them sound like men who would greenlight a fire if the flames tested well. Trey Parker’s Goomi, a squat green creature tangled in James and Henry’s plans, adds a different comic texture.

The animation supports this range of comedy with care. The studio lots glow with manufactured glamour. The Western landscapes feel broad enough for chase mechanics. The mansion scenes turn success into a cluttered toy chest. Later monster imagery carries the right old-Universal shadows before the film trades that texture for larger digital destruction. The movie’s visual rhythm is fast without becoming mush. Each gag has a readable silhouette, a rare virtue in animated chaos.

The Monsters Arrive, and the Idea Thins

The film’s trouble begins once Hollywood throws the Minions out. The premise has been so elegantly matched to film history that the next movement cannot help feeling less exact. Splitting the group weakens the swarm logic, and the robot Dort, voiced by Jesse Eisenberg, proves funnier as a concept than as a sustained plot engine. His cowardice, nodding toward The Day the Earth Stood Still, has a pleasingly brittle sound, but the scenes keep asking him to fill space rather than sharpen it.

Debbie, voiced by Zoey Deutch, fares worse. A strong-willed suffragette paired with a cowardly robot sounds like a joke with teeth, or at least a useful collision between political modernity and sci-fi parody. The film leaves her mostly stranded inside a romantic subplot that feels drafted for grown-ups yet too underfed to engage them. It signals adult awareness, then gets abandoned once the next chase sequence arrives.

James’ dream of directing a Universal monster movie should rescue the second half. The image of a Minion trying to command gothic horror carries obvious promise. The execution turns literal: movie magic summons destructive beasts, and the film swells into a save-the-world battle against monstrous forces. Irene, the eye-filled blob menacing Los Angeles, hints at a satire of spectatorship, an audience appetite grown enormous and hungry. The movie notices the metaphor, then runs away to smash buildings.

That shift is revealing. Minions & Monsters is happiest when chaos collides with systems of production: a film set, a studio office, a silent-era marketplace, the technological panic of talkies. When it becomes another animated climax full of noise and scale, the comedy loses its historical pressure. The final battle has speed and cartoon stamina, but fewer jokes with clean edges. The monsters are large. The earlier ideas were sharper.

A Late-Franchise Curiosity With Banana Peels

The emotional ceiling remains low by design. James and Henry’s friendship supplies warmth, and their shared creative hunger gives the plot a gentle pulse, but the film’s real feeling lies in its affection for cinema as organized lunacy. A studio is a place where accidents become assets, where gibberish becomes a career, where a train disaster can be good footage if the camera is pointed correctly.

That affection makes the film one of the franchise’s livelier oddities. It is messy, yes. The second half gives up too much precision. The Dort and Debbie thread sags. The monster climax chooses volume after the first half has taught the audience to expect wit. Yet the movie’s best stretch is so buoyant, so densely stocked with silent-comedy logic and studio-era parody, that the franchise briefly looks less like a merchandising empire and closer to a slapstick organism that wandered into cinema history and started chewing the furniture.

The Minions remain pests. Minions & Monsters simply gives them a museum worth vandalizing.

The animated franchise comedy Minions & Monsters held its global premiere at the Annecy International Animation Film Festival on June 21, 2026, and is scheduled to debut in wide theatrical release across the United States via Universal Pictures on July 1, 2026. Set approximately forty years before the events of the original Minions spin-off, the family adventure tracks the mischievous yellow henchmen as they arrive in Old Hollywood with the goal of creating their very own cinematic monster movie. Naturally, their chaotic ambitions backfire when they accidentally release real mythical creatures into the world, forcing the entire tribe to band together to reverse the global mayhem they just unleashed.

Where to Watch Minions & Monsters (2026) Online

Unfortunately, we couldn't find any streaming offers.
Source: JustWatch

Full Credits

  • Title: Minions & Monsters

  • Distributor: Universal Pictures

  • Release date: June 21, 2026 (Annecy International Animation Film Festival), July 1, 2026 (United States Theatrical Release)

  • Rating: PG

  • Running time: 90 minutes

  • Director: Pierre Coffin

  • Writers: Brian Lynch, Pierre Coffin

  • Producers and Executive Producers: Chris Meledandri, Bill Ryan, Brian Lynch

  • Cast: Pierre Coffin, Allison Janney, Christoph Waltz, Jeff Bridges, Jesse Eisenberg, Zoey Deutch, Bobby Moynihan, Phil LaMarr, Trey Parker

  • Editors: Animation production team / Illumination editing department

  • Composer: John Powell

The Review

Minions & Monsters

7 Score

Minions & Monsters gives the franchise one of its smartest comic premises: gibberish-spewing pests thriving in silent Hollywood, then collapsing the moment sound arrives. Its first half has wit, movie-history play, and brisk visual comedy; its monster-heavy back half grows louder and less exact. Still, the film has enough oddball cultural mischief to feel like a rare late-franchise entry with an actual spark.

PROS

  • Clever silent-cinema premise
  • Strong James and Henry pairing
  • Sharp Hollywood pastiches
  • Readable, energetic slapstick
  • Coffin’s elastic vocal work

CONS

  • Weaker monster climax
  • Thin Debbie and Dort subplot
  • Low emotional depth
  • Second half loses precision

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0

Tags: AdventureAllison JanneyAnimationChristoph WaltzComedyFamilyFeaturedJeff BridgesJesse EisenbergMinions & MonstersPierre CoffinSci-FiTrey ParkerUniversal PicturesZoey Deutch
Previous Post

Lucy Lost Review: Wartime Fear in a Storybook Frame

Next Post

Dark Scrolls Review: Retro Chaos With Slippery Boots

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Connect with
Login
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
Notify of
guest
Connect with
I allow to create an account
When you login first time using a Social Login button, we collect your account public profile information shared by Social Login provider, based on your privacy settings. We also get your email address to automatically create an account for you in our website. Once your account is created, you'll be logged-in to this account.
DisagreeAgree
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Is This Seat Taken? Review

    Is This Seat Taken? Review: A Satisfying Mental Workout

    1106 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Trust Review: Squandered Potential and an Incoherent Plot

    6 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • House of the Dragon Season 3 Review: The Throne Learns to Bleed

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Polygamist Review: Betrayal Burns Bright in Netflix’s 22-Episode Drama

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • I Will Find You Review: Parental Love Turns Dangerous in Netflix’s Latest Mystery

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Season Review: Hong Kong Glows While the Dialogue Sputters

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Time of Death Review: Michael Kelly Anchors a Grim Prison Mystery

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

Sugar Season 2 Review
TV Shows

Sugar Season 2 Review: A Noir With a Telescope It Barely Uses

3 days ago
Voicemails for Isabelle Review
Movies

Voicemails for Isabelle Review: No Tom Hanks, and It Knows

3 days ago
EA Sports UFC 6 Review
Reviews Games

EA Sports UFC 6 Review: The Stand-Up Game Finally Hits Clean

4 days ago
I Will Find You Review
TV Shows

I Will Find You Review: Parental Love Turns Dangerous in Netflix’s Latest Mystery

4 days ago
Girls Like Girls Review
Movies

Girls Like Girls Review: Hayley Kiyoko Finds Her Voice Behind the Camera

5 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Which of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960s thrillers is your all-time favorite?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2026 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

wpDiscuz
0
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x
| Reply