MINIONS & MONSTERS – Review

So, after seeing the new TOY STORY installment (at least once), you say that ya’ just can’t get enough of CG animated franchises? Well, the multiplex movie gods have answered your prayers. Less than two weeks after the return of Woody, Buzz, and their plastic pals comes the newest flick in a series that’s almost half as old. Technically, this is the seventh one in the series, but it’s really the third of the spin-offs. So, has this gang of jabbering yella’ fellas “worn out their welcome”, or do families need another visit from them? Hold on, looks like they’ve brought some company, since this comic adventure is titled MINIONS & MONSTERS.

After a really nostalgic and clever opening credit sequence, we join an inquisitive tour group at a Hollywood movie history museum. When their guide, Olivia (the voice of Allison Janney), shows them the display honoring the Minions, the kiddies are perplexed. She explains as we begin a flashback to a time long ago when the Minions were in search of a “big boss” (they have to be sidekicks to somebody evil and worthy). When things don’t work out with several potential candidates, they make their way to North America. Naturally, there are rebels in the mix (a trio): the plump, silent Ed, artist James, and the dreamer, the writer of stories, Henry. In a desert out West, the team spies a desperate bandit on horseback as he tries to elude a determined posse. Ah, but it seems that the “M squad” has stumbled onto the set of a silent movie in the 1920s. When the chase ends in bustling LA, the flick’s director, Max (Christoph Waltz), believes his epic is ruined. But when he shows the footage to his bosses, Frank and Elwood, the heads of Bright Brothers Studio, it’s a sensation. The duo proclaims that the lil’ guys will be in all their features from now on. Max finds them and proceeds to make the Minions big, popular movie stars. Still, Henry and James want to tell their own stories. But fame is fickle, and the guys fall out of favor with the arrival of “talkies,” AKA sound films. Henry believes that the sure way to get back “on top’ is to make a monster movie. However, all his yellow buddies, except James and Ed, decide to resume their “big boss” quest. Luckily, Henry still has a book of spells from a wizard, so they conjure up a monster, saving on special effects and makeup. Ah, but the lil’ green guy, Goomi (Trey Parker), has an evil scheme up his sleeve. Can he deceive the trio? And what happens when the other Minions find a new “candidate”, a robot-costumed science-fiction fan named Dort (Jesse Eisenberg)? Will they reunite to stop Goomi and finally meet their dream “mastermind”, Gru?

As the old TV commercials used to say (maybe still do) “your mileage may vary”. Here, I’m referring to your own feelings and tolerance for the lil’ “banana bros”. I still find them somewhat amusing in small doses, so I had some trepidation about a third feature. However, much of this does work, at least in the first act or so. By delving into their past, we’re given new backdrops for their comic chaos with some nicely designed “masters”. The international settings are great, but the artisans really shine as they recreate La-La-Land from a hundred years ago. The colors are dazzling with the city still shiny and new. Plus, this works in lots of nifty tributes to the classic stars of the time, though the museum settings also do this with a fun filmmaker cameo. We get a nice riff on the oft-told tale of silents going from sound, perhaps best seen in SINGING IN THE RAIN and THE ARTIST (let’s try to forget the wretched BABYLON). Oh, this would be a terrific TV special, a splendid streaming thirty minutes or so. But then, it keeps going. The plot requires the M’s to split up and bounce between the “A and B’ stories. And neither are half as engaging as the opening. Per the title, we’ve got to meet those monsters, led by the Lovecraft-inspired Goomi, with Parker tweaking his Cartman tone. His larger henchmen, Howard and Phil (aha, H P), aren’t that interesting, though Irene, the “mega-monster”, is more compelling with her zillion eyeballs floating in caramel pudding look. In the “B” zone, Dort doesn’t transcend the old “nerd SF geeks” cliches even as he begins a romance with a sweet suffragette, Debbie, voiced by Zoey Deutch. As for the other vocal talents, Bridges seems to be having fun as the twins (one mellow, as the other fumes), and Waltz brings lots of Stroheim-zeal to Max. Once more, all the Minions are played by this film’s director, Pierre Coffin. It’s a shame he has to pad out the plot, since the physical acting is superb and the images compare favorably with the Pixar wizardry. But by the time the extended finale showdown finally concludes (guessing this is a kaiju/Kong satire), the kids may be exhausted beyond the somehow lengthy ninety-minute runtime. It’s an improvement over the previous two flicks, but the separate plots and urban destruction detract from the silent era celebrations at the heart (and opening) of MINIONS & MONSTERS. And, speaking of the latter, why are there none of the classic movie monsters in this release from Universal Studios (at least Lon Chaney, Sr.)?

3 Out of 4 Stars

MINIONS & MONSTERS opens in theatres everywhere on Wednesday, July 1, 2026.

Doris Day Dies At Age 97

For fans of Hollywood’s Golden Age, the news from California this Monday morning hit hard, like the sudden loss of a treasured longtime friend (or for many that “girlfriend next door”).

Here’s how E! Online reported her passing:

Hollywood has lost a beloved legend.

Doris Day, the actress and singer who personified classic Hollywood in the ’50s and ’60s, has died, the Doris Day Animal Foundation announced on Monday. According to the foundation, Day died at her Carmel Valley, Calif. home early Monday while surrounded by a few close friends. 

“Day had been in excellent physical health for her age, until recently contracting a serious case of pneumonia, resulting in her death,” the foundation said in a public statement. Day was 97 years old, recently celebrating her birthday on April 3. 

For 20 years, 1948 to 1968, Ms. Day was a staple of movie theatres. A few years ago I included her in my list (at #8) of “Funny Ladies of the Movies”. Here’s that overview of her comedy work:

And now you’re thinking, “The ‘Que Sara Sara’ singer? Huh?”. Yes, she is a very popular singer, but Ms. Day is a very prolific film actress. She’s done many dramas and thrillers (she worked with Hitchcock!), but the films that made her the number one female box office draw from 1960 to 64 were comedies. Sure she was ably assisted by the aforementioned Ms. Ritter and the great Tony Randall, but “America’s sweetheart” generated lots of laughs (many at the expense of her film persona). When Warner Brothers signed the freckled-faced blonde to a contract in the late 40’s she was the love interest to Jack Carson and Dennis Morgan in crowd-pleasers like ROMANCE ON THE HIGH SEAS, MY DREAM IS YOURS, and IT’S A GREAT FEELING. Several frothy music flicks followed until Day finally got to show her comic gifts as CALAMITY JANE. After her WB contract ended, she had her biggest success opposite “Mr. Beefcake” Rock Hudson in PILLOW TALK (she got an Oscar nom, too). They reteamed twice more for LOVER COME BACK and SEND ME NO FLOWERS. But Day also had wonderful comic chemistry with an amazing variety of the era’s charismatic leading men. There were stars of the golden age like Clark Gable (TEACHER’S PET) and Cary Grant (THAT TOUCH OF MINK) along with rising stars like Jack Lemmon (IT HAPPENED TO JANE), Rod Taylor (THE GLASS BOTTOM BOAT and DO NOT DISTURB), Richard Harris (CAPRICE), and the superb James Garner (MOVE OVER DARLING and the Carl Reiner scripted THE THRILL OF IT ALL). While starring on TV in the sitcom “The Doris Day Show”, Ms. Day wrapped up her feature film career opposite George Carlin and Brian Keith in WITH SIX YOU GET EGGROLL in 1968.

Oh, but Miss Day was a versatile actress, who regularly ventured into dramatic fare. Just a couple of years into her film career she co-starred YOUNG MAN WITH A HORN as the devoted girlfriend of trumpeter Kirk Douglas. Soon after she was the wife of a Klansman (!) in STORM WARNING. Day was another devoted wife, this time to real-life St. Louis Cardinals’ pitcher Grover Cleveland Alexander, played by future president Ronald Reagan! She even worked with the “master of suspense” Alfred Hitchcock on his remake of THE MAN WHO KNEW TOO MUCH, co-starring James Stewart and introduced the tune that would become her “signature song” “Que Sara Sara” (it nabbed an Oscar). Another thriller followed when Day was menaced by a deranged Louis Jordan as the title character in JULIE. Four years later she was threatened again in the London-based (cue the fog) MIDNIGHT LACE.

Here’s one of her last audio interviews with TCM host, the late Robert Osburne:

Speaking of that wonderful cable channel, here’s the info on their tribute to her (set the DVR):

TCM Remembers Doris Day – Sunday June 9

6:00 a.m. Romance on the High Seas (1948) – A singer on a Caribbean cruise gets mixed up in a series of romantic problems.
8:00 a.m. My Dream Is Yours (1949) – A talent scout turns a young unknown into a radio singing star.
10:00 a.m. Tea For Two (1950) – An heiress has to say no to every question for 24 hours if she wants to star on Broadway.
11:45 a.m. On Moonlight Bay (1951)– A small-town tomboy falls for the boy-next-door in the years before World War I.
1:30 p.m. Carson on TCM: Doris Day (1976)– Doris Day joined Johnny to discuss why she decided to set the record straight about her life and write her autobiography. She shot down her screen image as a virgin (which she found boring), revealed why she never wanted to be an actress, and why she thought that couples should live together before marriage.
1:45 p.m. Love Me or Leave Me (1955)– True story of torch singer Ruth Etting’s struggle to escape the gangster who made her a star.
4:00 p.m. Calamity Jane (1953)– The Wild West heroine helps bring a star attraction to Deadwood and finds love.
6:00 p.m. Please Don’t Eat the Daisies (1960) – A drama critic and his family try to adjust to life in the country.
8:00 p.m. Pillow Talk (1959) – A man and woman carry their feud over the telephone line they share into their real lives.
10:00 p.m. Lover Come Back (1961) – An ad exec in disguise courts his pretty female competitor.
12:00 a.m. Move Over Darling (1963) – Five years after a woman disappeared in the sea after a plane crash, her husband remarries and sets off to be with the new wife only to be confronted by the woman he had pronounced legally dead.
2:00 a.m. The Glass Bottom Boat (1966) – A woman writing a scientist’s biography is mistaken for a spy.
4:00 a.m. Julie (1956)– A stewardess is stalked by her psychotic estranged husband.

And so, another shining star is added to the heavens. Doris could make any day much brighter, thanks to her sunny smile and titanic talent. Speaking of which, let’s leave you with her stunning song stylings (she sold tons of movie tickets and records). Doris Day will continue to delight audiences for many years to come. But for now, as her song states, “What will be, will be”.