Minions | The triumph of the brats of animation

(Annecy) Completely stupid, but terribly endearing: the Minions have carved out a place for themselves among the most profitable characters in animation in a decade. A look back at a Franco-American success, before the release of the new opus.

Posted at 10:01 a.m.

Francois BECKER
France Media Agency

Unveiled at the opening of the Annecy Festival, Minions: The Rise of Gru (Minions 2: Once Upon a Time Gru) comes out in early July worldwide, two years late, due to the pandemic.

A release awaited by millions of fans: the franchise, since the first part, Despicable Me (2010), brought in 3.7 billion dollars at the box office, according to the specialized site IMDB, without counting the multiple derivatives, making it one of the most profitable in history.

Scenario reduced to a minimum, frantic succession of gags sometimes at the level of the daisies… “The main thing in these films is just to be stupid and to have fun”, cheerfully assumes with AFP the American director of the last movie, Kyle Balda.

Dirty capsule-shaped brats, with yellow bodies dressed in overalls, the Minions were originally just secondary characters, but stole the show from Gru, the antihero of Despicable Me.

From 2015, they are at the heart of a first spin off, minions. Risky bet, to fit an entire film on characters expressing themselves in an invented and random mixture of Latin and Asian languages. But won: a billion dollars in box office receipts.

“Of course they talk. But no one understands what they are saying! “, laughs Kyle Balda, who likes to draw inspiration from classics like Charlie Chaplin or Jacques Tati: to make people laugh “without depending on the dialogues”, for an animation director, it’s like “climbing Everest “, he notes.

In spirit, burlesque and anarchic, the success of the Minions “can be compared to that of the Rabbids in video games, endearing and stupid too, points out Gersende Bollut, author of books on animation who contributes to the specialized journal Animascope.

“Flower Power”


Photo Illumination Entertainment/Universal Pictures

The film goes back to the beginnings of Gru, this failed villain: surrounded by an army of Minions, the teenager hopes to join a group of supervillains, the Vicious 6. A project that will inevitably go off the rails.

The new opus does not change a proven formula, at the risk of repetition.

The film goes back to the beginnings of Gru, this failed villain: surrounded by an army of Minions, the teenager hopes to join a group of supervillains, the Vicious 6. A project that will inevitably go off the rails.

Only the decor changes, a dive into the San Francisco of Flower Power and the 1970s, with an introduction to martial arts (a nod to the spirit Shaolin Soccer) and covers of hits, including a Minions version of the Stones (You Can’t Always Get What you Want).

Universal, which holds with the Minions one of the rare brands likely to face the other giants of animation, waited because of the pandemic two years to release this new opus of a saga always produced on both sides of the world. ‘Atlantic.

If the Frenchman Pierre Coffin, father of the Minions, and probably the only human being to master their language, is no longer co-director, he still watches closely over his creation, and still records all the voices of the Minions.

And it is in the Paris offices of the tricolor Mac Guff studios that the Minions come to life, with a neat, but somewhat standardized image.

On the Hollywood side, the Minions are produced by the American Christopher Meledandri, head of the Illumination studio. Much less known to the general public than Pixar and Dreamworks, the latter “has always wanted to compete” with these studios which have revolutionized animation, analyzes Gersende Bollut.

At the box office, “Illumination succeeded”, with in addition to the Minions, the successes of like beasts and Singbut without obtaining the same prestige or the same recognition, he continues.

The studio will quickly be talked about again: the Illumination teams are working on the animated cinema version of the legendary video game Super Mario Bros.expected in 2023.

As for the Minions, “I don’t think it’s over. There is clearly a future for these characters, ”slices Kyle Balda.


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