Sunday, July 18, 2010

We are going to steal the MOON!!!


After an emotionally moments with Toy Story 3 (surprisingly, I read some kids found it scary and dark), DESPICABLE ME has all the right ingredients to conjure certain antidotes for bringing out laughters, I mean a lots of laughters. Clearly, it's a very obvious carbon copy from Pixar blueprint and Looney Tunes' 'violence' jokes, but it was made in a smart and positive approach.

In a world where super villains make the headlines, Gru (Steve Carrell) is one of them, and he has just been challenged by another villain, Vector (Jason Segel) who had just stole, literally, the Pyramid. Fear of future popularity decline is imminent, along with his assistant, Dr. Nefario (voiced by UN-recognizable Russell Brand) and a bunch of Minions (the source of all your laughters), Gru is planning to overtake Vector by with, steal the Moon (yes, literally, by shrinking it and put it his hand). However, Vector is always one step ahead of him, and along the way, Gru discovers what might be Vector weakness. To exploit it, Gru has to manipulate some orphan girls, Agnes, Edith, and Margo, into Vector HQ and obtain a secret weapon to shrink the Moon. After spending lots of time with the girls, the 'white side' of Gru has little by little becomes to change his point of view. He has to choose whether to chase his ultimate ambition, or not to horribly disappoint the kids.


Nonetheless, the brief synopsis reminds me of Dr. Seuss' How the Grinch Stole the Christmas, since it shares the same plot. Like most of cartoon antagonist characters, Gru's arrogant accent and comic villain attitude has made him a unique main character in an animation movie. It's quite rare that this kind of movie picks up a baddie to be the main character, but we'll end up liking him even more. What makes me love it is that Despicable Me is simply hilarious! It's simply a kind of movie that all can enjoy, a terrifically smart film which balances the clever jokes and visual slapstick which won't harm anyone.

If you check out the cast, it has all the brand house names, ranging from Steve Carrell, Jason Segel, Russell Brand, Kristen Wiig, Will Arnett, and the veteran Julie Andrews. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy the voice-over of the characters, especially Carrell and Brand, which I think they've done a terrific job on putting a different characterization that they used to bring on live movies. But the most fun element from Despicable Me comes in the tiny form of Gru's Minions. You can't argue that they are the main show, since the cute irresistible yellowish mini size creatures will end up maximizing your laugh-o-meter to the max. From the moment they show up onto the screen, you'll want them for more.


Despicable Me appears to follow the tried and true formula, a good story decent animation = entertaining family film. It hasn't quite up to Pixar quality, but if this something that Universal and Illumination Studio can offer, they are surely on the promising track. For the first timer directors, Chris Renaud and Pierre Coffin, they did a splendid job on delivering Cinco Paul and Ken Daurio script. Just like How to Train Your Dragon and Cloudy in the Chance of Meatballs, this is one of the better CG movie efforts in a while, where it is also a reminder that no single studio has a monopoly on thoughtful animated features. Despicable Me is good enough for you animation lovers, perhaps until the next Pixar's smashes the theaters.

My Rating: 8/10

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