Despicable Me 2 Trailer :
"Despicable Me 2" is a gag-filled delight from start to finish. It's got more laughs in its first five minutes -- from its larynx-bending voice actors, its loopy, goofy design and its milling, mewling Minions -- than "Monsters University" managed over its entire length.
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Gru, voiced by Steve Carell, and Lucy Wilde, voiced by Kristin Wiig, in “Despicable Me 2.
Universal Pictures
"DESPICABLE ME 2," animated, with the voices of Steve Carell, Kristen Wiig, Benjamin Bratt, Russell Brand and Steve Coogan. Directed by Pierre Coffin. Rated PG for rude humor and mild action. Running time: 1:38 and if much of the message, the warmth and the "changed villain" character arc of the original film is missing, the giggles and laughs make up for it.
Sort of a "How Gru got his Groove Back," this
farce sees our former Evil Genius living the straight life, out of
diabolical plots and raising the three "leeeeeetle goils" who melted his
wicked heart in the first film. His life is all about making sure the
bouncy house and balloons are inflated and that a fairy princess shows
up at his youngest's birthday party.
Gru, voiced to giddy effect
by Steve Carell, and his mad scientist pal Dr. Nefario (Russell Brand)
and their Minions are making jellies and jams now.
Then a secret
agent, Lucy Wilde (Kristen Wiig) nabs Gru and hauls him before Silas
Ramsbottom (Steve Coogan), head of the Anti Villain League. Some
evildoer has used a gigantic magnetic hovercraft to swipe an entire
Russian arctic research station and has some evil-doing formula that
cannot fall into the wrong hands. Might Gru help track him down?
"No thank you, Meeester Sheep's Butt."
"That's RAMSbottom."
"Like that's better."
When
Nefario leaves Gru's employ and some of his Minions go missing, Gru
teams up with the fetching Lucy to hunt for this villain, who apparently
works in the local mall. His suspects? The zany wig-shop owner (Ken
Jeong) and the gregarious Eduardo (Benjamin Bratt), the salsa-and-tango
dancing owner of a Mexican restaurant.
The babbling Minions move
front and center for this sequel, tapping into the kid-friendliest
element of the first film. Their workplace mishaps, combat style and a
sort of Minion Island where they're taken all suggest "Let's put stuff
in that could be turned into Universal theme park attractions." But
beyond that, they're the perfect sight gag.
See a Minion sit on
another Minion's shoulders so that he's big enough to be a coxswain
burbling a Minion-speak version of "Stroke STROKE" to Gru as he rows
them ashore. Watch the Minion millions go all Oompa Loompa as they sing
and dance and eat way too much sugar.
Carell positively revels in
his simple voice role, and the film's design of the character --
wide-shouldered, skinny legs, ungainly but light on his feet --
complements that. Among the new voice actors, Bratt dials up the Latin
charm past hilarious, also matching his gracefully rotund character's
perfect design.
Here's a 3D movie that makes actual gimmicky,
joking use of the 3D medium, with a splashy production design full of
Bond Villain Lairs and bright, noisy colors.
And Minions. Don't forget the Minions. They're what make "Despicable Me 2" the funniest kids' cartoon of the summer.
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