Comic relief is an integral part of
most narratives. It relieves tension and gives the audience a break
to soak in important plot points and information. Sometimes, comic
relief can take the form of a character, or in this case characters.
As par for the course, these comic relief characters often become the
standout stars of their respective movies. The Penguins from
Madagascar, Shrek's
Puss in Boots and the Minions of Despicable Me
are just a few of these standouts that come to mind.
Since movie
studios equate these characters' popularity to the success of their
respective movies, standalone movies are made for them in order to
capitalize on this supposed market. Sadly, the truth is these
comic-relief characters just don't have the depth to hold people's
attention for the length of a featured film. While the charming
denim-wearing yellow Minions from the Despicable
Me films may have the
marketability, they fall under the same shortcomings.
Minions
follows these titular creatures on their quest to find the evilest
being on Earth to be their boss. Unfortunately, the Minions are
unable keep one because their oblivious stupidity results in their
boss' death. Sounds great, right? In actuality, only a small fraction
of Minions is
spent on the humourous dispatching of former bosses (much of which is
already given away in the trailers).
The
majority of Minions is
spent jumping from one set piece to another without any intention on
telling a satisfying story or developing the Minions as anything more
than incompetent. Even the antagonists of the movie, Scarlet and Herb
Overkill (Sandra Bullock and Jon Hamm respectively), are an
afterthought since they never amount to anything other than being the
wacky psychopaths that are somehow more incompetent than the Minions.
How
you enjoy the comedy of Minions
will make or break the
film for you. For me personally, there are some legitimate laughs in
this movie; they just were few and far between. The kids in the
screening with me ate up every word of gibberish and fart joke in the
movie. For me, much of the comedy felt too childish to keep all ages
laughing throughout.
Although
it seems like I have been picking on Minions
a whole lot, I believe
it would have been better suited as a short film or weekly television
series. There is some good material hidden in the movie; it is just
stretched too thin in order to fill 90 minutes. Unfortunately, a
movie will generate more money than a short film or TV show ever would.
As
it stands, Minions
doesn't have the heart
or depth to stand on its own. While I don't recommend going out of
your way to see it, Minions
is a fine movie if you
have nothing else to watch on Netflix.