Geography Activity PackPosted by: The Animation Vault Runtime: 1 hour 31 minutes Rating: ★★★★☆ (4/5)
Yes, you read that right. For ten glorious minutes, a Minion named Bob is the King of England. He sits on the throne, wears a crown that falls over his eyes, and uses the royal scepter as a back scratcher.
For years, the Minions were a punchline. A comedic side effect. The scene-stealing, gibberish-spouting, overall-wearing henchmen who turned Despicable Me from a quirky supervillain story into a global merchandising empire. Love them or hate them, you cannot deny their gravitational pull. So, when Universal and Illumination announced a prequel— Minions (2015)—the collective internet groaned. "A whole movie about the sidekicks?" we scoffed. "This is cash-grab nonsense." Minions Movie Part 1
The human characters (Scarlet’s goons, the Queen’s guards) are forgettable. And if you hate the Minions’ language or their slapstick, this movie will be your personal hell. It’s 100% unfiltered Minion energy.
We have to talk about the yellow elephants in the room. Posted by: The Animation Vault Runtime: 1 hour
What’s your favorite Minion moment? Sound off in the comments—but keep it in gibberish. 🍌 Tags: #Minions #DespicableMe #Illumination #Animation #FilmReview #1960s #ScarletOverkill #KevinStuartBob
We don’t get dialogue. We get evolution . In a rapid-fire montage narrated by Geoffrey Rush (a bizarre but delightful choice), we watch the Minions emerge from the primordial ooze—single-celled yellow organisms with a singular, desperate drive: to serve the most despicable villain they can find. For years, the Minions were a punchline
But for those of us who appreciate the art of visual comedy—the raised eyebrow, the slow turn, the accidental explosion— Minions is a treasure. It is a film that knows exactly what it is: a jukebox musical of nonsense. And sometimes, that’s exactly what you need.
This is the movie at its peak. Scarlet is furious that a Minion stole her spotlight. The climax involves Scarlet trying to murder the new king, a massive free-for-all at a villainous convention, and a final twist where the Minions are saved by a young, pimple-faced villain in a scarf: . The Nostalgia Bomb Let’s be honest: the 1960s setting is mostly an excuse for needle drops. And what drops they are. The film uses The Kinks’ “You Really Got Me,” The Rolling Stones’ “Paint It Black,” and of course, The Beatles’ “Got to Get You into My Life.”
And honestly? I’ll be there for Minions: The Rise of Gru when they finally give us the 1970s sequel.
Geography Activity Pack