Harley, Jonny Owen-Last, Joseph Kloska, Josh O’Connor, Joshua McGuire, Julian Seager, Katie West, Laura Elsworthy, Laurie Calvert, Leila Wong, Lily James, Matthew Steer, Melissa Galloway, Michael Jenn, Mimi Ndiweni, Monique Geraghty, Nari Blair-Mangat, Nonso Anozie, Paul Hunter, Peter Stacey, Rajesh Kalhan, Richard Madden, Richard McCabe, Riley Halden, Rob Brydon, Robert J. High resolution official theatrical movie poster (1 of 19) for Minions (2015). And frankly, we can't help but want a minion of our very own.Cast: Adetomiwa Edun, Alex Gillison, Alex MacQueen, Alex Marek, Andrew Fitch, Andy Apollo, Anjana Vasan, Ann Davies, Ant Henson, Arielle Campbell, Barrie Martin, Ben Chaplin, Bhanu Alley, Bronwyn Pearson, Cate Blanchett, Charlotte Worwood, Craig Mather, Daniel Tuite, Derek Jacobi, Dolapo Umar, Drew Sheridan-Wheeler, Elina Alminas, Ella Smith, Elliott Wright, Eloise Webb, Francesca Bennett, Gareth Mason, Georgie-May Tearle, Gerard Horan, Gino Picciano, Greg Lockett, Hayley Atwell, Helena Bonham Carter, Henry McCook, Holliday Grainger, Jana Perez, Janet Dawe, Jd Roth-round, João Costa Menezes, Joe Kennard, John W.G. It's all fairly pointless, although the cheerful anarchy may encourage us to be a bit more mischievous. All of the nonstop visual gags lead to a surreal finale that culminates in the moment Gru ( Steve Carell) meets the minions. The freeform plot has an easy unpredictability to it, skilfully augmented by imagery that's remarkable for a its photorealistic quality, with softer edges than most animated movies. There are a lot of hilariously oddball people in this film, from Scarlet and Herb to a pair of villain wannabes ( Michael Keaton and Allison Janney) who follow our hapless heroes on their journey.
And the starry voice cast refreshingly disappears into the characters. Thankfully, directors Coffin and Kyle Balda resist temptation to use the standard animation formula, opting instead for a meandering pace, a less pushy moral message and action scenes that emerge from the plot, settings and characters. Adults are more likely to catch references to things like the Monkees, Hair or Bewitched, but kids will enjoy the general silliness, including lots of chances to sing along with the minions as they babble through classic tunes. Since it's set in the 1960s, the filmmakers give the film a groovy vibe, with sun-drenched animation and hilariously colourful details in every scene. She's impressed by their loyalty and takes them to London to work with her inventor husband Herb ( Jon Hamm) on a nefarious plan to steal the British crown from the Queen ( Jennifer Saunders). There they hear about ruthless baddie Scarlet Overkill ( Sandra Bullock), so they head to Villain-Con in Orlando to meet her. So Kevin, Stuart and Bob (voiced in Esperanto-style gibberish by director Pierre Coffin) head off to 1968 New York to find a villain to work for. When they find themselves without a leader, they try to build a society in an arctic cave, but something just isn't right.
music in this scene with a scene from a contemporary movie or TV show and ask. With the tribe on the brink of collapse, three unlikely heroesKevin, Stuart. Ballio starts a new threat, one of his minions renews the percussion on a. After their latest explosive mistake leaves them without an evil leader, the Minions fall into a deep depression. It opens at the dawn of time, as minions evolve into yellow pill-shaped sidekicks who serve their evil masters throughout history. Since the dawn of time, Minions have served (and accidentally eliminated) historys most despicable villains. But one minion, Kevin, has a plan accompanied by his pals. Without a master to grovel for, the Minions fall into a deep depression.
And while it's not riotously funny, children will be mesmerised and adults will be smiling. Synopsis: Evolving from single-celled yellow organisms at the dawn of time, Minions live to serve, but find themselves working for a continual series of unsuccessful masters, from T. The film has an unusually gentle tone, with some real visual artistry to it rather than the cookie-cutter story structure and imagery in most summer movies.
Utterly charming, this silly prequel rewrites the origin story of the minions and sends them on a series of adventures that are gently anarchic and refreshingly low-key for an animated blockbuster.