Connect with us

Movie Reviews

Film Review: Illumination’s ‘Minions: The Rise Of Gru’

Published

on

Film Review: Illumination’s ‘Minions: The Rise Of Gru’

The Minions have risen to astonishing heights since Sergio Pablos birthed what would grow to be the franchise some 12 years in the past — in case you’ve misplaced depend, their progeny consists of three function sequels (one due two years therefore), two prequels, greater than a dozen shorts, a TV particular, video video games and the inevitable theme park attraction.

Deadline

For folks who might need misplaced monitor (youngsters don’t are likely to overlook such issues), Despicable Me gave professional beginning to its first offspring, Minions, 5 years in the past, and whereas it’s laborious to argue that it was definitely worth the wait (its debut was postponed by two years as a consequence of Covid), this set-in-hippie-era San Francisco sequel serves up affordable amusement for roughly the primary hour, solely to reasonably overstay its welcome thereafter. All the identical, it’s going to preserve youngsters tolerably amused upon its opening by way of Common on Friday.

Amongst many different elements it has in its favor, that is one more Illumination creation that adults won’t simply put up with however can truly get pleasure from up to a degree, thanks in giant measure to the cheeky counter-culture jokes, hilariously tweaked wardrobes, riffs on biker tradition and a ’70s-era soundtrack; at one level, a serious villain pops right into a sales space at a document retailer to revive his self-worth by listening to Linda Ronstadt’s “You’re No Good.”

However whereas amusement corresponding to that is amply sprinkled round all through the movie, which can be strikingly nicely designed and animated, there may be additionally a gathering sense of working on fumes right here, of continuous the exploits of some extremely remunerative characters simply because it’s financially price it, not as a result of inspiration calls for it. There are, in the long run, just too many narrative-complicating flip-flops, shut calls, frantic chases, left turns and proper turns inserted simply to fill out 90 minutes of function movie time.

Illumination’s Chris Meledandri Talks ‘Minions’, Streaming Vs Theatrical, Chris Pratt For ‘Tremendous Mario’ & Dealing with Concern Of Failure: CineEurope

All the identical, Minions goes down with out an excessive amount of discomfort, and its affordable giggle quotient serves as a pointed reminder that comedy has been in very brief provide on the large display up to now this yr.

Advertisement

Since final seen, the Vicious Six have been experiencing some disruptions, the newest being the ouster of considered one of them, Alan Arkin’s Wild Knuckles. This surprising opening conjures up Gru (Steve Carell) to use for the job—“I need to be a supervillain!,” he loudly proclaims—however when he’s rejected, new methods have to be discovered.

He takes his revenge by stealing the gang’s most prized possession, the Zodiac Stone, and is instantly pursued by each Wild Knuckles and the gang, who at this diminished level encompass the felicitously named Belle Backside (Taraji P. Henson), Stronghold (Danny Trejo), Nunchuck (Lucy Lawless), Svengeance (Dolph Lundgren) and Jean-Clauded (Jean-Claude Van Damme).

From this level on, Minions shifts into nonstop motion mode, hightailing it to the center of the decades-ago San Francisco counterculture. In a distinctly un-mellow temper, hippies meet biker baddies (who morph into animals) in a boisterous climax that’s spiked with a good quantity of site- and era-specific humor that may certainly go proper over the heads of kids, not that it’ll matter with a lot else happening as soon as the ability of the Zodiac Stone is unleashed. Even when it looks as if the movie has shifted into overdrive and diminishing returns, you continue to really feel that the smartypants brigade is in management; they’re simply hitting doubles reasonably than residence runs.

It nearly goes with out saying that the visuals are sharp, imaginative and witty, generally much more so than the dialogue, to not say that the colourful voice solid doesn’t do a first-rate job. Little doubt Gru will return for extra rounds now that he’s risen.

Advertisement

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Movie Reviews

Dhruv Vikram’s Bison Movie Review and Rating, Anupama

Published

on

Dhruv Vikram’s Bison Movie Review and Rating, Anupama
Movie Name : Bison

Release Date : Oct 24, 2025
123telugu.com Rating : 2.75/5
Starring : Dhruv Vikram, Anupama Parameswaran, Rajisha Vijayan, Pasupathy
Ameer
Director : Mari Selvaraj
Producers : Sameer Nair, Deepak Seigal, Pa. Ranjith, Aditi Anand
Music Director : Nivas K. Prasanna
Cinematographer : Ezhil Arasu K.
Editor :  Sakthi Thiru

Related Links : Trailer

Dhruv Vikram’s Bison Kaalamaadan (simply Bison) released in Tamil during Diwali, and its Telugu version hit the screens today, a week later. Directed by Mari Selvaraj, the film blends sports and social commentary and check out the review to know how it is.

Story:

Advertisement

Set in the 1990s, Bison follows Kittayya (Dhruv Vikram), a student who dreams of excelling in kabaddi. His father Velusamy (Pasupathy) disapproves, fearing for his son’s future. Their village is divided by caste, and Kittayya’s family belongs to a marginalised community that has endured oppression for generations. Despite resistance, he pursues kabaddi but faces harsh challenges at every step. Whether he achieves his dream and breaks these barriers forms the crux of the story.

Plus Points:

Mari Selvaraj once again explores oppression and social inequality, this time with kabaddi as the backdrop. He narrates it effectively, depicting inequality from local playgrounds to the national stage.

Dhruv Vikram puts his blood and sweat into the role. His physical transformation and emotional depth stand out, marking him as a promising talent.

Pasupathy is equally impressive, portraying a father torn between fear and affection. The bond between him and Dhruv forms the film’s emotional core.

Advertisement

Among others, Lal, Ameer, and Rajisha Vijayan perform well. Anupama Parameswaran, however, appears for less than 15 minutes and has little scope to perform.

Minus Points:

Bison draws inspiration from the life of Arjuna Award–winning kabaddi player Manathi Ganesan, balancing realism and emotion. While the discrimination is portrayed effectively, many scenes feel overstretched.

The emotional impact of Mari Selvaraj’s earlier works, such as Karnan and Pariyerum Perumal, is missing in Bison. Its length, repetitive sequences, and predictable narrative weaken the film’s overall grip.

The sports drama angle feels underused, with kabaddi serving more as a metaphor for social inequality than as a dramatic core.

Advertisement

In the Telugu dubbed version, poor localisation hurts the experience. Tamil signboards, newspapers, and tattoos remain untranslated, leaving viewers puzzled. It’s a clear case of negligence. The raw violence might also alienate family audiences.

Technical Aspects:

As a writer and director, Mari Selvaraj delivers a decent outing but not one matching the power of his earlier films. Bison struggles with uneven pacing and repetition. Ezhil Arasu K’s cinematography beautifully captures the rural backdrop and kabaddi action.

Nivas K. Prasanna’s music is decent but occasionally mismatched and loud. Sakthi Thiru’s editing could have been sharper, as trimming repetitive portions would have made it tighter. Production values are fine overall.

Verdict:

Advertisement

On the whole, Bison Kaalamaadan is a sports drama that addresses oppression and inequality. It works to an extent, largely due to Dhruv Vikram’s dedication and Pasupathy’s heartfelt performance. However, Mari Selvaraj’s narration lacks the sharpness and emotional impact of his earlier works. The prolonged runtime, predictable writing, and uneven emotional flow make Bison a below average flick. The film may not appeal to everyone, especially given its raw tone, but if you’re curious, watch it with modest expectations.

123telugu.com Rating: 2.75/5

Reviewed by 123telugu Team 

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

Film Review: “Bugonia” – A Delightfully Warped Night at the Movies – The Arts Fuse

Published

on

Film Review: “Bugonia” – A Delightfully Warped Night at the Movies – The Arts Fuse

By Michael Marano

There’s a profound catharsis in watching Bugonia, one that echoes the catharsis articulated by those who attended the ‘No Kings’ protests on the 18th.

Bugonia, directed by Yorgos Lanthimos. Screening in cinemas around New England

Emma Stone in a scene from Bugonia. Photo: Courtesy of Focus Features

Yorgos Lanthimos’ Bugonia is a remake of the 2003 South Korean movie Save the Green Planet!, which, for the sake of journalistic integrity, I gotta admit I haven’t seen. So, while I can’t talk about the connections of Bugonia to Green Planet!, I can comment on its connections to the whole subgenre of “Women Held Captive by Nut Jobs” movies.

Advertisement

And to the captivity we’re all enduring, right now.

Bugonia concerns two dumbfuck cousins (Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis), who’ve had whatever scant IQ points they had at birth lobotomized out of them by QAnon-type online conspiracies. The oddly loveable and shaggy nitwits kidnap a high-powered pharmaceutical company CEO (Emma Stone), convinced she’s an alien using the levers of capitalism to destroy the planet. The pair demand an audience with Stone’s Andromedan superiors to negotiate for the survival of Homo Sapiens.

The vibe here, especially in the context of the cousins’ ever-nuttier conspiracy theories and the gender issues present, echoes William Wyler’s 1965 adaptation of John Fowles’ The Collector. A vibe maybe amplified by the recent deaths of the two stars of The Collector,  Terence Stamp and Samantha Eggar? The Collector, which nabbed the premise of Beauty and the Beast, added the motif of the captor being crazy, making the beautiful woman prisoner not just a captive held in her kidnapper’s physical space, but his broken mental reality as well. Think of the physical and mental imprisonments of Split, 10 Cloverfield Lane, Boxing Helena, Room, the made-for-tv classics, Sweet Hostage and Bad Ronald, and the gender-swapped Misery.

There’s another dimension to this the post-Collector riff on the Beauty and the Beast captivity motif…  the site of captivity becomes a microcosm of larger, current societal issues. The mental illness of the captor echoes the mental illness of the culture. Where does the insanity of the captor end, and the insanity of society at large begin?

And here’s where Bugonia gets really interesting. Our whole culture enables and encourages billionaire plutocrats to kill the planet. When it comes to the delusions of Plemons and Delbis in Bugonia, does it matter whether or not Musk, Peter Theil, and company are hostile aliens — if what they’re doing to our species and the Earth is exactly what hostile aliens would do? Ever see the Twilight Zone episode “The Monsters are Due on Maple Street,” in which aliens pave the way for their invasion by fomenting paranoia and distrust among Earth communities? How’s that different from what mutant, slug-boy dodgeball victim Mark Zuckerberg does with 3 billion Facebook users a month? Stone’s character allegedly approves the use of unauthorized and untested methods and procedures on unsuspecting subjects and consumers. How’s that different from what Elizabeth Holmes did to trusting schmucks via her scumbag Theranos grifts?

Advertisement

By making the alleged crimes of Stone’s CEO plausible, Bugonia dodges the issue that hampered Evan Peters’ tech bro villain in Tron: Ares and the last two movie iterations of Lex Luthor. No supervillain tech bro can compete with the insanity and malignancy of the real things. Stone plays a person of real villainy… not someone trying to get their hands on a hunk of kryptonite.

So, if society nurtures these corporate aliens (and it doesn’t matter a whit that they’re not extraterrestrial aliens) to spread destruction that would be the envy of H.G. Wells’s Martians, who’s to say these dim bulb cousins are nuts? Yeah, they’re acting crazy. But the world is crazy, so maybe their responses aren’t? The actions of oligarchs and corporate assholes are making their lives unlivable. And desperate times do call for desperate measures.

This ambiguity creates a kind of Stockholm Syndrome among the kidnapping cousins and the abductee and the audience. For most of its runtime, Bugonia is a work of theater. The story is mostly contained in a couple of rooms. Outside that theatrical space, real-life tech bros are making our lives just as unlivable as are the lives of those kidnapping cousins. If Bugonia is a play, then current events lend it a Brechtian Alienation Effect. The fourth wall is broken and on some level, the audience of Bugonia is made to think as they watch the film, to consider the insane ideas and issues being raised — and to weigh whether or not they really are crazy.

Everyone’s a hostage in Bugonia… the dum-dum cousins, Stone’s pharmaceutical CEO, and the audience. It’s an Absurdist movie, and the absurdity it envisions isn’t the goofy absurdity of Alfred Jarry’s Ubu Roi. It’s the sadistic predicament of millions of people whose lives have been imperiled (in some cases ended) by a self-proclaimed DOGE master, a transphobic, apartheid, sci-fi obsessed nepo baby with a breeding kink who wants to die on Mars, whose obscene wealth is based on slave labor imposed in a jade mine owned by his incest-obsessed daddy.

All these weighty and thought-provoking factors feed into the utterly twisted black humor that makes Bugonia such a delightfully warped night at the movies. There’s not a lot of hyperbole in Bugonia (for the most part). Stone hilariously fakes empathy for her employees while telling them they can leave work at 5:30 while at the same time telling them they really shouldn’t rings painfully true for anybody who’s had to deal with a shitty job and a sociopathic boss (which is everyone).  There’s a profound catharsis in watching Bugonia, one that echoes the catharsis articulated by those who attended the ‘No Kings’ protests on the 18th. In part, the attendees responded to not feeling alone in their horror and dismay at what Trump is doing. I got the vibe that the people at the screening of Bugonia I attended felt the same way watching the twistedness of the movie reflect the twistedness of the world outside the movie theater.

Advertisement

The sharing of that kind of catharsis is a very human empathy, of a type that the CEO (and/or alien?) that Stone plays is incapable. Rush out and see Bugonia and share that empathy, before the tech bros and oligarchs make you pay a subscription fee for the oxygen you’ll burn nervously laughing at the cruel inanity it depicts, and that we are all living in.


Novelist, editor, writing coach and personal trainer Mike Marano has a new story called “Land of the Glass Pinecones” in the GenX-themed anthology 120 Murders: Dark Fiction Inspired by the Alternative Era.

Continue Reading

Movie Reviews

‘Regretting You’ wastes Allison Williams in overwrought Colleen Hoover romance – Review

Published

on

‘Regretting You’ wastes Allison Williams in overwrought Colleen Hoover romance – Review


Love is complicated for Allison Williams and Dave Franco in ‘Regretting You,’ adapted from Colleen Hoover’s book.

play

Advertisement
  • “Regretting You,” adapted from Colleen Hoover’s best-selling book, arrives in movie theaters Oct. 24.
  • Allison Williams and Dave Franco are thrown together after their significant others die in a car crash.
  • Young stars Mckenna Grace and Mason Thames are the movie’s highlight in every way.

Like many Nicholas Sparks movies before her, here comes Colleen Hoover’s film, attempting to leave no tear unjerked.

While “It Ends With Us” was a hot mess in every way, at least the new romantic drama “Regretting You” (★★½ out of four; rated PG-13; in theaters Oct. 24) makes sure all its drama is on the screen. And the flick, based on Hoover’s bestselling novel, lays it on thick alongside a lacking narrative and cringey dialogue. On the plus side, the young acting talent and a welcome lightheartedness will keep the eye-rolling to a minimum.

The story follows two couples of high school sweethearts in a small North Carolina town. Morgan (Allison Williams) got pregnant at the end of senior year and married jock boyfriend Chris (Scott Eastwood), and they’re raising 17-year-old aspiring actress Clara (Mckenna Grace), who butts heads regularly with her overprotective mom.

The other pair is Morgan’s sister Jenny (Willa Fitzgerald) and Jonah (Dave Franco), who ghosted his old pals after graduation for several years before coming back to town – now these two have a newborn son and are thinking about a wedding.

Advertisement

Still with me? Because stuff’s about to get real. Chris and Jenny die in a car accident, and Morgan and Jonah quickly figure out that their loved ones were having a secret affair for years. That reveal drives a bigger wedge between Morgan and Clara, who gets together with Miller (Mason Thames), the movie-loving popular boy at school. (Morgan does NOT approve.) And to add some extra sauce to the mix, Jonah has been crushing on Morgan since they were kids.

“The Fault in Our Stars” director Josh Boone wades back into emotionally turbulent waters with “Regretting You,” which manages to tick off many boxes on the schmaltz-drama bingo card: abandonment issues, unrequited love, dead parents, cancer-ridden relatives and even one big, rain-soaked romantic moment.

Most of the adult side of the plot leans insufferable and overwrought: “There’s no version of you that’s boring,” one person says to the most boring character in the movie. Eastwood and Fitzgerald are barely in the movie long enough to register, Williams’ 30-something mom lacks any actual spirit, and Franco’s painfully earnest single dad can’t decide whether to keep his glasses on and off. (Neither way looks particularly cool for this broody nerd.) Oh, and fun fact: All four actors also play their teen selves, which is monumentally weird.

Advertisement

Fortunately, Grace and Thames are so cute together that the grown-ups don’t even need to matter. (The one exception: Clancy Brown as Miller’s extremely lovable grandpa.) The kids navigate plenty of teen-movie tropes, too, but their combined magnetism lifts the entire movie. In another era, these two would be the king and queen of rom-coms – of all the various love pairings, theirs feels the most genuine amid so much artificial sweetness.

Boone also sprinkles in some physical comedy and funny scenes that keep this Hoover film nimble instead of a completely contrived slog. (And get ready for more of the latest zeitgeisty author, with adaptations of her “Reminders of Him” and “Verity” coming in the new year.) Without its wryness and youthful bent, you’d really be regretting this particular cinematic life choice.

Continue Reading

Trending