The story is not new, but the technique is good. Ever since DreamWorks broke the orthodox monopoly of Disney by relying on its sword, Shrek, various princes have followed these footsteps and made great strides along the non-mainstream wild road.
Gru is known as the biggest bastard of the century, but in fact he is just a kid who hopes to be affirmed through pranks and smooth out the psychological shadow of the teenager. (Did you think of Naruto) when he sees the real villain of the villain bank, he also trembles.
Although the protagonist is non-mainstream, the ending must be a happy ending. Gru is good, and his wife is affirmed. The children have found their homes, the moon is safe, and the villains are in heaven. . .
Foreigners who do animation do not admit that their intentions are not enough. The little friend was wearing a T-shirt, and Gru was still wearing a big coat with a scarf. The man in the middle was the row of pillars in the bank. Sure enough, as Gru said, the last one had to pause for a while. Was it North Korea who invented the shrinking ray, that costume, especially the head wearing glasses, the king who is fuc king. . . South Korea is under a lot of pressure. Vecter, this name, this attire, science nerd. . . ? The Chinese tanks at the beginning are very good and powerful!
The biggest surprise is the group of little yellow balls. They are very loving. It would be great if there were people who sold this doll.
Steve Carell's English with a mix of suburban Madrid and Moscow's urban-rural accents is excellent.
View more about Despicable Me reviews