Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Minions are just talking gibberish

Creators discuss ‘Minion-ian’ and creating a nonverbal movie

- By JOHN ANDERSON

It hasn’t been a good season at the multiplex for members of the English-only movement. The oversized stars of “Jurassic World” get their points across without any intelligib­le words at all. Likewise, the title canine of “Max.” Or Arnold Schwarzene­gger in “Terminator Genisys.”

But the bald, banana-colored caplets in denim that populate “Minions” take verbal miscommuni­cation to a whole other level. What language do they speak?

“It’s basically gibberish,” said director Pierre Coffin, who co-directed the new “Despicable Me” spinoff with fellow animator Kyle Balda and provides the voices of the Minions. He said they tried to use words from every language “so everyone feels the Minions are part of their culture.” It didn’t quite work. “I had this whole theory about using the most spoken language in the world, which is obviously Chinese,” Coffin said, “but every time I tried to say something in Chinese, it turned out to be the opposite of what I was trying to say. In the end, I didn’t want to offend anyone, so I dropped it and went directly to Spanish. With gibberish. And Italian.” With the occasional lapse into English, or phrases like “mazel tov.”

The Minion-ian language spoken in “Minions,” which opens Friday, is cute, adorable and occasional­ly hilarious, but it distinguis­hes the film in other ways as well.

“There are a lot of old-school-animation values in the film,” said Balda, “where everything you get across is through facial expression­s. You could ideally turn the sound down and still know what they’re going through.”

“It’s very much like a silent film,” Coffin added. “It’s common in the animation world that the first person you refer to, always, is Chaplin, even in animation school. He was the best, along with Harold Lloyd and Buster Keaton, at going beyond story and telling a story through a character that conveys humor, emotion, even plasticity.”

In “Despicable Me” and “Despicable Me 2” (both directed by Coffin and Chris Renaud), the Minions worked for Gru (voice of Steve Carell), the supervilla­in with the heart of goo, which, as viewers learn in “Minions,” was just part of their eternal mission: serving evil. Minions have always acted as servants to whatever malevolenc­e they can find, which, as we learn, has included Dracula, Napoleon and the ancient, slave-owning, pyramid-building Egyptians. In each instance, however, they somehow contribute to the villain’s downfall.

“They kind of fail up, y’know?” Balda said of his Minions.

At the beginning of the film, they are in the position of having to find a new master, which leads them to the ruthless Scarlett Overkill (Sandra Bullock), Herb Overkill (Jon Hamm), Queen Elizabeth II (Jennifer Saunders) and a scheme to rip off the crown jewels of England.

Coffin and Balda said they were more than enthused when “Despicable Me” producer Chris Meledandri presented them with screenwrit­er Brian Lynch’s pitch for “Minions.”

“We said, ‘Yes!’ because we love these guys and it felt that we could find hundreds of thousands of ideas with them,” Coffin said. “But we didn’t foresee all the problems making an hour-and-a-half movie with no language and characters that you’re asking the audience to pay quite a bit of attention to.”

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 ??  ?? UNIVERSAL PICTURES In “Minions,” the minions do the evil bidding of Scarlett Overkill, or any other evil master they can find. The minions tend to end up foiling their leaders’ plans rather than helping them succeed.
UNIVERSAL PICTURES In “Minions,” the minions do the evil bidding of Scarlett Overkill, or any other evil master they can find. The minions tend to end up foiling their leaders’ plans rather than helping them succeed.

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