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"Minions: The Rise of Guru" is long for stupidity and singing, short for conspiracy

(CNN)Five years after the last "Sneaky Me" movie, twelve years after the beginning, " "Minions: The Rise of Gru" extends the animation franchise without getting it up and running exactly on the fly, providing the mundane exercises set in the weird 1970s soundtrack. Loud and colorful, it can distract small children whose comedy tastes are running towards rapid fire tweets, pitfalls, occasional exposed yellow butt and intestines.

If you set the scene to 1976 (200th anniversary!) When the movie starts, the movie will feature a rich array of songs from that era. They are very familiar with Disco Hits and Rolling Stones "You can't always get what you want". (Of course, loyal grandparents who try to catch them will be unexpectedly rewarded on their journey down the path of memory.)

The main and structurally important issues are: Director Kyle Balda and writer Matthew Vogel throw various gag on the wall, hoping that some will stick, while seriously neglecting to maintain the plot.

Basically, Gru (spoken bySteve Carell), nearly 12 years old, is an up-and-coming super villain fanboy who crave for the opportunity to join an ominous group. It is assumed that there is. Known as Vicious Six. They are introduced through action sequences like Indiana Jones. In this sequence of actions, you'll earn a mysterious artifact while suddenly abandoning the ostensible leader of revenge, Wild Knuckles (Alan Arkin).

Thus, while Gru came to the conclusion that his loyal side kick may not be ready to step up into the big league of crime, the two opposing sides. Notice that he was caught in the meantime. "I need to fly alone with this," he tells them, bringing tears to their eyes (or eyes).

Thus, Gru and Minions take off on parallel tracks. It's packed into a package of less than 90 minutes and just adds the split nature of a useless story. This includes a detour to learn Kung Fu (one of the few celebrity voices to register, Michelle Yo pops up in dissonance) and sprinkles a call back to the previous movie. This combination creates a fairly wide interval of fun moments.

"Minions" certainly need to be evaluated in the conservative context of what they are trying to achieve, such as fueling the sale of fast food giveaways and toys, but the previous movie of the franchise. Even when compared to, I feel that this is particularly limited in its scope and ambition.

Still, the timing of the movie'sdelayed releasemay be correct. If this is true, it provides welcome news for animation in the theater after Pixar's "Light Year"fails. Commercially speaking, to achieve lift-off.

In most cases, "The Rise of Gru" relies on its title character being visually pleasing and adaptable, making them a kind of slap happy for our time. Change to a nice three stuge. The animation also makes it much easier to appeal to the stupid side of the kids with that score-unfortunately not enough to make them green (or yellow) enviously real. It is more advantageous than the clown.

"Minions: The Rise of Gru" will premiere in a US theater on July 1st. It is evaluated as PG.