Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
James Martin, S.J.July 12, 2010

When my five-year-old nephew found out that there was to be a family wedding on July 9 of next year, he admonished our family. "July 9?" he said, "We can't go! That's when 'Expectable Me' opens!"  Television had successfully drummed into his impressionable brain the opening date of last weekend's big hit movie, the new animated feature starring the voices of Steve Carrell and Jason Segel.  But as with 'Toy Story 3' (reviewed in this week's issue by John Anderson) animated films these days are not just for nine-year-olds. Harry Forbes in our latest online Culture peace looks at a villain's redemption.

There’s nothing like the reformation of a misanthropic old curmudgeon. Just consider the perennial popularity of one Ebenezer Scrooge.

This is not to say that “Despicable Me,” the latest 3-D CGI effort from Universal (in tandem with its new animation arm, Illumination Entertainment) is in the same exalted realm as Charles Dickens. But the turnabout of the Scrooge-like character here pulls at the heartstrings in much the same manner.

He’s Gru, a hulking, hook-nosed man with spindly legs and a Middle European accent who looks like Steve Carrell on Prednisone. It is, in fact, the star of “The Office” who provides Gru’s voice, creating a character far different from his usual conservative albeit quirky persona. 

Read the rest here.  (By the way, my nephew liked it too.)

James Martin, SJ

 

Comments are automatically closed two weeks after an article's initial publication. See our comments policy for more.

The latest from america

This week on “The Spiritual Life,” Father James Martin speaks with former Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg about faith, fatherhood and his “Jesuit background.”
James Martin, S.J.June 24, 2025
In ‘Where is the Friend’s House?,’ we see the faces of the Iranian people captured with sensitivity and detail.
John DoughertyJune 24, 2025
Among those recognized at two theology conferences in June was Stephen Bevans, S.V.D., to whom the Catholic Theological Society of America gave its highest honor, the John Courtney Murray Award.
James T. KeaneJune 24, 2025
“Keeping our gaze on Jesus, we must learn to give a name and voice even to sadness, fear, anguish, indignation, bringing everything into relationship with God,” Pope Leo said.