Parents' Guide to

Despicable Me 4

By Sandie Angulo Chen, Common Sense Media Reviewer

age 6+

Gru and his Minions return for family fun; some peril.

Movie PG 2024 95 minutes
Despicable Me 4 Movie Poster: A giant minion holds another minion in his teeth

A Lot or a Little?

What you will—and won't—find in this movie.

Community Reviews

age 7+

Based on 21 parent reviews

age 7+

Super fun but fast-paced

The humor was exceptional and some great moments between father and son - but overall it was very fast-paced and frenetic. May be difficult for younger children to keep up. Some violence and potty humor but nothing too jarring.
age 8+

Very funny and clever, lots of (slapstick) violence

In line with the previous Minions and Despicable Me movies, this one is funny, clever, and charming. I do have to say that it felt more mature in terms of the violence than previous movies. I personally love action movies, especially big shoot outs and fight scenes, but this is a kids movie and there should be limits. Lots of guns, hand to hand combat, speeding vehicles etc, although all done in a slapstick manner, it's still a bit much for younger kids. My kids are teens and preteens and I was totally fine with them seeing this movie. But if they were 6 or 7? I think the violence would be too much. CS review misses several instances of violence that are important to mention, for example an adult teacher speaks menacingly to children who are clearly afraid of him; an adult hits another adult with an object in a context that implies she hits children as well (trying not to give spoilers here), and an animal is kept in poor conditions and is clearly afraid of it's owner (a bad person in the movie). Great values in the movie overall, about family members taking care of each other, and children being kind to animals. Definitely recommend, but I would consider 8 and up.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (21 ):
Kids say (20 ):

This is a fun, frothy sequel that's full of family-friendly adventure and silly Minion hijinks. Despicable Me 4 isn't a serious, emotionally driven story like Inside Out 2 or a seemingly final installment to a franchise like Kung Fu Panda 4. It feels like Gru and company could keep churning out movies (or a TV series), and, as long as the Minions showed up to cause comedic mayhem, kids would welcome every last sequel. There's not a lot of room for individual character development this time around, especially since Gru is busy scheming with his young neighbor, and there are new "Mega Minions" busy working for the AVL as an Avengers-style superhero force. Maxime is neither the scariest nor the most memorable of Gru's antagonists, and his partner (both criminal and romantic), Valentina (Sofia Vergara), has little to do besides hold her white lapdog and dramatically yell, "Ay, Maxime!"

Pharrell Williams' signature original songs support Heitor Pereira's score and a soundtrack that's capped off by Gru's goofy, sing-along rendition of "Everybody Wants to Rule the World." Screenwriters Mike White and Ken Daurio aren't reinventing the franchise with the predictable addition of a baby to the story, but they still know how to make audiences of all ages laugh at the broadest of comedic lines. While the Despicable Me sequels have yet to rise to the standard of the original, they're still a solid choice for families looking for lighthearted comedies.

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