Married Anti-Villain League (AVL) agents
Felonious Gru and Lucy Wilde are sent to recover the stolen Dumont Diamond from Balthazar Bratt, a former child star who became a super-villain after his show, Evil Bratt, was canceled. Gru recovers the diamond, but Bratt escapes. At the AVL headquarters, director Silas Ramsbottom announces his retirement, and appoints board member Valerie Da Vinci as the new director. Da Vinci dismisses Gru and Lucy from the AVL, believing they should have captured Bratt during the mission.
When Gru and Lucy return home, they tell their adopted daughters Margo, Edith, and Agnes of their dismissal, but assure them they will soon have new jobs. When Gru refuses to return to being a super-villain, and with his assistant
Dr. Nefario accidentally frozen in carbonite,[a] most of his
Minions, led by Mel, abandon him to find new jobs. They eventually land in jail after accidentally crashing into a television studio.
A butler named Fritz arrives at Gru's home with an invitation from Gru's long-lost twin Dru, who lives in a distant country named
Freedonia. The family travels to meet Dru, and are surprised by his immense wealth and mansion. Meanwhile, Bratt steals the diamond again, intending to use it to power a giant robot that will destroy
Hollywood, as revenge for his show's cancelation. Dru reveals to Gru that their deceased father was a super-villain known as "the Bald Terror", whose villainous activities and technological advances are the real source of the family's wealth. Dru wants Gru to teach him how to become a villain, but Gru refuses to revert to his old ways. While Lucy struggles with her new tasks as a mother, Dru and Gru become closer after joyriding in their father's high-tech vehicle.
Gru and Dru decide to steal the diamond; however, Gru secretly intends to bring it to the AVL to convince Da Vinci to rehire him and Lucy. They narrowly escape with the diamond and are rescued by Lucy. Dru, finding out Gru's true motives, is upset that Gru lied about teaching him how to be a villain. In return, Gru berates Dru for his incompetence, disowns him, and decides to leave Freedonia.
Bratt, disguised as Lucy, kidnaps the girls, and once again acquires the diamond. Discovering this, Gru and Dru put aside their differences; the brothers and Lucy set off after Bratt in the Bald Terror's vehicle. With his robot's laser powered by the diamond, Bratt terrorizes Hollywood, covering it in superpowered
bubble gum in hopes of lifting the city into outer space. Lucy rescues the girls from a falling
skyscraper as Bratt sends Gru and Dru crash-landing into the streets of Hollywood. Bratt tries to kill Gru with the robot's laser, but Dru risks his life to break into the robot and power it down from the inside. Gru engages Bratt in a dance fight before stealing his weaponized
keytar to defeat him. The Minions, having escaped jail to reunite with Gru, pop the bubble gum bubbles covering the city. Dru and Gru reconcile, and share an embrace with Lucy, Margo, Edith and Agnes.
Gru and Lucy are reinstated into the AVL. The newly united family celebrates in Gru's home, and the girls acknowledge her as their mother. Still wishing to be a super-villain, Dru, along with most of the Minions, steals Gru's rocket-powered aircraft and flies away. Gru and Lucy decide to give them a five-minute head-start before engaging in pursuit.
Voice cast
Steve Carell as
Felonious Gru, simply called Gru, a spy and former villain turned Anti-Villain League agent. He is the adoptive father of Margo, Edith and Agnes, and Lucy's husband.[6]
Carell also voices Dru Gru, the long-lost twin brother of Gru, and the girls' adoptive uncle.[6][7]
Kristen Wiig as Lucy Wilde, an Anti-Villain League agent who is the wife of Gru, and the girls' adoptive mother[8]
Trey Parker as Balthazar Bratt, a super-villain and former child star who grows up to become obsessed with the character that he played in the 1980s and is bent on world domination[6]
Jenny Slate as Valerie Da Vinci, a tyrannical member of the Anti-Villain League who becomes the new AVL director[11]
Dana Gaier as Edith, the middle and sassy adopted daughter of Lucy and Gru[12]
Nev Scharrel as Agnes, the youngest and innocent adopted daughter of Lucy and Gru. She was originally voiced by
Elsie Fisher in the first two films[13]
Additionally,
Andy Nyman voices Clive the robot, Bratt's sidekick,[10] and Adrian Ciscato voices Niko, a boy from Freedonia who falls in love with Margo.[10]
Production
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Development
Development of Despicable Me 3 began in 2013, when production and character designer Eric Guillon began supervising the process as a co-director with
Pierre Coffin and
Kyle Balda, both of whom had concluded work on Minions (2015).[14][15] While the development was underway in 2014,
Illumination CEO
Chris Meledandri reported that the film was in early writing stages.[16] The production team intended to give each Despicable Me film its own "larger narrative positioning", allowing the expansion of the main characters' stories.[14]
Casting
In April 2016, it was reported that
Steve Carell would reprise his role as Gru and also voice his twin brother Dru, and that
Trey Parker was cast as Balthazar Bratt.[6] In September 2016, it was announced that
Miranda Cosgrove and
Kristen Wiig would reprise their roles as Margo and Lucy Wilde, respectively, and that Nev Scharrel would replace
Elsie Fisher as Agnes.[8][13]
The soundtrack for Despicable Me 3 was released on June 23, 2017.
Pharrell Williams released the new song "Yellow Light" for the soundtrack, which was made available through
digital download and
streaming.[17]
Marketing and release
The marketing campaign of Despicable Me 3 included promotions, such as the star ratings being replaced with the Minions during
Amazon's "Minion Day", and
BuzzFeed's "character takeover" badges. In New York City, 600 taxicabs had the sculpted Minions atop of them, of which had a Minionese greeting. Additional marketing partners for the film included
23 & Me,
Chiquita,
Ferrero,
Kellogg's,
McDonald's,
Procter & Gamble,
Topps, and Yummy Spoonfuls.[18]
Universal Pictures Home Entertainment released Despicable Me 3 for
digital download on November 21, 2017, and on
4K Ultra HD Blu-ray,
Blu-ray, and
DVD on December 5. Physical copies contain The AVL Database, behind-the-scenes featurettes, character descriptions, a Freedonian map, a deleted scene, a "Doowit"
sing-along version, Minion mugshots and posters, a short film The Secret Life of Kyle and a "Yellow Light"
music video.[23]
Reception
Box office
Despicable Me 3 earned $264.6 million in the United States and Canada and $770.2 million in other territories for a worldwide total of $1.034 billion.[4] It was the
fourth highest-grossing film of 2017 and the
fourth highest-grossing animated film of all time.[24][25]Deadline Hollywood calculated its net profit at $366.2 million, accounting for production budgets, marketing, talent participation, and other costs; box office grosses and home media revenues placed it third on their list of 2017's "Most Valuable Blockbusters".[3]
In the United States and Canada, Despicable Me 3 was released with The House and Baby Driver.[26] The film grossed $29.2 million on its first day,[27] including $4.1 million from Thursday night previews.[28] During its opening weekend, Despicable Me 3 grossed $75.4 million across 4,529 theaters, which was increased to 4,535 the following week, making it the number-one film. This surpassed the record of The Twilight Saga: Eclipse's (2010) 4,468 theaters to become the widest release ever until Avengers: Endgame (2019) took over with 4,662.[b] The film fell to number two in its second weekend with a gross of $34 million,[33] and number six in its third with $19.4 million.[34]Despicable Me 3 left theaters by December 21, 2017.[35]
Worldwide, Despicable Me 3 grossed $9.9 million during its opening weekend in five markets on June 16.[36] This was followed by its third weekend, grossing $95.6 million with an increased market count of 46.[37] Its top international markets were China ($158.2 million), Japan ($66.2 million), the United Kingdom ($62.7 million), Germany ($43.8 million), and France ($41.4 million).[38]
Critical response
The film has an approval rating of 59% based on 198 professional reviews on the
review aggregator website
Rotten Tomatoes, with an average rating of 5.7/10. Its critical consensus reads, "Despicable Me 3 should keep fans of the franchise consistently entertained with another round of colorful animation and zany—albeit somewhat scattershot—humor."[39]Metacritic (which uses a weighted average) assigned the film a score of 49 out of 100 based on 37 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[40] Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A−" on an A+ to F scale, down from the first two films' and Minions's (2015) "A".[30]
Alex Welch of IGN gave the film a six out of ten score, saying, "It's not much, but Despicable Me 3 is at least enough for the younger fans of the franchise."[41] Peter Debruge of Variety wrote, "Despicable Me 3 is unwieldy, but it mostly works, as co-directors Pierre Coffin (who also voices the Minions) and Kyle Balda never lose sight of the film's emotional center, packing the rest with as much humor as they can manage. The jokes come so fast and furious, the movie can hardly find room for Heitor Pereira's funky score, and though Pharrell Williams has contributed five new songs to sell soundtracks (including the sweet "
There's Something Special"), the movie hardly needs them."[42]Alonso Duralde of TheWrap gave the film a mixed review, saying: "Ultimately, none of these flaws will matter to the throngs of little kids who have made the previous Despicable Me movies (and the superior Minions spin-off) into giant global hits."[43]
Sandy Schaefer for Screen Rant gives the film a three stars out of five saying "Despicable Me 3 offers enough in the way of zany, irreverent entertainment (with a dose of heart) to please steadfast fans of the franchise."[44] Jordan Mintzer for The Hollywood Reporter gave the film a positive review saying "This rather clever, breakneck-paced cartoon gives fans exactly what they want: Like the new nemesis voiced by Trey Parker, it shoots multiple machine-gun bursts of bubblegum at the audience, asking them to chew and enjoy"[45]Peter Travers of Rolling Stone gave the film three stars out of four, saying "Pierre Coffin (who voices the Minions) and co-director Kyle Balda keep the plot spinning merrily. Pharrell Williams contributes five new songs to the mix, including the hummable "There's Something Special." It's no mystery why Illumination's franchise is still something special after three go-rounds—the box-office gross is a whopping $1.5 billion and counting."[46] Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly gave the film a 'B' grade, saying "What shines through is the visual wit and innate sweetness of the storytelling, and Carell's cackling, cueball-skulled misanthrope a (mostly) reformed scoundrel who can still have his cake, and arsenic too."[47]
The Minions' nonsense pastiche of the "
Major-General's Song" was termed "amusing" (in an otherwise negative review)[48] and "the film’s finest moment";[49] it was uploaded to YouTube by Illumination as a singalong challenge and had garnered more than 19 million views as of 2023.[50]
Dennis Leonard, Tim Nielsen, Matthew Hartman, Mac Smith, Andre J.H. Zweers, Christopher Flick, Richard Gould, John Roesch, Shelley Roden, and Slamm Andrews
Croll, Ben (July 12, 2022). The Art of Eric Guillon: From the Making of Despicable Me to Minions, The Secret Life of Pets, and More. San Rafael, California: Insight Editions.
ISBN9781683836810.