Four misfits find themselves struggling with ordinary problems when they are suddenly pulled through a mysterious portal into the Overworld: a bizarre, cubic wonderland that thrives on imagination. To get back home, they'll have to master this world while embarking on a magical quest with an unexpected, expert crafter, Steve.
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Jason Momoa | Garrett |
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Jack Black | Steve |
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Sebastian Eugene Hansen | Henry |
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Emma Myers | Natalie |
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Danielle Brooks | Dawn |
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Jennifer Coolidge | Vice Principal Marlene |
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Rachel House | Malgosha |
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Allan Henry | Malgosha (Creature Performer) |
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Bram Scott-Breheny | Young Steve |
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Moana Williams | Young Garrett |
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Jemaine Clement | Daryl |
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Mark Wright | HR Person |
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Yvette Parsons | Delivery Person |
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Hiram Garcia | Mr. Gunchie |
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Bret McKenzie | Nitwit Onset Performer |
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Jared Hess | General Chungus |
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Batanai Mashingaidze | Matty the Waitress |
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Amanda Billing | Henry's Mother |
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Tommy Broadmore | Trevor |
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Frankie Creagh-Leslie | Trevor's Friend |
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Alison Quigan | Chuggy Executive #1 |
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John Smythe | Chuggy Executive #2 |
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Alex Tunui | Secretary |
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Craig Mckinney | Miner |
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Joel Rindelaub | Arcade Judge |
| Director | Jared Hess |
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| Writer | Chris Bowman, Hubbel Palmer, Neil Widener, Gavin James, Chris Galletta, Allison Schroeder | |
| Producer | Jay Ashenfelter, Jon Berg, Cale Boyter, Vu Bui, Pete Chiappetta, Allison Schroeder, Todd Hallowell, Andrew Lary, Roy Lee, Brian Andrew Mendoza, Jill Sobel Messick, Jason Momoa, Mary Parent, Nick Satriano, Jon Spaihts, Anthony Tittanegro, Kayleen Walters, Torfi Frans Ólafsson | |
| Musician | Mark Mothersbaugh | |
| Photography | Enrique Chediak | |
| Packaging | MKV |
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| Nr Discs | 1 |
| Audio Tracks | English (EAC3 5.1) |
| Subtitles | English | German |
| Owner | Jackmeats Flix |
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| Location | Comedy Partition 1 |
| Purchased | On May 13, 2025 at NeoNoir |
| Watched | Jun 08, 2025 |
| Index | 10780 |
| Added Date | May 13, 2025 12:39:47 |
| Modified Date | Jun 10, 2025 07:31:23 |
My quick rating - 5.3/10. Well, it finally happened. They made a Minecraft movie. And no, it’s not stop-motion or YouTube fanfic gone big budget—this is a full-on Hollywood production with stars, CGI, portals, and enough pixelated nonsense to crash your old school laptop. I barely played the game, and now that I’ve seen the film, I’m even less sure of what it’s actually about.
We start with the boldest cinematic move of the decade: eight minutes of exposition and credits. That’s right, this movie kicks off with plenty of gamesplaining and a musical overture, apparently to lull parents into a false sense of security. But just when you're wondering if this is an animated TED Talk, bam, four plucky misfits (a checklist of modern-day quirks and TikTok-ready angst) fall through a mysterious portal and land in the “Overworld”—a place that looks like someone fed a Lego set and a sugar cube factory into a blender.
Enter Steve. Yes, the Steve. Voiced by Jack Black, he’s part wizard, part wilderness guide, all mystery man. He’s like if Bear Grylls were raised on cheese cubes and dad jokes. Jack Black nails it, as he often does, playing Steve like a guy who got lost on his way to a Tenacious D concert and decided to stay in Minecraft instead. However, Jennifer Coolidge delivers what may be the film’s best line (“No, I think he’s Swedish”) with such oddball sincerity I had to pause to laugh. That subplot gets ignored until the credits so stick around.
Jason Momoa, meanwhile, seems to have wandered in from another movie—or another planet. His performance can best be described as “a Viking with a concussion,” and he somehow plays every scene like he just remembered he left his oven on. It’s a bizarre energy that works in Fast X, but here it mostly feels like he’s trying to win a dare.
The CGI is undeniably impressive. If nothing else, the world looks like a cotton candy dream, lush, blocky, and unapologetically weird. It’s like a Bob Ross painting rendered in pixels by a caffeinated 12-year-old. Credit where it’s due: the production team understood the assignment visually, even if the story feels like it was generated by ChatGPT after being hit with a shovel.
Rachel House as Malgosha? A delight. She’s channeling pure Bond villain energy, but through the lens of a PTA mom who has had it. Honestly, I’d watch a spin-off about her monologuing in a volcano lair built from obsidian blocks and passive-aggressive Post-it notes.
At the end of the day, A Minecraft Movie isn’t for me, and it never tried to be. It’s for kids, fans of the game, and adults with enough patience (or wine) to tolerate its pixelated weirdness. Compared to Sonic and Mario, it’s a notch below, but at least it tries. Sometimes too hard. Sometimes not hard enough. It’s inconsistent, amusing, visually rich, and yes, dumb. But hey, so is half the internet. Why not let Minecraft have its moment, too?
| TheMovieDb.org |