Pop Culture Happy Hour - A Minecraft Movie And What's Making Us Happy
Episode Date: April 4, 2025Based on the best-selling game, A Minecraft Movie stars Jack Black and Jason Momoa in a goofy and sprawling adventure full of blocky animals and magical macguffins. Directed by Jared Hess (Nacho Libre..., Napoleon Dynamite), the film also features Danielle Brooks and Jennifer Coolidge. Follow Pop Culture Happy Hour on Letterboxd at letterboxd.com/nprpopculture.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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A Minecraft movie is the first attempt to adapt the blockbuster video game, Minecraft, for the big screen.
The film stars Jack Black and Jason Momoa in a goofy and sprawling adventure full of blocky animals and magical mcuffins.
I'm Stephen Thompson.
Joining me today on NPR's Pop Culture Happy Hour is Regina Barber.
She's a host and reporter for NPR's science podcast, Shortwave.
Hey, Regina.
Hey, Stephen, this is awesome.
It's great to have you.
Also with us is James Mastro Marino.
He is a producer for NPR's Here in Nune.
now and Leeds NPR's gaming coverage. Hey James. Hey, Stephen. I am thrilled to have you both
here. Minecraft is the biggest selling video game of all time, so it's only natural that it
would spawn a film franchise. It's true. Even E.T. the extraterrestrial for Atari 2600.
But the Minecraft universe in the games isn't really built on characters with discrete
personalities. It's more of a sandbox-style world-building game where you construct elaborate shelters that
help protect you from marauding pig warriors and zombies.
Turning Minecraft into a movie presents a challenge because the film has a lot of character
development to catch up on.
But as the Lego movie and Barbie have demonstrated, it's possible to get it spectacularly
right.
I'm not saying this one does.
A Minecraft movie stars Jack Black as Steve.
He's the default blank slate character in the Minecraft games.
Here he is an extremely eager adventurer who lives for the mines and is trying to
protect a powerful cube that allows its holder to pass through different realms.
An army of pigs wants to use the cube for the purposes of plundering, but their efforts are
complicated when the cube, the movie does have fun with the fact that everyone calls it an orb,
falls into the hands of a washed-up gamer named Garrett the Garbage Man Garrison.
He's played by Jason Moa.
Soon enough, Garrett, Steve, a pair of plucky orphans and a realtor played by Danielle Brooks
are venturing through different realms.
Naturally, along the way, they unveil and deploy various Minecraft Easter eggs
and maybe even learn a little something about the value of creativity and friendship.
It's in theaters now. Regina Barber, I'm going to start with you.
What did you think of a Minecraft movie?
From the trailers, I did not have a lot of hope.
And so I went in with basically zero expectations.
And I have to say, I had a lot more fun than I thought I was.
I was laughing a lot more.
The one-liners were great.
So I have a daughter and she begged me to play Minecraft with her.
And I never...
And you were like, no.
I never could understand just like building things that didn't have great graphics that everything was so blocky.
But and then like my current partner and he was like, do you want to play Minecraft together?
And I was like, okay.
And this enraged my daughter who was much older at the time, no longer playing Minecraft.
And I was like, we can play together now.
And she's like, no, it's too late.
Cats in the cradle and the silver spoon.
That's right.
But I have played it and I started to understand.
Like she never wanted to play with like people attacking you.
So like once that kind of came in, then my gamerness like started to reach out.
So I knew it a fair amount.
But still I was like, how are they going to turn this into a movie?
And they did an okay job.
I was worried it was going to be like stupid bad, but it was just stupid fun.
So I liked it.
Okay.
How about you, James?
Yeah.
It's been in my orbit since, like, 2011 when the indie game first came out.
And I basically take various different times to dip in and see what's going on because I have friends that are way more creative and inventive than I am with Minecraft system.
I'm not agreeing that you're not creative.
I'm just saying I can identify.
Yeah.
Well, I mean, you can laugh at me for that too because, like, they'll build like whole villages and castles and like stuff that I just frankly don't have the patience for.
I like the adventuring side of it too, actually.
Gina. What the film does translate well is like the absolute terror of your first night, first playing Minecraft, where you know that anything can kill you.
I'm very mixed on the movie because I was holding it up to the Barbie movie and the Lego movie and these other things that used really blank slate properties to kind of tell actually pretty interesting stories. And on the one hand, the Minecraft movie might have more constraints because
it can't be entirely about a product that's been around for decades and been in like people's minds for generations.
It has to kind of check a bunch of boxes.
It has to establish what Minecraft is for the benefit of some parent in the audience.
It's not as immediately evident to a toy that you can pick up and handle, even though it is very akin to Lego in terms of giving you a wide canvas to build your own dream.
And the first like 15 minutes of the movie are Jack Black telling you exactly what you.
exactly what is appealing about this world.
Jack Black shouts a lot of exposition in this movie.
Yes.
It's bookended by him doing that.
I kind of liked the intro.
I don't know why.
I just found it funny.
It felt a little bit like the Lord of the Rings intro.
Because it's setting up like this epic world,
but instead of doing it with Gravitos,
it's doing it with Jack Black offbeat humor.
I basically had a similar relationship to this movie,
I think that you guys did,
which was coming in with relatively low expectations
based on a combination of the trailers, which weren't necessarily blowing my socks off,
and just a general sense that this is a massive blockbuster IP extension.
This is designed.
There is a certain mercenary quality to this project that is to be expected,
and that is only really rarely exceeded, right?
Like, we keep mentioning Barbie in the Lego movie,
but you haven't heard us mention the emoji movie.
Oh, God.
Right.
There are many, many, many, many IP extension.
that do not work as well as those films.
To me, this cleared a relatively low bar.
I thought that it's very lively.
Everyone involved is very committed.
My relationship with Minecraft is entirely based on at least one of my kids played it.
But it was not an obsession in my house to the extent of something like Toontown or Pop Tropica or later Roblox.
Right.
Roblox is huge.
That movie's coming out eventually.
Oh, yeah.
I wouldn't be surprised if you saw a nostalgia vehicle built around Pop Tropica and or Disney's Toontown at some point down the line to tap into Gen Z nostalgia.
Gen Z nostalgia.
Yeah.
It's a thing, man.
Death comes for us all.
But it's worth noting that this film was directed by Jared Hess, and Jared Hess did Napoleon Dynamite and Nacho Libre.
And Jared Hess's, you know, kind of narrative stamp is a certain kind of humor that is very loud.
And ridiculous.
And I like that.
Yeah, it's ridiculous.
It's absurdist.
But it is not necessarily like sliding jokes subtly under the door.
And the fact that you have Jack Black, who, as I've kind of alluded to, Jack Black basically screams every line, he says.
Who are you?
I am Steve.
And everything is just like pitched to the farthest rafter.
And, you know, Jason Momoa is going very, very big here.
The animation is big.
They're kind of playing off of the limitations of the Minecraft animation in the way that the Lego movie plays off the limitations of Lego animation.
It's very committed.
It's throwing a lot at the screen.
If you have a headache, don't go to this movie.
But if you want just like a fine.
big, loud, silly kids movie, and maybe you have kids who are excited to go, you could do a lot
worse.
Yeah.
I think that's the key.
When you keep on saying committed and the actors were committed and the storyline was
committed to being loud and consistently all the way through, I think that's why it exceeded
my expectations.
There's so many movies that try to do something and then they're like halfway through or two-thirds
of the way through, like don't continue, you know?
And I think the one-liners, they didn't stop.
kept going in a nice pace.
I don't know how somebody who loves Minecraft, who's younger, would want more.
Yeah, I mean, it's funny that you say it's so loud because Minecraft isn't loud.
It's like actually pretty understated.
It's often credited for this really quiet and like immersive soundtrack, for example.
That's true.
But you can't replicate that sort of experience of like discovering Minecraft for yourself on a big screen.
So they have the most enthusiastic.
stand in, tell you exactly why the overworld is cool and worth protecting.
And then I think for me, ultimately, it felt like it didn't quite deserve.
It's like emotional payoffs.
Like, I didn't quite believe everyone's character arc.
Yeah, that's true.
The female characters had a lot less to do than the three male ones.
But I still am laughing internally at some of the things Jack Black and Jason Mamoa say, like particularly those two.
and their bromance is actually pretty great.
I mean, I kept on thinking to myself, is this a movie that's actually about male loneliness?
Yeah.
And it isn't not about male loneliness.
It's not not about male loneliness.
I think that's a really good point.
And this is where I want to give a little bit of credit to Jason Momoa, whose level of commitment to this role.
And let's just say, like, Jason Momoa is not having to emulate a character from the Minecraft games.
He's just a guy.
He's like a washed up.
He was like the world champion in some like street fighting game from 1989.
And he's like never let go of that triumph in his life.
Yeah.
What he is very, very much to his bones is a Jared Hess character.
He is a Napoleon Dynamite, Nacho Libre style, silly character.
Stuck in the past.
Yeah.
Who's stuck in the past, late 80s washout.
He runs like a retro video game store that in which I wish to live.
It was pretty nice, actually.
I'm the guy who watched the movie Five Nights at Freddy's and was like, I understand that people get murdered there, but could I live at a Freddy's?
You'd take that risk.
I want to live in a haunted Chuckie Cheese.
It's not necessarily like a fondness for the franchise.
You know, that's an attainable goal, Stephen.
That'll always be the dream.
But getting back to Mamoa, I think his level of commitment to the bit really helps sell this movie.
Free garbage tip.
Fear is just weakness hijacking your body's cockpit.
What in the hell?
And if that happens, you can say biocombe Diaz to your body plane's navigation system.
He's not a nuanced character.
It's a Jared Hess movie.
But he's bringing a vibe to it that you would never think you were going to get from the video games.
This movie succeeds at making Jason Mamoa so deeply uncool.
Yeah.
Which is a feat unto itself.
And he's given, like, basically the best lines.
I just have to say, Jennifer Coolidge had great lines.
I enjoyed her lines a lot.
She plays the vice principal where one of the kids goes to school.
She has, like, just these random things about her divorce.
And, like, I will say to our listeners, we were all sitting together in the theater,
which is, like, the first time I've ever done a pop culture happy hour where we're all watching the movie next to each other.
We can all hear each other laugh or something.
or sigh beleaguered.
Yes, yeah.
But there's a point in the movie where, like, you know, Jennifer Coolidge, something great happens to her.
And she's like this middle-aged divorcee.
And these little children are cheering for her.
And like, I was just touched.
I was like, oh, my gosh, these children are so kind.
This movie does give you a few clever cameos.
There are definitely people with like little bit parts who will come in and liven up a scene or two.
Jermaine Clement from Flight of the Concords just for a second.
pops up almost unrecognizably.
You mentioned Jennifer Coolidge.
And, of course, there are all the Minecraft Easter eggs.
Were there any things that jumped out at you guys as like, oh, that's sweet?
That's something I wouldn't have thought to include.
The chicken jockey, which is a very strange enemy.
It's just a baby zombie writing a chicken.
And it's when the movie is at its most Nacho Libre,
Memoa has to fight this bizarre and nearly unstoppable minuscule force.
So I was afraid that the movie would indulge purely in memes and antics.
Mostly the jokes land without having to be steeped in internet culture.
That moment is bewildering, but sort of fits the like, it fits the moment.
What can I say?
Yeah, it's bewildering.
It fits the tone of the film.
And the best Easter eggs will delight the people who get them without taking the people
who don't out of the film.
Yeah, and malevolent babies play really well to kids.
It's true.
I think the one Easter egg I did get was a Napoleon Dynamite Easter egg, and that's Tots, right?
Like, there was Tater Tots.
Can you call it an Easter egg when it's the entire personality of the real world part of the movie?
Yes, exactly.
It's Idaho.
There are Tots.
Like, nearly every minute has a Taut reference.
Yes, that's true.
That's true.
They've got a tot launcher, and it's pretty important.
That's true.
Tots are a recurring theme in this film.
I kind of like in this film, like, is it Barbie?
Is it the Lego movie?
Of course it's not.
I think it is more along the lines of the superiors.
Mario Brothers movie, which, one, made like a billion and a half dollars. And two, as much as that was like clearly a very slight film, it did have tons of Easter eggs that delighted Mario Superfans and clearly caught on with its audience. And I think this film, for all of the kind of invective hurled at its trailers, I think this film can catch on with the people it's engineered to catch on with. I think it's good enough to do that. There's one stipulation.
And that is, I also went with my wife, and she found the animation off-putting.
And this was another complaint people had.
Yeah, because you're translating a deliberately retro-pixelated art style into this glorious HD world.
Kind of glossifying.
Nonetheless, it's all blocky.
And that can be very charming.
But it also means that characters don't move like you would expect blocky characters do.
They move just like anyone you would expect to.
And so it's weird when a villain, for example, says, oh, you round people.
You're so round, and therefore you're wrong.
You're not fit for this world.
When actually beyond like some sharp angles, most things look textured and squishy anyway.
So I think the animators did about as good of a job that they could with this assignment.
But I do think there's a little bit of a, is it an uncanny valley?
Sort of your mileage may vary with how you approach to that.
I do think they glean enough jokes off of that animation that it generally works.
The fact that the McGuffin in the film is an orb that is a cube, to me, like, they kept, they went back to that joke maybe one too many times, but I laughed basically every other time.
So what are you going to do?
Yeah.
Anyway, we want to know what you think about a Minecraft movie.
Find us on Facebook at facebook.com slash PCH and on letterboxed at letterboxed.com slash NPR pop culture.
We'll have a link in our episode description.
Up next, What is Making Us Happy This Week?
Now it's time for our favorite segment of this week and every week,
What's Making Us Happy This Week?
Regina Barber, what's making you happy this week?
There's this anime that a lot of people love, and it started in 1999.
It's called One Piece, and I was conscious in 1999, could have watched it, didn't.
One Piece is about, you know, a group, I've only watched the first season,
a group of pirates that are traveling around in this mysterious world,
and one of them has special powers,
they're fighting,
but they're also super wholesome sailors and pirates.
I started the series,
and it's like over 20 seasons.
It's got over a thousand episodes.
I'm in episode 70-something,
and I am loving it.
I have no idea why I waited this long in my middle age to watch One Piece,
but it is paying off.
So that's one piece that you can watch on Netflix.
I say if you've been thinking about it for years, just do it.
Nice.
Thank you, Regina Barber.
James Mastro Marino, what is making you happy this week?
Oh, man, I feel shamed for not starting One Piece because it's been in my life for a very long time.
Do it.
Just do it, James.
I have something that has a little less commitment.
And it's another anime.
We did not plan this.
Yeah, we did.
But it is a animated movie called Look Back.
It came out last year to critical.
acclaim and it got on my radar because both the film critics I follow and the anime fans I follow
were both raving about it. So I caught up with both it and the original manga it's based off of. And it's a
brilliant, really touching story about two aspiring manga artists in Japan and their friendship from
elementary school days to young adulthood. I can't really say much more without
spoiling it. Other than that, it is
beautifully animated and it had me
crying buckets. Because
I, at one point in my life, wanted
to be an illustrator, and I
had a friend who was better at art than me,
and I related to this friendship
quite terribly.
But it is a gorgeous
film, and I cannot recommend it enough.
That's look back, which you can watch
on Amazon Prime video. And I should note here
that Amazon supports NPR and Pace to
distribute some of our content. I have to
say, James, I have a daughter who's
illustrator who loves manga, and we are adding that to our cue right now. Yeah, me too.
So for me, it has been an unusually great spring for new albums, and I've already heard
a ton of records that are going to be in the running for my favorite music of the year.
One of those records came out about a month ago. It's called Foxes in the Snow, and it's by the
singer-songwriter Jason Isbel. He's one of the biggest stars in Americana music, but his new record
is the rawest and most stripped down thing he's ever done.
It's just Jason Isbell with an acoustic guitar as he processes a bunch of major life changes,
including his recent divorce from the great singer-songwriter Amanda Shires.
These songs cut deep and really resonate.
And my favorite is a song that's just a bunch of life advice that he's passing on to his daughter.
It's called Don't Be Tough, and it absolutely clobbered me, speaking of buckets of tea.
So that's tighten up your belt and laces, feel the pain and fear.
Don't be tough until you have to.
Let love knock you on your ass.
So that's Jason Isbell.
His great new record is called Foxes in the Snow,
and that is what is making me happy this week.
If you want links for what we recommended,
plus some more recommendations,
sign up for our newsletter at npr.org slash pop culture newsletter.
That brings us to the end of our show.
Regina Barber, James Mastro Marino.
Thanks so much for being here.
Thank you, Stephen.
This was great.
Absolute pleasure.
This episode was produced by Liz Metzger
and edited by Jessica Reedy and Mike Katzif.
Hello, Come In, provides our theme music.
Thank you for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR.
I'm Stephen Thompson, and we will see you all next week.
