Later, minion Kevin, decked out in a coconut bra goes rubber tubing with a banana placed rather pointedly. The answer's innocent, 'Your bald head.' She then proceeds to explain that it reminds her of an egg and she expects to see a chick hatch out of it. 'I know what makes *you* a boy' says little Agnes and Gru is startled. Tucking the girls in, Gru panics when he finds Margo texting an Avery, wanting to know if Avery's a boy. The craziest thing about this outing is its hermaphroditic humor. They're oblivious to any danger, held on an island paradise (where one bares its butt), but they have PK41 in their future. At first, they disappear from Gru's in ones and twos until an ice cream truck appears and sucks up a bunch of them. But the minions (inventively voiced by directors Pierre Coffin and Chris Renaud as if Cousin Itt was almost intelligible) get much more to do and arguably are the stars here. Even the girls almost get lost in the shuffle. There's a neighbor trying to fix Gru up (with Kristen Schaal's Shannon), Nefario's defection and that overly busy mall all competing with the main plots. If the sequel doesn't quite measure up to the original, it's because of a lack of focus. But Gru is convinced that Salsa & Salsa restaurant owner Eduardo Perez (voice of Benjamin Bratt) is really super villain El Macho, perhaps because Perez's son Antonio (voice of Moises Arias) has taken an interest in Gru's eldest, Margo (voice of Miranda Cosgrove). He and Lucy are assigned cover as cupcake shop owners in the mall where men's hair replacement entrepreneur Floyd Eagle-san (voice of Ken Jeong) becomes a suspect. Until, that is, he's kidnapped (in a thrilling Bondesque maneuver involving inadvertent parasailing) and introduced to the Anti Villain League.
![steve minion butt steve minion butt](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/b7/59/4a/b7594a92124d16647d38e2cc6373a3c1.jpg)
But Gru's too busy planning Agnes's birthday party to notice.
![steve minion butt steve minion butt](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/8mqWMjhmp4U/hqdefault.jpg)
Once again we begin with a villainous deed as an Arctic scientific station is sucked into the heavens by a giant magnet. Returning screenwriters Ken Daurio and Cinco Paul mix family and villainy once again, hitting many of the same beats as the first time around (enormous weaponry, a theme-parky mall instead of amusement park, a capping song and dance performance and a Great White shark!), but while Gru finding a mate isn't as momentous as him having found his heart there's still plenty of fun to be had (some of it quite subversive!).