Box office Minions: The Rise of Gru grossed $370.3 million in the United States and Canada, and $569.9 million in other territories, for a worldwide total of $940.2 million.
Deadline Hollywood calculated the film's net profit as $368million, accounting for production budgets, marketing, talent participations and other costs; box-office grosses and home media revenues placed it third on their list of 2022's "Most Valuable Blockbusters".
The Rise of Gru box-office success was attributed to its release date near
Independence Day. Its marketing was also cited, which brought back families to theaters. According to
Comscore analyst Paul Dergarabedian, the film was "perfectly executed" for family audiences, and
Boxoffice Pro chief analyst Shawn Robbins elaborated this as a "pent-up demand" journey. In the United States and Canada,
Minions: The Rise of Gru was initially projected to gross $70–80 million from 4,391 theaters over its four-day opening weekend. After making $48.2 million on its first day (including an estimated $10.8 million from Thursday previews), the best for an animated film among the pandemic and of the
Despicable Me franchise, estimates were raised to $129 million. It went on to debut to $107 million (and a four-day total of $123.1 million), topping the box office. Its total set the Independence Day weekend record, surpassing
Transformers: Dark of the Moons $115.9 million in 2011. The film made $46.1 million in its second weekend (a drop of 57%), finishing second behind newcomer
Thor: Love and Thunder.
Minions: The Rise of Gru is the
sixth highest-grossing film of 2022 in this region. The film opened in Australia a week before its U.S. release, debuting at $3.7 million. It added another 60 international markets in its sophomore weekend and made $87.2 million. The combined first and second offshore weekends were 13% below
Minions and 3% below
Despicable Me 3 (2017). Four countries—Argentina, Saudi Arabia, Israel and Venezuela—had the biggest opening weekend of all time for an animated film. The popular TikTok trend that accompanied its release (
see below) was credited for Israel's record-breaking performance. In its third international weekend,
Minions: The Rise of Gru passed the $400 million worldwide mark after adding $56.4 million to its total. In France, it set records for the biggest Illumination animation opening day of all time, the third-biggest animation opening day of all time, and the biggest opening (including previews) of 2022. The film passed the $500 million worldwide mark in its fourth weekend, $600 million worldwide by its fifth, and $700 million worldwide by its sixth.
Critical response Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale, the same grade as its predecessor, while those at
PostTrak gave the film an 87% overall positive score, with 71% saying they would definitely recommend it. Serena Puang from
Boston Globe gave the film two and a half stars out of four and wrote: "The movie is fun: The music is unironically good—a particular standout is the Minions's rendition of
Simon and Garfunkel's '
Cecilia'; Bob, as cute as ever, learns that 'even the smallest of us are capable of great things'."
Scroll.in Udita Jhunjhunwala, giving a positive review, wrote: "The animated comedy is an 88-minute delight, further enlivened by the talented voice cast..." Clarisse Loughrey from
The Independent rated the film three out of five stars, saying that "There's nothing all that special about The Rise of Gru, but it runs like a well-oiled machine."
RogerEbert.com Odie Henderson rated the film three out of five stars and praised the humor, writing, "The laughs are well paced and the viewer isn't given too much time to reflect on how ridiculous Matthew Fogel's screenplay is", despite feeling the pacing was "breakneck". He also commended the film's animation, deeming it "striking, from the gorgeously rendered Chinatown of the City by the Bay to the charming look of young Gru. He has the same big, expressive eyes that fill the emotional faces of his little gurls", and its voice acting, stating that Carrell "does a fine job of making his Gru voice younger and less pronounced".
Peter Travers of
ABC News stated: "Director Kyle Balda creates a traffic jam of chases and collisions with the Vicious Six morphing into giant animals, including dragons, tigers and monkeys. It's all too much and too ditzy. But would you want it any other way?".
The Associated Press Jake Coyle scored the film two-and-a-half stars out of four and ended his review, "If anything, the Minion craze has proven the timeless versatility of the googly-eyed henchmen—a cartoon concoction of childlike slapstick simplicity and eminent pliability. It's enough to make you curious to imagine the Minions in subsequent decades—on Wall Street in the '80s, maybe, or head banging at a Nirvana concert in 1990s Seattle."
Peter Bradshaw from
The Guardian rated the film two stars out of five, writing that "the plot is perfunctory and it runs on the faintest of fumes".
Bilge Ebiri from
Vulture gave the film a negative review, writing that "it looks nice, the kids will enjoy it, and, at 87 minutes, it all goes down relatively smoothly—but it's not quite smart enough to be as stupid as it wants to be."
Los Angeles Times Katie Walsh, in a negative review, wrote: "These references, and the relentless assault of '70s needle drops, are fun, to a point, but the movie itself is 87 minutes of pure chaos, a hallucinatory, cacophonous
fever dream of nonsensical subplots and Minion gibberish."
"Gentleminions" TikTok trend A popular
Internet meme involving groups of
Generation Z adolescent boys dressed in suits like the character Gru attending the film and some dressing up like Minions with the tag #Gentleminions began spreading on
TikTok almost immediately after the film's release. The meme originated with a group of Australian high schoolers. It is usually accompanied by American rapper
Yeat's song "
Rich Minion", which was commissioned for the
Cole Bennett-directed trailer of the film. Large groups recorded themselves cheering, throwing bananas at the screen, and performing Gru's trademark
steepled fingers gesture. Several theaters in the United Kingdom banned groups of young men in formal attire from seeing the film due to their disruptive behavior during screenings. The meme was also documented in the United States, Norway, Singapore, and Israel. The substantial meme subculture around
The Rise of Gru was noted by
The Face to be similar to memes surrounding the superhero film
Morbius, released earlier in 2022. Both meme subcultures focused around a largely ironic appreciation for the supposed strengths of said film, often verging on the absurdist, but
The Face noted that the interest in
The Rise of Gru was largely based in genuine interest in the film and nostalgia for the previous
Despicable Me films, whereas the interest in
Morbius was ironic due to the latter's perceived lack of quality.
PostTrak reported that 34% of
The Rise of Gru audiences were between the ages of 13 and 17, an unusually high percentage for an animated film. Pamela McClintock of
The Hollywood Reporter concluded that the results of the survey were a result of the Internet trend. ==Accolades==