Megamind — 2 2023

In a year of stunning animation ( Spider-Verse , Boy and the Heron ), this film feels like a tax write-off accidentally released to streaming. Watch the 2010 original again. Let the memory remain untainted.

Desperate to replicate the success of scene-stealing sidekicks, the film sidelines Minion (still voiced by David Cross, ironically the only original holdout) for Keiko—a hyperactive, wide-eyed groupie who solves problems by "believing hard enough." She’s not charming. She’s exhausting. What Could Have Been The saddest part? There is a good sequel buried here. The idea of Megamind protecting his heroic reputation while old villain friends pressure him to relapse is rich with comedic and dramatic potential. Imagine a Megamind 2 exploring imposter syndrome, or the difficulty of leaving a toxic past behind. Instead, we got a 82-minute pilot for a TV series that doesn’t exist yet. Final Verdict Rating: 2/10 Megamind 2 2023

On paper, that premise works. In execution? It’s a train wreck painted blue. 1. The Animation Downgrade The first Megamind had a stylized, cinematic sheen—rich lighting, expressive character models, and dynamic action. The 2023 sequel looks like a mid-tier mobile game cutscene. Movements are stiff, backgrounds are barren, and the frame rate chugs during action sequences. This isn't a stylistic choice; it’s a budget tell. In a year of stunning animation ( Spider-Verse

When Megamind vs. the Doom Syndicate dropped on Peacock in 2023, the collective reaction wasn't excitement. It was confusion. Quickly followed by disappointment. Picking up immediately after the events of the first film, Megamind is now Metro City’s celebrated hero. But his former villain team—the Doom Syndicate—returns to town expecting their "leader" to help them wreak havoc. Forced to juggle his new heroic identity while keeping up the villainous charade, Megamind must stop his old crew without revealing his secret. There is a good sequel buried here

Where the original had wit (“You dare mock the son of a shepherd?”), the sequel has slapstick, pop-culture references that were dated in 2015, and characters screaming their emotions. The Doom Syndicate—a forgettable roster including "Pierre Pressure" and "Lord Nighty-Knight"—feel like rejected Power Rangers villains designed by an algorithm.

Megamind vs. the Doom Syndicate isn't just a bad sequel—it’s a cautionary tale. It proves that IP nostalgia without creative passion, theatrical budget, or original voice talent results in a hollow product. Fans of the original should pretend this doesn’t exist. New viewers will wonder why anyone liked Megamind in the first place.

Here’s a critical, engaging write-up for the much-discussed (and critically maligned) Megamind 2 (2023), officially titled . "Megamind 2": The Direct-to-Video Sequel Nobody Asked For, and Why It Hurts In 2010, DreamWorks Animation gifted us a clever subversion of the superhero genre with Megamind . It was sharp, hilarious, and unexpectedly poignant—a film about nature vs. nurture, starring a blue-headed villain who realized being the bad guy was lonely. For over a decade, fans clamored for a proper follow-up.