Pierre Coffin Calls Female Minion Idea 'Tokenistic'

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- Pierre Coffin said adding a female Minion would be 'the beginning of the end,' calling it 'tokenistic' — though Universal once explored an island with an all-female Minion tribe that never made it past early development, and in his head female Minions would look identical to male ones
- Minions & Monsters is set decades before Minions 2: The Rise of Gru, during the early Hollywood era when Fritz Lang and Michael Curtiz migrated from Eastern Europe to build studios; the film includes nods to Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, and Chaplin
- Minionese has no linguistic structure — it's gibberish carried by melody, and Coffin records every Minion voice himself at home over a three-week audio session, adapting phrases for local markets (like 'gran jefe' in South America), with all territories except China using his voice
- The first three distinct Minions — Kevin (authority), Stuart (aloofness), and Bob (naivety) — were created for the 2015 Minions film; later entries added personalities like Otto, whose non-stop chatter would 'inevitably get around to Trump'
- Amblimation hired Coffin in 1993 at its Acton studio in west London to work on An American Tail, We're Back! A Dinosaur Story, and Balto before Spielberg took most staff back to the US to form DreamWorks
- Minions don't age and don't reproduce — 'they just are,' Coffin said, though he also revealed the franchise once considered a Backrooms-style Minions mashup before rejecting it as 'yellow against yellow'
Why it matters: Universal would push for a female Minion to broaden audience appeal, per Coffin — but the director, who voices every Minion outside China and personally defines their look, calls the idea 'tokenistic,' putting the studio's commercial instinct against its creative lead.




