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Movie Review

Clichéd storytelling undercuts Ruth Bader Ginsburg's legacy in On the Basis of Sex

Alex Bentley
Dec 31, 2018 | 6:00 am
Clichéd storytelling undercuts Ruth Bader Ginsburg's legacy in On the Basis of Sex
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Against all odds, Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg has become quite the cult figure at her advanced age. She’s been honored in memes and through Halloween costumes, played by Kate McKinnon on Saturday Night Live, and given a gangsta-style nickname — The Notorious RBG — that was appropriated for a recent documentary about her life, RBG.

That streak continues with the biopic On the Basis of Sex. It focuses on the early life of Ginsburg (Felicity Jones) as she becomes one of the first women accepted at Harvard Law School, a professor at Rutgers University, and a leading proponent for gender equality.

The main thrust of the film is a case in which Ginsburg, with help from her husband, Marty (Armie Hammer), tries a back-door approach toward getting women treated the same as men. The case involves a man being denied a caregiver tax credit because the law assumed women should be the ones at home. With obstacles at every corner, Ginsburg is shown to be relentless in her goal of toppling all laws that discriminate on the basis of sex.

Directed by Mimi Leder and written by first-time writer Daniel Stiepleman, the film is an up-and-down affair. Early on and then occasionally throughout the two-hour running time, the filmmakers take a facile approach. In trying to demonstrate the difficulties Ginsburg faced as a woman in a male-dominated world, they pile on cliché after cliché, a technique that serves neither her nor the story well.

Still, it’s hard not to get swept up in her righteous fight. The biggest thing the filmmakers do right is involve her family in the plot. Along with Marty, Ginsburg’s daughter, Jane (Cailee Spaeny), is shown to have a significant impact on her thinking, and it’s this personal nature that keeps the film engaging.

By the time the film gets to the “big court scene™,” it’s a constant push-and-pull between the stereotypical nature of the story and the effective performances of the actors. In the end, the actors win out, but the battle is closer than it should have been.

Jones and Hammer complement each other well, portraying a relationship that’s idealized yet still seemingly honest. Other notable performances include Spaeny and Justin Theroux as ACLU lawyer Mel Wulf.

On the Basis of Sex makes a good case for why Ginsburg is as revered as she is, but it could’ve been even better had it not taken the easy way out at times. See this film for the performances, and then RBG to get the full scope of this honorable woman.

Felicity Jones in On the Basis of Sex.

Felicity Jones in On the Basis of Sex
Photo by Jonathan Wenk/Focus Features
Felicity Jones in On the Basis of Sex.
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Movie Review

Despicable Me sequel Minions & Monsters keeps franchise's goofy vibe

Alex Bentley
Jun 30, 2026 | 4:00 pm
Henry and James in Minions & Monsters
Photo courtesy of Illumination & Universal Pictures
Henry and James in Minions & Monsters.

The Despicable Me franchise is one of the most enduring of the 21st century, now reaching its seventh film in the past 16 years with the release of Minions & Monsters. The Minions, which were originally mere sidekicks to the supervillain Gru, have now arguably become the face of the franchise, even more so when they get their own movie.

Minions & Monsters purports to give even more history for the little yellow pill-shaped beings who want nothing more than to serve bad guys. Instead of fan favorites like Kevin, Stuart, and Bob leading the way, this film features James, a Minion who can’t stop causing chaos, and his best friend, Henry (all Minions are voiced by series creator Pierre Coffin).

After a prologue showing the Minions teaming up with various baddies over centuries, the group shows up in early 20th century Hollywood, gaining attention from filmmakers like Max (Christoph Waltz) and producer brothers Frank and Edward (both voiced by Jeff Bridges). They quickly rise up the ranks, with adventures coming to involve actress Debbie (Zoey Deutch), robot Dort (Jesse Eisenberg), and a Cthulhu named Goomi (Trey Parker).

Co-directed by Coffin and Patrick Delage and co-written by Coffin and Brian Lynch, the film is the loosest one of the franchise to date, using a barely-there story as an excuse to have the Minions engage in as much mayhem as possible. The prologue is the most successful part of the film, as they meet a cyclops, wizard, bank robber, and more, with each sequence getting wilder and funnier.

The 90-minute film is just as interested in entertaining kids with its craziness as it is in giving adults references to early film history. Among the films and actors that get shout-outs are the first-ever movie, The Horse in Motion, Georges Méliès’ A Trip to the Moon, Charlie Chaplin, Buster Keaton, and more. Whether including those historical relics will have kids wanting to seek out the real deals is questionable, but at least it shows the filmmakers know they owe a debt to the greats of the past.

The second half of the film becomes less coherent as the Minions split into different factions. James, Henry, and a hard-of-hearing Minion named Ed go in one direction to make a monster movie, while a larger group led by their antagonist named Dick goes in another. There’s no real purpose to either side’s journey other than to serve up laughs through the Minionese language (which seems to lean toward Spanish, as one scene acknowledges) and their antics.

Anyone purposefully going to a Minions movie likely enjoys Coffin’s performance of each character, each of which is subtly different. The rest of the cast, while star-laden, never truly sounds like the actors portraying them, which is strange when you have distinctive voices like Waltz, Bridges, and Eisenberg. The only people who stand out are Allison Janney as the narrator, Bobby Moynihan, and a cameo by George Lucas.

While Minions & Monsters doesn’t offer up an overly compelling reason for existing, it’s also harmless fun that has the side benefit of exposing kids to bits of film history that they might not have known existed. It also tries something different from the tried-and-true format of previous films, and experimentation should be appreciated even if it’s not fully successful.

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Minions & Monsters opens in theaters on July 1.

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