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Jack Black, Jason Momoa and Sebastian Hansen are pictured in a scene from "A Minecraft Movie." The OSV News classification is A-II -- adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG -- parental guidance suggested. Some material may not be suitable for children. (OSV News photo/Warner Bros.)

Movie Review: ‘A Minecraft Movie’

April 4, 2025
By Kurt Jensen
OSV News
Filed Under: Movie & Television Reviews

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NEW YORK (OSV News) – Motion pictures based on popular video games may have found their perfected form in “A Minecraft Movie” (Warner Bros.).

The film is unrelentingly upbeat and undistracted by manufactured sentiment. Its positive mood is struck and sustained, moreover, without resort to the cheap jokes or occasional vulgarity that often plague such adaptations.

Rather than follow the easy path of anthropomorphizing video characters, the filmmakers instead take a group of people who are frustrated with the paths of their lives in the real world and insert them into a kinetic 3D immersive version of the Swedish game’s landscape where they learn to achieve their goals.

Since their source material is the best-selling video game of all time, the quintet of screenwriters — Chris Bowman, Hubbel Palmer, Neil Widener, Gavin James and Chris Galletta — assume the pool of veteran players-turned-moviegoers is large enough for them to get away with the occasional in-joke. But even newcomers can savor the nuances on offer here.

Director Jared Hess’ production is not the type of picture from which viewers expect to take away an especially meaningful message. But it does carry with it an implied theme about better living through gameplay — in other words, you’re not just killing time, you’re building your life.

In the game, protagonist Steve, one of only two playable human characters, has a dark backstory about being the lone survivor of a worldwide virus. There’s none of that here.

On the contrary, Jack Black gives us a perpetually optimistic — albeit initially dissatisfied — version of the character. His Steve longs to escape the drudgery of being a doorknob salesman and become a miner instead.

Steve gets his opportunity when he comes across the glowing blue cube known within the game as the Orb of Dominance and finds that it opens a portal to a utopian place called The Overworld. Here, players construct their own mini-environments. They also interact with blocky people and animals.

Among the latter are creatures called piglins. The inhabitants of an evil empire known as the Nether, piglins are on a greedy quest for gold.

Steve is eventually joined by a group of other visitors to the Overwrold who are just as happy as he is to leave their unfulfilling pasts behind them. Garrett (Jason Momoa), an arcade video-game champ from decades ago, has fallen on hard times. Failed real estate agent Dawn (Danielle Brooks) wants to be a zookeeper.

For their part, youthful siblings Henry (Sebastian Hansen) and Natalie (Emma Myers) share a belief that their lives have taken a wrong turn. Additionally, Henry finds himself mocked at school for his creative impulses.

There’s no fear of that in this dimension. Having characterized the Overworld as “the biggest sandbox in the universe,” Steve observes, “Creativity in this world is the key to survival.”

Ultimately, of course, the ensemble of characters must head for home, and their return journey is, unsurprisingly, reminiscent of “The Wizard of Oz.” As in that classic, the cast learn lessons along the way and discover talents they didn’t previously know they had.

The film contains intense action sequences and some scenes of cartoonish violence. The OSV News classification is A-II – adults and adolescents. The Motion Picture Association rating is PG — parental guidance suggested. Some material may be inappropriate for children.

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Kurt Jensen

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