Jump directly to the Content

News&Reporting

Hints of C. S. Lewis in 'Despicable Me'?

You bet: When Gru gets the girls, he gets the moon too

My good friend Frank Smith of Charlottesville, Virginia, is a big fan of Despicable Me. (Me too, by the way.) Frank has seen it three times now, and after his most recent viewing, he came away with a pretty cool observation, comparing one of the film's main story developments with a passage from C. S. Lewis. Here's what Frank wrote in a recent e-mail (spoiler alert):

I'm always moved to tears at the end. And you know, there's something pretty good in there. When Gru gives back the moon to save the girls, ostensibly he gives up his lifetime dream – for something much better, of course, but still it's a loss. Pearl of great price stuff. But that scene at the end where he and the girls ride the platform to the roof and stand looking at the moon in the sky, silhouetted against it, enjoying it . . . I realized that he ended up getting the moon too, in the right way – untarnished, unstained by violence or greed, to enjoy forever. Like Annie Oakley in the musical, he "has the moon at night" to ...
Subscriber access only You have reached the end of this Article Preview
To continue reading, subscribe now. Subscribers have full digital access.
Already a CT subscriber? for full digital access.
Posted by:

Read These Next

close
hide this
Access The Archives

Member-Only Access

Subscribe to Christianity Today to continue reading this article from CT's digital archives.

Subscribe

Already a subscriber? to continue reading.