The Bad Guys Review: A Delightful Animated Ocean’s 11 for the Whole Family


I love it when animated movies catch you by surprise. When you go in with low expectations or none whatsoever and emerge overwhelmingly joyous, it is a priceless cinematic experience. The Good Guys is such as blast. It’s an animated Ocean 11 for the kiddie set, but at the same time, this is very much an enjoyable experience for all ages.

The premise is a crew of high-end crew who are as thick as thieves come and they think they have the heist of the lifetime—but it’s not as simple it as seems. At the center of this is Wolf, played impeccably by Oscar winner Sam Rockwell, who is as smooth and confident as they get. He is unquestionably the leader. Thank George Clooney and Frank Sinatra put together. Meanwhile, the seemingly (and rightfully so) Awkwafina excels as the tarantula who has a knack for hacking that comes in handing—pretty much on every single gig. Craig Robinson of The Office fame stars as a giant shark named well, Shark—who pushes himself beyond what we’ve seen before, and Marc Maron effortlessly slithers into his role as Snake. Lastly, there’s the stellar performance of Anthony Ramos as Piranha.

The cast is filled out by Flight of Concords star Richard Ayoade, Zazie Beets of Deadpool2 fame, who plays Diane Foxington, the Governor, is more multi-layered than one would think. Of course, who could omit The Famous Mrs. Maisel’s breakout star Alex Bornstein—who might we add is also the voice of Lois Griffin on Family Guy. She commands every scene she is in.

What is so fascinating and compelling about this film is how it is truly a redemption story and that is a good message and theme for every single one of us. The idea that it is just waiting for the right time for each of us to discover it is about as universal as they come, but not one we see all too often in film as it is delivered by The Bad Guys. As the movie commences, these are crooks of the highest order. Maybe, just maybe, they might find a conscious by the close of the film and must change their moniker change to The Good Guys. Maybe.

The idea of redemption is a powerful one with children. Informing the younger generation that despite your present or your past, your future is unwritten. That is a powerful message. It is one not to be taken likely, even though it comes from a light-hearted animated film. Never doubt how much these movies resonate with children. They may struggle with academics until they learn their way, but one thing that hits them right in the gut is the difference between being good and bad. The lesson here is that no matter your circumstances or your actions, it is never too late to turn the leaf. It is never too late to at least try to be a better soul and the act of the effort is what counts. It is powerful, impeccably important, and kudos to filmmakers for making it the crux of The Bad Guys.

Aquafina is everywhere right now, and deservedly so—is there anything she cannot achieve? She grounds the crew with her tech-savvy spider and keeps it real. Without her, I swear the crew would go off the rails.

Rockwell is sensational. He is as cool as ice. In fact, the entire team feels like an animated version of Ocean’s 11. It’s a heist movie with a moral compass, i.e., perfect for our youngest viewers and it never plays down to them or forgets that adults will be in the audience too. There are more parent-geared jokes than one would expect, but they are not in the slightest inappropriate for kids—they’ll just go over their collective heads. The way that Rockwell embodies Wolf, he is every bit the vicious predator, but he’s starting to realize there might be more to life than robberies.

Beets rocks as the Governor (and a secret character) who is as much in command of her city as she is sure that Wolf is debonair and someone you would like to know. The Deadpool 2 star plays it close to the vest and there’s a reveal towards the final act that you will not see coming.

Ramos tackles the farting Piranha (yes, you read that correctly) with panache and makes it one of the more laughable characters of the crew, which is much needed for a children’s animated comedy. At its heart, which is exactly what The Bad Guys is Lastly, Craig Robinson goes out of his comfort zone to tackle the shark part and it is nothing like you’ve seen him in before.

Director Pierre Perfiel has helmed a project with a steady hand and never forgetting the ebbs and flows that make a great narrative, regardless of whether it’s animated or live-action. He has helped create a world that is as slick and cool as The Rat Pack patrolling Las Vegas back in the day. We hope this film does well because we’d love to see my zaniness from this immaculately conceived crew.

Grade: B+