Smurfs

Smurfs (2025) is a loud, chaotic, and creatively bankrupt mess stuffed with pointless subplots, bad humor, and nonstop corporate pandering.
6659
Starring
Nick Offerman, Rihanna, Kurt Russell
Director
Chris Miller
Rating
PG
Genre
Action, Adventure, Children, Fantasy
Release date
July 18, 2025
Overall Score
Rating Overview
Story/Plot/Script
Visuals/Cinematography
Performance
Direction
Age Appropriate
Parent Appeal
Non-Wokeness
Rating Summary
For a movie about magic, Smurfs has none of it. With new subplots rapid-fired out on an average of one every 9 minutes, and a bloated cast of wasted talent, this overstuffed under conceived disaster is barely worthy of being a third direct-to-video sequel.

In the 2025 Smurfs movie, Papa Smurf is kidnapped by the evil wizard Gargamel’s even eviler brother Razamel, who is seeking a magical book that will allow him to control the world. Smurfette, voiced by Rihanna, and a team of Smurfs, including No Name, Ken, and Ron, go on a dimension-hopping adventure through the real world to rescue him. With the help of new friends like Mama Poot and a magical book named Jaunty, they confront the wizards and uncover secrets about their identities to save the universe.

Smurfs REVIEW

Many modern screenwriters seem to believe that stuffing their films with every subplot from their brainstorming sessions is an adequate substitute for layered and cohesive storytelling that builds organically. They are wrong. However, when you consider that Smurfs screenwriter Pam Brady co-wrote alongside Trey Parker and Matt Stone on both the South Park series and movie, as well as Team America, and what strong proponents of storytelling via logical progression those two are, Smurf's threadbare plot-weaving is particularly egregious.

Smurfs (2025) is the narrative equivalent of dumping a bucket of Legos on the floor and calling the pile a boat. Without exaggeration, Pam and her team crapped out an average of one new plot/subplot every 9 minutes, and each with barely enough effort to be labeled "minimal" and even less artistry or creativity.

Yet, somehow, with ten or more flimsy stories unfolding simultaneously, Team Pam managed to squeeze in no fewer than four Smurf-themed Rihanna music videos/product placements throughout. However, director Chris Miller can't even handle those. There's a scene that takes place in a French discotheque, and it's clear that no music or even a metronome was playing to help the extras keep a uniform rhythm. I wouldn't be surprised if Miller told them all to think of their favorite dance song and let loose.

Not even the star-studded cast (B and C-listers) can do more with this disasterously bad script than phone it in, with one exception. The mentally ill trans activist JP Karliak, who voices Gargamel's younger brother, and this film's main villain, goes all out, delivering a dynamic performance that probably could have been a fun one with a script worth more than toilet paper and a director who wasn't asleep during filming.

When you boil it down, Smurfs (2025) is a giant steaming pile of smurf that's best scooped up and dumped in the trash bin.

 

Parental Notes

PARENTAL NOTES

Important Information for Parents

Our Parental Notes flag the material parents may want to know about before pressing play, including profanity, blasphemy, adult content, extreme violence, frightening intensity, hyper-stimulating sequences, and other family-content concerns.

UNLOCK PARENTAL NOTES.Profanity, blasphemy, adult content, extreme violence, hyper-stimulating intensity, and more.
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James Carrick

James Carrick is a passionate film enthusiast with a degree in theater and philosophy. James approaches dramatic criticism from a philosophic foundation grounded in aesthetics and ethics, offering insight and analysis that reveals layers of cinematic narrative with a touch of irreverence and a dash of snark.

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