Metacritic Film

Monsters, Inc.

Starring Billy Crystal, John Goodman, James Coburn, Jennifer Tilly, Bonnie Hunt, Mary Gibbs, and Steve Buscemi

MPAA RATING: G for General Audiences

Buena Vista Pictures
Family/Kids
88 minutes | Color
USA
Released In Theaters November 2, 2001

The Academy Award-winning creators of "Toy Story" open the door to a frightfully funny world of monsters and mayhem and scare up lots of laughs in their new movie, Monsters, Inc. (Disney/Pixar)

WRITTEN BY
Dan Gerson
Andrew Stanton

DIRECTED BY
Peter Docter
David Silverman (co-director)
Lee Unkrich (co-director)

Overall Metascore

This is a weighted, normalized average of all individual scores given by critics, on a scale of 0 (worst) to 100 (best).

78 / 100

Critic Reviews

100 New Times (L.A.)
As giddy and antic as any great Warner Bros. cartoon of the 1930s and '40s -- it bears seeing more than once, if only to allow for the sight gags that play second fiddle to the plot, a rarity in animation -- but also resonant and real. In other words, it's the perfect movie.
100 Rolling Stone
It's the Pixar animators who keep grown-ups as riveted as the kids with visual marvels that dazzle and delight.
100 LA Weekly
The story's charming, the set pieces are wildly inventive, and even the throwaway one-liners, about everything from movie-animation pioneer Ray Harryhausen to the old Oscar Meyer jingle, are hilarious.
90 Wall Street Journal
Who doesn't need what this movie has to give?
90 Newsweek
A terrific piece of work: smart, inventive and executed with state-of-the-art finesse.
90 The New York Times
There hasn't been a film in years to use creative energy as efficiently as Monsters, Inc.
88 Chicago Tribune
The climax, featuring what's essentially a suspended roller coaster of closet doors, is as thrilling as it is imaginative.
88 Charlotte Observer
It comes from Pixar, the animation studio that scored with the "Toy Story" series and "A Bug's Life," and it has more zip and a tad less soul than those predecessors.
88 Baltimore Sun
The movie may not be perfect, but it's jam-packed with goodies -- like a breakfast cereal fun-pack with a prize on every box-top.
88 USA Today
Though the comedy is sometimes more frenetic than inspired and viewer emotions are rarely touched to any notable degree, the movie is as visually inventive as its Pixar predecessors.
88 Miami Herald
Movies like Monsters, Inc. literally make you feel like a kid again, marveling at the joyously inventive sights before you, and that's a feat that should not be taken lightly.
88 Philadelphia Inquirer
"Shrek" is a scintilla funnier, "Toy Story 2" a hair's breadth more poignant, but "MI" is every bit as imaginative and lovable as these other contemporary animation classics.
88 New York Post
Smart, funny and ingeniously detailed with terrific vocal teamwork.
83 Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Not quite up to the exalted level of the two predecessors ("Toy Story" and "Toy Story 2"), be assured it's still the most eye-popping and thoroughly entertaining animated film to come down the pike so far this year.
80 Film Threat
Confirms that despite all the technical tools at their disposal, one thing counts head and shoulders above razzle-dazzle eye candy (or anything else, for that matter): the story and characters, and Monsters, Inc. introduces worthy additions to the Pixar pantheon.
80 Time
"Shrek," this film's prime competition for the first Animated Feature Oscar, is a synoptic parody of fairy tales. In Monsters, Inc. the gags aren't as spot-on but the technique is miles ahead. The vision is grander and warmer.
80 Washington Post
Whatever its ultimate position on the greatest hits list, Monsters, Inc. is supple and technologically sophisticated entertainment.
80 New York Magazine
Much more kid-oriented than any other computer-animated movie thus far. In other words, it's much more Disneyish. I enjoyed it.
80 Chicago Reader
An unprecedented friendship between a monster and a child leads to an amazing chase scene.
78 Austin Chronicle
The spirited interplay between Goodman and Crystal is both wacky and, dare I say, charming.
75 Chicago Sun-Times
Monsters, Inc. is cheerful, high-energy fun, and like the other Pixar movies, has a running supply of gags and references aimed at grownups.
75 New York Daily News
Rarely does an animated character merge as perfectly with the persona of the actor providing his voice as the star of Monsters, Inc. does with John Goodman.
75 Christian Science Monitor
The movie's cutest twist is that the monsters are more scared of kids than kids are of them, because they think human children are toxic.
75 San Francisco Chronicle Carla Meyer
Funny and sweet enough to delight kids and inventive enough to satisfy adults.
75 Entertainment Weekly
Monsters, Inc. has got that swing, that zippity, multilevel awareness of kids'-eye sensibilities and adult-pitched humor.
70 Slate
Doesn’t have the warmth of the Toy Story pictures, but it still boasts a very entertaining slapstick-farce structure and some neat hairy, oozy, tendrilly creatures.
70 Salon.com
It's a nice movie. But Disney has never learned that "nice," especially in comedy, is a negative virtue.
70 Variety
Clever and jokey in a vaudeville sort of way, but lacks the heart and sheer imagination of the company's best work for Disney, "Toy Story 2" and "A Bug's Life."
67 Portland Oregonian
It's a good movie, mind you, with great bits in it, but it still falls short of rapture.
63 Boston Globe
By any other standard, the creatures in Monsters, Inc. would be impressive. But by the high standard Pixar not only set itself, but invented, they're only ordinary.
60 Washington Post
Marvels of animation abound in Monsters, Inc. -- when it comes to irreverent humor and real heart, Monsters doesn't quite measure up.
60 Los Angeles Times
Though it has its charms, Monsters, Inc. does not measure up. As a childhood entertainment it is certainly fine, but Pixar's celebrated lure for adults is largely absent.
60 TV Guide
The funny lines fall flat and the relationships and conversations among adult characters are straight out of 1950s sitcoms. Now that's scary.
50 Village Voice
But Monsters, Inc. -- directed by Pixar soldier Pete Docter, not by master digital comic John Lasseter -- turns out to be stingy on context, commentary, and the prism-ing view of pop culture that made the earlier films mint.

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