![]() Still with me? This bit of information prompts other kinds of questions, the most important one of them being about gender and the three progenitors. ![]() ![]() Why? Science says that the Minions’ genetic diversity wouldn’t be possible if they reproduced asexually, so they had to have gotten busy in some way or another.Ĭhamary said that the clip “reveals that there are three different larval forms of the Minions - they each have different body types, or what biologists call ‘morphs.’ There’s the Kevin-Type, which is the tall, two-eyed one the Stuart-Type, which is the one-eyed one with medium height and then there’s the Bob-Type, the short one with two eyes.” (Stuart, Kevin and Bob are, as you can probably tell, different main characters in the series). The question remains, did these progenitors reproduce asexually, or, well, together? According to evolutionary biologist JV Chamary, the Minions probably had to have reproduced sexually. It gets a bit convoluted as VanHooker really dives deeply into details and playful scientific inquiry, but the gist is this: he suggests, using the introductory scene from the 2015 film Minions which illustrates their evolution, that the Minions most likely originated with three single-celled progenitors that date back to the primordial soup. He consulted an evolutionary biologist for answers. Brian VanHooker, a writer for MEL, asked the (peculiar! but necessary!) question that we should’ve been wondering all along: how exactly did they reproduce? Which came first, the chicken or the egg, the earth or the Minion? If you’ve ever watched any of the Minions movies and wondered how they developed such a large, thriving population, you wouldn’t be the only one.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |