ILLUMINATION COMPANY












ILLUMINATION COLABORATORS



Illumination (formerly known as Illumination Entertainment) is an American computer animation studio, founded by Chris Meledandri in 2007. Illumination is owned by Meledandri and the Illumination brand is co-owned by Universal Pictures,[5][6][7] a division of Comcast through its wholly owned subsidiary NBCUniversal. Meledandri produces the films, while Universal finances and distributes them.[6] The studio is responsible for the Despicable Me, The Secret Life of Pets and Sing franchises and the film adaptations of Dr. Seuss‘ books The Lorax and How the Grinch Stole Christmas. The Minions, characters from the Despicable Me series, are the mascots of the studio.Illumination Logo used since 2017FormerlyIllumination Entertainment (2007–2017)TypeDivision[citation needed]IndustryAnimation
Motion pictures
Television specialsFoundedJanuary 17, 2007; 15 years agoFounderChris MeledandriHeadquarters
Santa Monica, California, U.S. Key people
OwnerNBCUniversal (Comcast)[citation needed] Number of employees100 (2016)[3]ParentUniversal PicturesDivisions
- Illumination Labs[4]
- Moonlight
SubsidiariesIllumination Studios ParisWebsiteOfficial website
Illumination has produced 12 feature films, with an average gross of $695.4 million per film. The studio’s highest-grossing films are Minions ($1.159 billion) and Despicable Me 3 ($1.034 billion). Both films are among the 50 highest-grossing films of all-time, and six of their films are among the 50 highest-grossing animated films.
illumination movies https://g.co/kgs/RjkFNG

The Illuminati control the entertainment industry worldwide. They go by the term Angels And Demons and create a wide variety of entertainment that illustrates the NEPHILIM angel and demon hybrids. These movies are designed to give us inspiration and reveal tricks, tactics and methods for fighting against evil forces. The physical violence in these movies is only symbolic. They illustrate the battles with our mind and words in combating evil forces. Death in these movies is also symbolic. It refers to the death of the mind, or when our mind loses the battle.
