lego dc universe cartoon network

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Lego Dc Universe Cartoon Network

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WARNING: This page contains titles inappropriate for underage viewers. Update My Parental Controls. Programmes de la nuit Ninjago : Masters Of Spinjitzu Le monde incroyable de Gumball Teen Titans Go ! Ne m'appelez pas Princesse ! Winston Steinburger et Sir Dudley Ding DongFair Use (Comic Covers) Cover Art (Textless) Image Cartoon Network Action Pack #66(March, 2012) Cartoon Network Action Pack Vol 1 66: Used for purposes of illustration in an educational article about the entity represented by the image. The image is used as a means of visual identification of this article topic. As the subject is protected by trademark or copyright, a free use alternative does not exist.This week in the world of cartoons, we spend our last week in the late summer Bermuda Triangle of TV animation. Enjoy clips from Futurama, Teen Titans Go!, an upcoming Lego Star Wars special, and a few shows that aren't normally in the roundup, while some of our faves are on hiatus.




Regular Show, Adventure Time, and Beware the Batman will be back next week. As always — minor spoilers ahead! In the penultimate episode of Futurama, Emilia Clark (Daenerys from Game of Thrones!) voices Zoidberg's love interest. Check out the Mother of Dragons in action, in this clip.For an in-depth look at this week's episode, check out our recap. The adult Regular Show? Both shows take place at a park, but that is where the similarities end. The second season begins this Tuesday Night on Comedy Central. Warning - there's some adult content in this clip.A second installment of the Lego-animated Yoda Chronicles airs this coming Wednesday night on Cartoon Network. Watch this — it's gonna be fun.In this new episode from this coming Tuesday, Cyborg and Beast Boy go to battle to decide their favorite food. This battle includes futuristic PowerPoint presentations and dancing burritos.The Metal Men, the best team of super-heroes in the DC Universe based on the periodic table, get a turn in this week's DC Nation short.




Every wanted to see Ego the Living Planet wage war against a bunch of Hulks in space? Ego... umm... looks interesting.Top image courtesy of DC Comics and Cartoon Network. Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H. airs Sunday mornings on DisneyXD. Futurama airs Wednesday night on Comedy Central. airs Thursday nights on Cartoon Network.★ TouchArcade needs your help. Click here to support us on Patreon. The Next Cartoon Network Game Is 'Teeny Titans', a 'Pokemon'-like Game with DC Comics Characters Coming This Month The Cartoon Network has been giving us some really good games recently. From Card Wars - Adventure Time to Attack the Light and Flipped Out - The Powerpuff Girls, CN has been leveraging its IPs quite successfully, and its next game seems equally as promising. According to a post on our forums today, the next game from Cartoon Network and Grumpyface Studios is called Teeny Titans and is coming in June. We knew the game would be coming this summer, but it's good to hear the game is actually coming out this month. 




Teeny Titans is a collectible character battle game where you hunt for, train, and battle various DC Comics' heroes and villains. The game will also include original voicework from the full Teen Titans Go! Just the reference to Teen Titans and DC Comics is probably going to be enough for most players since the Teen Titans GO! TV series is pretty entertaining and DC heroes (despite some recent stumbles in the movie theaters) are always fun. Teeny Titans brings a new real-time RPG battle system to the table, and the game is - as you probably suspected by now - Cartoon Network's take on Pokemon. The game will be premium with no IAPs and will offer over 12 hours of gameplay. Between collecting all those characters and the (hopefully) fun battle system, this is sure to be a winner. Jump over to the forum page to see more of the game. Teeny Titans - A Teen Titans... Warner Bros. and DC Entertainment in Partnership with Mattel Launch DC Super Hero Girls, a New Super Hero Universe Designed Just for Girls, Slated for Fall 2015




Zoe Ball's hips rule her out of Strictly Come Dancing Zoe Ball's hips rule her out of Strictly Come Dancing Celebrity Juice will return with LIVE episode Big Bang stars 'take pay cuts for Bialik and Rauch' 9 saddest TV moments to make you cry 22 of the most ridiculously bad game show answers ever Is BBC's The Replacement the best new drama of 2017? We all know that miraculous resurrections are pretty commonplace in the world of comic books, but here's one we didn't see coming...The award-winning animated series Young Justice is being revived, three years after it was cancelled by Cartoon Network.Warner Bros Animation has confirmed that work is under way on a third season, though the series is yet to find a new network, reports Deadline. Want up-to-the-minute entertainment and tech news? Just hit 'Like' on our Digital Spy Facebook page and 'Follow' on our @digitalspy Twitter account and you're all set.With The LEGO Batman Movie, a shiny, irresistible delight, blockbuster flicks have perfected their ideal form.




Movies were Legos before the Danes invented Legos. Paintings and poetry and novels are handcrafted toys; the artist whittles alone. But films are masterworks of assembly, with actors and costumers and set-builders and gaffers and truck drivers and kids who fetch water bottles all snapping into place. The credits thank thousands of bricks. Which makes it wondrous when the final construction still feels like one designer's personal dream, or when there are funny pieces out of place that somehow, together, feel exactly right. The LEGO Batman Movie isn't one of those oddities. It's a mass-engineered monument, a giddy whiz-bang feat of plastic, built to make a half-billion dollars. And what's wrong with that? If you've ever tried to reconstruct the picture on the box, you know precision deserves applause. Nine writers have their fingerprints on the blueprint, five directly on the screenplay and four from comic books in which, in 1941, our antihero Batman and his frenemy Superman first met while raising money for war orphans.




Now their relationship has deteriorated so badly that Batman (Will Arnett) starts off the movie howling, "Come at me, bro!" At least that's friendlier than last year's Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice, when the aggro recluse stomped toward Supes growling, "Do you bleed?" In this movie, there’s no threat of blood. At worst, these Lego rivals can snap an arm socket. But this Batman is that Batman, too. He's all Batmen, the franchise having decided after nine decades and eight films to stop fretting with timelines and reboots, and embrace the existentialist idea that the Bat-character is just another black brick that can be swapped out at will. This bragging Batman takes credit for every time his manflesh incarnations have bested the Joker. "Remember that time with two boats?" he smirks. "The time with the parade and the Prince music?" When this Bruce Wayne preens to redheaded new police commissioner Barbara Gordon (Rosario Dawson) that he's been "Gotham's most eligible bachelor, like, 90 years in a row," he means it.




(And when he gawks at Babs's ass, he drools over two round holes, as though she's Nicki Minaj–meets–antimatter.) That 90-year boast doesn't make Bruce a great-great-great-grandpa. He still rages like a toddler, forcing aggravated Alfred the butler to read Setting Limits for Your Out-of-Control Child. This welded-together leading man is all ages and no ages. Ben Affleck or Christian Bale couldn't get away with this time-transcending gambit. Actors are too real. But a Lego leading man can lay claim to everything, including square pecs and nine-pack abs. This Batman is a synthesis who's synthetic three times over, cartoon lore begetting factory-stamped acrylonitrile butadiene styrene begetting pixels. He's the perfect mini-figurehead for a film that's truly post-human. Director Chris McKay comes from Cartoon Network's Robot Chicken, where he spent years warping playground icons to his will. McKay specializes in sacrilege. He made G.I. Joe hire a sniper named Fumbles and forced the Fraggles to beat each other to death.




Let Jared Leto chew his nails trying to equal Heath Ledger's Joker. McKay's content to imagine the green-haired goon, voiced by Zach Galifianakis, as the kind of crybaby who'd weep when a restaurant is out of tater tots. Yet instead of spoofing Batman by revealing him to be, say, a softie who loves kitten GIFs, McKay and the writers lean into Wayne’s hermitic mystique, taking it as self-seriously as he does. A lonely jock tycoon living in a mansion with his butler? The movie sees that trope and raises you one microwave lobster thermidor, a billionaire's bachelor dinner, to be chomped, shell and all. The echo is the saddest. This Joker commits crimes because he wants Batman to admit the two have a special connection. It’s gotta mean something that their grudge matches have dragged on for decades. (A duration which, as Barbara points out, proves that Batman is a mediocre crime fighter who's good at winning battles and lousy at winning wars.) Batman denies their relationship — or "’ship," as he's too bitter for four whole syllables of affection.




"I like to fight around," grunts Batman. "You mean nothing to me. The joke isn't just on the Joker, who can't keep his red lower lip from quivering. It's on our miserable modern Batman, a narcissist compressed into four centimeters of mockable gloom. Warner Bros. seems delighted it doesn't have to coddle a man-size ego like, oh, Zack Snyder's. It uses The LEGO Batman Movie to apologize for last year's DC Universe mistakes. "Get a bunch of criminals to fight other criminals? What a stupid idea!" mutters Batman in a swipe at Suicide Squad. (Depending on how long the cartoon took to animate, that might mean the studio knew Suicide Squad was a mistake while it was making it.) Ostensibly, LEGO Batman is about Bruce Wayne rescuing Gotham with his accidentally adopted ward, Robin (Michael Cera), an attention-starved moppet who doesn't mind that his caretaker takes all the credit. (When Robin dodges a death trap, Batman compliments himself, beaming, “Unbelievable obeying!”) Really, LEGO Batman’s mission is to rescue the entire DC franchise, using painted smiles as shields — an ambitious double whammy, like bolting a helicopter to a pirate ship.

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