lego movie 2014 english subtitle

lego movie 2014 english subtitle

lego movie 2014 bt

Lego Movie 2014 English Subtitle

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Hi everyone, We are new to Amsterdam.  Glad to be here, even if having tough time transitioning.  Anyway, we have plans to go to the movies with some also newly expated friends but have a question. In the film listings it says The Lego Movie NL & The Lego Movie OV.  Does anyone know what NL and OV mean?   Hi everyone, We are new to Amsterdam.   TimothyGeelhoed said:Welcome to the Netherlands! I recently moved to Den-Haag with my husband a few months ago. NL means that the movie will be in Dutch and OV means Original Version. That means the Lego movie will be shown in English with Dutch subtitles. Many cartoon/animation movies here in the Netherlands have OV (English) and NL (Dutch verions). Let me tell you about one of my favorite features in the Netherlands that I really love. If you have a visa or permit to stay 4 months or longer, you can get a Pathe Unlimited or Unlimited Gold card which are really good if you go to the movies often. A non IMAX or 3D movie cost 10 euros per person.




With the Pathe Unlimited, it cost only 19 euros a month per person and you will be ale to see as MANY movies as you want a month and as many as you want a day. It's really awesome since if you go to the movies 2 times in a month, you've already paid for the card. If you want to see IMAX or 3D movies, they do charge a small fee. They also have Unlimted Gold which is 26 euros per person a month. With the Unlimited Gold, you can see as many movies as you want a month INCLUDING IMAX and 3D movies. Another cool feature about them is you can reserve you're seats in advance on the Pathe website, but you will need to go to the theater a little early to get you're seats in advance (The lastest is 30 minutes before the movie.) You also get discounts on snacks and drinks. The unlimted gives 10% and the Unlimted Gold gives 25% off. It really is a nice thing to have if you love going to the movies! Me and my husband absolutely love the Pathe Unlimited since we are always at the movies. Hi, That sounds very cool!  




Thanks for the advice.  We try to see movies often, so we will look into the memberships.The Gotham-saving hero is back and, though he’s tiny enough to fit in your pocket, The LEGO Batman Movie star is aiming for an opening weekend of super proportions. The spinoff of 2014’s surprise hit The LEGO Movie (Will Arnett’s Batman was enough of a scene-stealer to nab his own feature film) hits theaters Friday, and so far, the Caped Crusader has garnered positive reviews from critics. The star-studded cast, also including Zach Galifianakis, Michael Cera, Rosario Dawson, and Ralph Fiennes, also helps to round out the film. EW’s Chris Nashawaty gave the movie a B+, calling it a bit more “devious” than its predecessor, and praised it as “irresistibly clever.” See more of Nashawaty’s review below, as well as excerpts from other critics. Chris Nashawaty, Entertainment Weekly “Arnett’s hilariously humorless Batman turns out to be the fun-size star of what’s basically a comic-book movie for kids who are too young to see comic-book movies…




Good thing that beneath all of the semi-Dark Knight propaganda is an irresistibly clever and visually intoxicating adventure that once again shows why it’s more fulfilling to play with friends than brood alone in your Batcave.” Jesse Hassenger, A.V. Club “In rampaging through Batman mythologies like a child through a playroom, the movie makes an admirable attempt to reconcile kid-friendly adventures with the character’s psychological pain. Arnett plays Batman as, essentially, a young Bat-fan determined to maintain the invincibility of his favorite hero (in this case, himself) even as reality encroaches on his lone-vigilante fantasy; it’s no accident that Alfred can be glimpsed reading a child-rearing book at one point. Cera syncs with this interpretation by playing up Robin’s more innocent childlike qualities. He finds such endearment doing so that despite the spoofy trappings, this Robin rises above mere parody to become a flat-out charming iteration of the superhero sidekick.”




“The characters are Lego minifigures with pegs for heads and crudely etched faces that barely move, yet they have more personality than the majority of human actors. Most delicious of all: The Lego Batman Movie comes on like a kid-friendly sendup of the adult world, yet there’s a dizzying depth to its satirical observations that grows right out of the spectacularly fake settings, which are hypnotic to look at but have the effect of putting postmodern quotation marks around…everything.” Manohla Dargis, New York Times “One reason that the first Lego movie worked as well as it did is that its novelty and trippier moments conveyed a sense of play and unboundedness, which is part of the appeal of Legos themselves. (It’s the better movie and ad.) The Batman story, by contrast, proves to be a prison, one its creators never escape. They toss around the superstuff and giggle at the legend, but they’re finally confined by the superhero story and its corporate sanctity.




It’s a bottom-line bummer.” Michael Rechtshaffen, The Hollywood Reporter “While on the subject of teamwork, the writers — including novelist Seth Grahame-Smith (Pride and Prejudice and Zombies), Chris McKenna & Erik Sommers (Community) and Jared Stern & John Wittington (the upcoming animated Netflix series Green Eggs and Ham) — find no shortage of satirical targets, taking sly aim at everything from Suicide Squad to Donald Trump’s taxes. But they and director McKay prove less adept at finding that terrific balance between the blissfully inspired and a non-syrupy sweetness that made the first brick-and-knob feature excursion so successful.” “The film, directed by Chris McKay, is a spin-off of 2014 hit The Lego Movie, an unapologetic product unapologetically selling a product. Sometimes brash, sometimes wearying, that movie at least felt like it was made by the brightest kid in the class. Not so for Lego Batman.” “Much of the material hinges on Batman’s un-superhero-like behavior, as when he throws a childlike tantrum before the stoic butler Alfred (Ralph Fiennes, dry as gin) or stands at the Wayne Manor microwave while his meal rotates for two boring minutes.

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