lego spiderman ideas

lego spiderman ideas

lego spiderman car

Lego Spiderman Ideas

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Lego Ideas (formerly known as Lego Cuusoo) is a website run by Chaordix and The Lego Group, which allows users to submit ideas for Lego products to be turned into potential sets available commercially, with the original designer receiving 1% of the royalties.[1] It started in 2008 as an offshoot of the Japanese website Cuusoo. Lego Ideas was first introduced as an offshoot of the Japanese website Cuusoo, produced as a collaboration between that company and The Lego Group. Titled Lego Cuusoo, the site was labeled a beta site and remained so until the unveiling of Lego Ideas as a finished product.[2] In 2014, the platform moved to Chaordix. Users express their idea by combining a written description of the idea and a sample Lego model that demonstrates the concept into a project page. Once the page is published it is viewable to other users. The goal of every project is to be supported by 10,000 different users, which would then make the project eligible for review. At first, projects would be kept on the Cuusoo/Ideas website for up to two years and then taken down if the project did not reach the 10,000 required votes of support.




Lego Ideas later changed the threshold to include a minimum number of 1,000 votes in the first year after submission or the project would expire, followed by six months to reach 5,000 and then another six months to reach the 10,000 supported votes. Originally, project submissions were allowed to be about anything and had no limits on the size and style of project. After sets began to be rejected with stated reasons, Lego Ideas announced restrictions on content including the use of no new part molds, banning intellectual properties owned by competing toy companies, and adult content. Lego Ideas further restricted project submissions in June 2016 by limiting the size of the project, any project replicating a life-size weapon, and any project based on an intellectual property already produced as a set by Lego Ideas/Cuusoo. All eligible projects are collectively reviewed in the order of whichever projects hit 10,000 supporters within any of the three tri-annual deadlines of May, September, or January.




Due to the increasing number of project submissions based on ideas that the Lego Company would reject, Lego Ideas has refined its submission standards over the years. Since its inception, a number of sets that have reached the 10,000 vote threshold have been rejected during the review for various reasons. Some rejected sets have been based on specific intellectual properties were rejected due to the content matter presented. Anything which contains alcohol, sex, drugs, religious references, post-World War II warfare or based on a first-person shooter is deemed inappropriate for younger Lego fans.[1] IPs that have been rejected for this reason have been based on Firefly[5] and Shaun of the Dead. Other projects which have been rejected include ones based on My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic due to the property being owned by rival toy manufacturer Hasbro,[7] certain sets based on The Legend of Zelda due to the need to create too many original molds, although Lego did not completely rule out other projects based on the franchise,[8] and a Sandcrawler set for the Ultimate Collector Series due to The Lego Group's ongoing collaboration with Lucasfilm on Lego




In the first 2015 review, announced in October 2015, no projects were selected for the first time[10] as the many projects were rejected for various reasons. Many of these projects would not have met the revised submission standards issued in June 2016. If the product is cleared for production, it is developed and later released as an official set under the "Lego Ideas" banner. Users that have their projects produced receive ten copies of the final set, as well as a 1% royalty of the product's net sales. Currently fifteen sets have been produced and nineteen sets have been announced: Set based on an original idea Set based on an existing theme/license or intellectual property Sets are listed in order of announcement. Bold line indicates when branding changed from Cuusoo to Ideas ^ a b cThe LEGO Movie Directors May Make An Animated Spider-Man Film, Get The Details Filmmakers Phil Lord and Chris Miller have created a very solid working relationship with the folks over at Sony.




Not only did they make both of the incredibly successful 21 Jump Street movies working for the studio, but they also first directed, then produced, respectively, the Cloudy With A Chance of Meatballs films for Sony Pictures Animation. Everything has worked out pretty great when the two sides have worked together in the past, so it makes a degree of sense that the company might be willing to trust the duo with piece of its biggest superhero property. The Wall Street Journal has learned from insiders that there are dealings going on behind the scenes at Sony Pictures that could wind up seeing Phil Lord and Chris Miller producing an animated Spider-Man movie. Any and all details about the project are currently being kept tightly under wraps, and it doesn't appear clear at this point if the film will ever actually be a thing, but the newspaper notes that studio executives are planning a major "Spidey summit" in January that is being planned to help work out what kind of future Spider-Man has on the big screen.




As a big fan of Phil Lord and Chris Miller's, this idea definitely has me excited - and it should be mentioned that the two filmmakers do already have at least some experience working with superheroes. When the two directors made The LEGO Movie for Warner Bros., they not only included Batman as a lead character (voiced by Will Arnett), but also brought in Superman, Green Lantern, Wonder Woman and more in for bit parts. As producers of the prospective animated Spider-Man movie they would certainly be a little less hands -on, but it's pretty clear that they have an appreciation for what comic books have to offer the cinematic landscape. As of right now, it's not exactly easy to say where an animated Spider-Man movie might fit into the franchise's development at Sony Pictures. Because The Amazing Spider-Man 2 didn't perform up to expectations this past summer, the future of the webslinger on the big screen has been a bit hazy. As of now, the next film actually scheduled on the company's slate is Drew Goddard's Sinister Six - which will see some of Spider-Man's greatest villains teaming up for their own movie - and that one is currently dated for November 11, 2016.

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