the lego movie 2014 online

the lego movie 2014 online

the lego movie 2014 download

The Lego Movie 2014 Online

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The LEGO movie follows Emmet, who is on an epic quest to stop an evil tyrant from gluing the universe together, a journey for which he is hopelessly and hilariously underprepared. Will Arnett, Elizabeth Banks 1 hour, 40 minutes Available to watch on supported devices. Visit the LEGO Batman Store Discover the full range of LEGO products available on Amazon, including clothing, jewellery, homeware and more. Watch for 0.00 with a Prime membership Start your 30-day free trial Prefer to rent or buy? When renting, you have 30 days to start watching this video, and 48 hours to finish once started. By placing your order or clicking “Watch Now”, you agree to our Terms of Use. Sold by Amazon Video. 5 star1,1304 star1903 star682 star261 star52See all 1,466 customer reviewsTop Customer ReviewsAn irresistibly charming family adventure!Worth the wait ?|Everything is indeed awesome!| Most Recent Customer ReviewsSearch Customer Reviews The Lego Movie (2014)




6 February 2014 (Singapore) 4 more credits » 5269 news articles » A video game villain wants to be a hero and sets out to fulfill his dream, but his quest brings havoc to the whole arcade where he lives. The special bond that develops between plus-sized inflatable robot Baymax, and prodigy Hiro Hamada, who team up with a group of friends to form a band of high-tech heroes. Bruce Wayne must not only deal with the criminals of Gotham City, but also the responsibility of raising a boy he adopted. A rat who can cook makes an unusual alliance with a young kitchen worker at a famous restaurant. A family of undercover superheroes, while trying to live the quiet suburban life, are forced into action to save the world. After his swamp is filled with magical creatures, Shrek agrees to rescue Princess Fiona for a villainous lord in order to get his land back. When a criminal mastermind uses a trio of orphan girls as pawns for a grand scheme, he finds their love is profoundly changing him for the better.




When the newly crowned Queen Elsa accidentally uses her power to turn things into ice to curse her home in infinite winter, her sister, Anna, teams up with a mountain man, his playful reindeer, and a snowman to change the weather condition. A hot-shot race-car named Lightning McQueen gets waylaid in Radiator Springs, where he finds the true meaning of friendship and family. When Woody is stolen by a toy collector, Buzz and his friends vow to rescue him, but Woody finds the idea of immortality in a museum tempting. Ash Brannon, and 1 more credit » In order to power the city, monsters have to scare children so that they scream. However, the children are toxic to the monsters, and after a child gets through, 2 monsters realize things may not be what they think. David Silverman, and 1 more credit » Princess Fiona's parents invite her and Shrek to dinner to celebrate her marriage. If only they knew the newlyweds were both ogres. Kelly Asbury, and 1 more credit »




Cast overview, first billed only: Lord Business (voice) / President Business (voice) / The LEGO Movie is a 3D animated film which follows lead character, Emmet a completely ordinary LEGO mini-figure who is identified as the most "extraordinary person" and the key to saving the Lego universe. Emmet and his friends go on an epic journey to stop the evil tyrant, Lord Business. See All (59) » The story of a nobody who saved everybody Release Date: 6 February 2014 (Singapore) Also Known As: La gran aventura Lego Fox Studios, Moore Park, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia As Emmet is yelling at Wyldstyle to stop as they flee Bricksburg, the rotating street sign turbines of their improvised escape vehicle all momentary line up on "STOP." The cannonballs stored on Metal Beard's back vary in number between shots, and they reappear briefly after he's fired them. At first, he fires all but two, then all are gone, then all the cannonballs reappear before disappearing again.




He's coming, cover your butts. At the end credits, we hear the whole version of Batman's song and even one final version of "Everything is Awesome". References Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991) Written by Collin Hegna and Carl Werner Performed by Federale See more » Contribute to This PageMovie ReviewEmmet is an average nobody. I mean, we all have something that makes us someone, but Emmet doesn't really even have that. On the other hand, he's a very nice, very positive, very devoted average nobody with nothing. His favorite song is "Everything Is Awesome." It's a catchy tune he could listen to all day, and usually does. When he goes to work at his average construction job, building average skyscrapers for his big boss, President Business, why, Emmet can't help but smile ear to blocky ear. Then one day something happens that changes all that. Emmet runs back to the construction site after work to grab his prized instruction manual he left behind and spots this beautiful girl digging through the debris.




She's the most un-average girl he's ever seen. So much so that his jaw would have hit the floor if a painted-on jaw could do such a thing. Then, after he slips and takes a series of accidental tumbles—something pretty average for Emmet—the splendid girl mistakes him for "the most important person in the universe." (Otherwise known as the Special.) Emmet hasn't got a clue what that even means, but if she wants to talk to him about it, then that's super stupendous. Besides, maybe she can tell him what this big piece of something or other is that's stuck to his back. The girl's name, by the way, is Wyldstyle. How's that for unique? And she's a master builder who's able to snap together just about any blocky thing she can dream up. Wyldstyle takes Emmet to meet a wizard-like guy with a long white beard named Vitruvius. And he seems to think Emmet is this prophesized Special too. They also tell him this incredible story about President Business and an ancient relic called a Kragle and the coming of the end of the world … in three days!




It all seems so far-fetched and unbelievable and out of the ordinary. But Emmet's not going to complain or worry or even doubt any of it. For the first time in his very square life there are people who think he might be more than mediocre. And they just happen to be the most cool, smart and incredibly AWESOME people he's ever met! If they want him to be Special, then he'll work to make that true. He just has to piece it all together. [Connecting studs and plot spoilers are both contained in the following sections.]Positive You've figured out by now that Emmet is a perfectly ordinary guy who is pretty unexceptional in every way. (We find out that the people he works with hardly know him and in many cases can't even remember his name.) But when he gets singled out to be Special, he steps up in a big way. "When you told me I was important and special, that was the first time anybody had ever told me that," Emmet says to Wyldstyle, whose real name, we find out, is Lucy. "And I wanted to do everything I could to live up to that."




He goes so far as to even be willing to sacrifice his life to save those around him. That "embrace what is special about you" attitude permeates the movie and is repeated over and over. Emmet's choices eventually motivate the master builders (a group of individually talented block builders) to work together as a team, sacrifice for one another and stand up to fight what they consider to be an all-powerful evil. There's even a nice thread in here about the value of following instructions. Those are very nice messages indeed. And now we get to our first blocky spoiler: In the real world, you see, a young boy with a rich imagination is the creative force behind the whole adventure we're watching. And though his dad isn't initially too happy with him, the man eventually embraces the boy and admits that playing imaginatively—and together—is far more enjoyable than working alone on his grand LEGO hobby set.Spiritual There are a number of "relics" imbued with special power that are revered in this fantastical world of plastic people.




But once we get a closer look at them, we realize that they're actually discarded items from the real world of human people, such as a tube of Krazy Glue, a Band-Aid and a Q-tip. One of those relics—a special item that the wise man Vitruvius prophesizes about—is a cap to the aforementioned tube of glue. And Emmet receives a quick "vision" when he first touches it. He sees the image of someone Vitruvius defines as the "Man Upstairs." Then, in the course of things, Vitruvius is killed and returns as a plastic ghost held aloft by a string. We eventually learn that the entire world of blocks and studs, and all its "magical" happenings are part of the human boy's imagination. It's a story he concocts as he snaps together the plastic bricks in his basement. And the Man Upstairs is actually his dad, who warned him not to play with the elaborate cityscape he's constructed out of his prized LEGOs.Sexual There's an obvious attraction developing between Emmet and Lucy that culminates with them ... holding hands.




(She's been dating Batman up till this point.) Somebody makes a comment about Wyldstyle having a "heavenly body."Violent If the blow-'em-up action and wham-bam fight scenes of this pic were part of a live-action movie, they would demand several paragraphs detailing the damage in a Plugged In review. There is a constant stream here of everything from fast-moving traffic smash-ups, to bombastic fist- and gunfights, to horsemen riding off a high cliff and erupting in a nuclear explosion, to a whole cloud-based fantasy land being blown up and destroyed. The difference here, of course, is that this is an animated world populated by plastic blocks. Even the rapid-fire projectiles and an explosion's resulting flames are all made of colorful plastic—just as they are when kids around the globe play with LEGOs on their bedroom carpet. Characters, buildings and vehicles bash, crash and fall apart into their primal pieces, and so nothing feels deadly or particularly permanent. A tube of Krazy Glue becomes the ultimate deadly weapon because it can freeze the LEGO folks in place, effectively rendering them lifeless.




(We see numerous examples of this.) A laser ray is used to melt plastic and almost zaps Emmet before it's stopped. Indeed, "melting" is threatened as a torture technique. A head is lopped off a "man's" neck.Crude Profane "Darn," "dang it," "butt" and "oh my gosh" are all repeated a few times each. We hear exclamations of "what the heck?" Name-calling includes "butt," "dorky" and "ding-dong."Drug Alcohol A group of guys talk about meeting up at a "sports bar" after work (but they say it's the chicken wings that prime the pump for getting "crazy," not alcohol).Other ElementsThere are silly lowball gags thrown into the comedy mix. A pair of robots, for example, jump up on a copy machine to make photocopies of their plastic block backsides. Similarly, a running gag revolves around a favorite TV show called "Where Are My Pants?" So we sometimes see "naked" LEGOs, all yellow and "bare" instead of painted with "clothes." When someone states that a proposed plan will be "really hard," a pirate-robot scoffs at the statement saying, "Wiping ye bum with a hook for a hand be really hard."




ConclusionPicture dumping a box full of LEGOs, Lincoln Logs, old action figures, cast off toy cars and plastic thingamajigs on the rug. (Something I was very fond of doing as a tyke, much to the chagrin of my mother who never seemed to find the joy in it.) Then think of staging all those playthings in a wacky action adventure of your own boundless youthful imagining. That pretty much sums up The LEGO Movie experience. (If, that is, you were also very good at coming up with giggle-a-minute quips and had some talented movie star pals who could voice the whole thing with grown-up glee.) It's a bright, silly and breakneck-paced good-guy-vs.-bad-guy tale that offers kids and kids at heart some pretty big lessons for such a small-scale story: 1) Believe in yourself. You can never know how much you can really do—how special you really are—unless you give it a good try. 2) Let your imagination lift you up to creative rapture. There's nothing more fun or fulfilling than that.




3) Work together to get the job done right. After all, a bunch of geniuses all going in opposite directions can't accomplish anywhere near what a gaggle of workaday guys and gals can if they cooperate and push forward down the same path.You just never know what kind of cool result you might get! For those who have played any of the LEGO video games, the transition to the big screen will feel very familiar. The film does, however, pack in more "dangs" and "darns" and "what the hecks" than you'll find while gripping a game console. And the story is actually more high-action than the games, too—which equates to lots and lots of chases, explosions and rapid-fire plastic bullet shootouts between heroes and villains. Still, like the games—and my blocks on the rug—all that thumping and bumping comes off as a playful part of a kid's overactive fantasies. Even a chap losing his head and reappearing as a glow-in-the-dark toy ghost feels inconsequential thanks to the movie's connect-a-block-and-break-everything-into-pieces goofiness.

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