the lego movie disney

the lego movie disney

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The Lego Movie Disney

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The evil plans of Lord Business to ensure order in his world with a powerful weapon is in jeopardy as a prophecy about ‘Special’ comes true with the discovery of ‘Piece of Resistance’. With odds like Bad Cop, Micro managers and ‘Man from upstairs’ stacked against him during his journey to save the world; Emmett, a construction worker, has a long way to go before he succeeds. If you like and use our caps, please consider leaving a comment below - we'd love to see what you made with them! Download Gallery As Zip File Page: 1 of 62 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ... The Lego Movie (2014) 6 February 2014 (Singapore) 4 more credits » See full cast & crew » See more awards » 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) / See full cast » 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 See all certifications » View content advisory » Release Date: 6 February 2014 (Singapore) Also Known As: La gran aventura Lego Fox Studios, Moore Park, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia See full technical specs » 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. 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 » This FAQ is empty.




Add the first question. Contribute to This PageFrom left: Emmet (voiced by Chris Pratt), Batman (voiced by Will Arnett), Vitruvius (voiced by Morgan Freeman), and Wyldstyle (voiced by Elizabeth Banks) in The LEGO Movie The box office headlines today are touting The LEGO Movie as a surprise monster hit, and with an estimated $69.1 million in its opening weekend, it’s easy to see why. The debut is higher than Frozen’s $67.4 million wide opening weekend in November 2013, and that film has gone on to be Walt Disney Animation’s biggest hit since 1994’s The Lion King (when adjusting for inflation). The LEGO Movie, meanwhile, has set a record for a feature animated film from Warner Bros. Pictures, surpassing the $41.5 million debut of 2006’s Happy Feet. And its A grade from audience polling firm CinemaScore suggests strong word of mouth could carry its U.S. grosses well past the $200 million threshold for animated films released at the beginning of the year. But more than a surprise monster hit, The LEGO Movie could be an animated film game changer if Hollywood pays close enough attention.




Instead of chasing The LEGO Movie’s box office returns by creating other toy-based animated films (like, say, The Hot Wheels Movie or Bratz vs. Ugly Dolls), Hollywood — and especially feature animation houses such as Pixar Animation Studios, DreamWorks Animation, and the like — would do well to learn from other storytelling risks that The LEGO Movie takes. On the surface, The LEGO Movie tells a tried-and-true story of a lowly nobody who is plucked from obscurity and burnished with special significance so he can save the world. Emmet is an average construction worker (voiced by Chris Pratt) who has lived his life literally following the instructions handed to him and the rest of society by corporate autocrat Lord Business (voiced by Will Ferrell). When he accidentally discovers the mysterious, world-saving “Piece of Resistance,” however, Emmet is taken to be a savior-like figure called The Special by a group of LEGO Master Builders, who are capable of creating anything they want from LEGO pieces without following the instructions.




But there is also a meta-narrative tucked inside the film — dazzlingly directed and written by Phil Lord and Christopher Miller (Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, 21 Jump Street) — about the current state of animated feature filmmaking. A creeping sameness has seeped into feature animation over the last few years — even when they are impeccably well made and designed, films like Monsters University and The Croods adhere to airtight storytelling blueprints, unfolding with little genuine surprise. Even Frozen, with its refreshing feminist revision of the standard fairy tale, still holds fast to many elements of the “Disney formula” — it just does it so well that the movie’s a comforting throwback to Disney’s early ’90s animation prime. The third act of The LEGO Movie, by contrast, cracks its story wide open. (MAJOR SPOILERS start here!) At a pivotal moment, Emmet enters the real world, discovering that the epic battle between Lord Business and the Master Builders is really a struggle between a grown father (also played by Ferrell) — determined to bring some tidy-but-stifling order to his sprawling basement LEGO world — and the freewheeling imagination of his young son (Jadon Sand).




It’s a genuinely jaw-dropping twist that also honors the reason LEGO has proven to be such an enduring toy: Those small plastic bricks are the raw materials for unfettered creative play. The world of The LEGO Movie is also stuffed with outré characters like the unfailingly happy Unikitty (voiced by Alison Brie) and the hodgepodge pirate captain Metal Beard (voiced by Nick Offerman), and its off-beat sense of humor flies at the audience with a rapid-fire energy that, at times, borders on manic — just like the anything-goes inventiveness of a child’s mind at play. The best animated movies, especially the ones by Pixar and DreamWorks, have also embodied that ability to take risky leaps of creative logic that surprise, delight, and move us all at once. But since 2010’s Toy Story 3 and How to Train Your Dragon, American feature animation has largely lost that spirit of go-for-broke, did-not-see-that-coming excitement. It’s a droll irony that a movie that could be a transparently craven advertisement for a toy line manages not only to be thrillingly inventive and original, but a pointed critique of creative commodification.




So of course Warner Bros. is already working on a sequel. Sequels can be good — and in the case of Pixar’s Toy Story films, they can be truly great. But with the talent within the animation “creative consortium” that Warner Bros. announced last month (including Miller, Lord, Crazy, Stupid, Love’s John Requa and Glenn Ficarra, The Muppets’ Nicholas Stoller, and Mr. Popper’s Penguins’ Jared Stern), one hopes that the studio remains as keen to build brand-new creative endeavors as they are to rebuild their past ones. Here are the estimated top 10 box office figures for Friday to Sunday, courtesy of Box Office Mojo: 1. The LEGO Movie* — $69.1 million 2. The Monuments Men* — $22.7 million 3. Ride Along — $9.4 million 4. Frozen — $6.9 million 5. That Awkward Moment — $5.5 million 6. Lone Survivor — $5.3 million 7. Vampire Academy* — $4.1 million 8. The Nut Job — $3.8 million 9. Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit — $3.6 million

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