the lego movie fallen timbers

the lego movie fallen timbers

the lego movie exeter nh

The Lego Movie Fallen Timbers

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From in-store demos and classes to a wide variety of entertaining activities, we’re always offering fun experiences for our guests. Explore our current and upcoming events and plan your next adventure at The Shops at Fallen Timbers. Dr. Seuss's Birthday Celebration Storytime Barnes & Noble Booksellers THU, MAR 2: 10:00 AM - 11:00 AM March Lil' Timbers Kids Klub Location: Space in-between Regis Salon and Finish Line SAT, MAR 4: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM SAT, MAR 11: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM The LEGO Batman Movie Event 3 SAT, MAR 11: 2:00 PM - 3:00 PM SAT, MAR 18: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM SAT, MAR 25: 11:00 AM - 12:00 PM Lady Tutu 5k and Little Princess Dash Be the first to know. The Great Wall 3D The Lego Batman Movie 3D Franklin Park 16 and XD Cinemark Woodland Mall Cinema 5 See More Theaters Near Maumee, OH Sign Up For Free! THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: RUSALKA ENCORE THE SHACK: MOVIE PREMIERE ALL ABOUT EVE (1950) PRESENTED BY TCM




SWORD ART ONLINE THE MOVIE - ORDINAL SCALE THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: LA TRAVIATA THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: LA TRAVIATA ENCORE BEAUTY AND THE BEAST OPENING NIGHT FAN EVENT See more pre-sale tickets 'Fifty Shades Darker' Trivia: Why Christian Grey Has a 'Chronicles of Riddick' Poster in His Childhood Bedroom In the irreverent spirit of fun that made "The LEGO® Movie" a worldwide phenomenon, the self-described leading man of that ensemble - LEGO Batman - stars in his own big-screen adventure. But there are big changes brewing in Gotham, and if he wants to save the city from The Joker's hostile takeover, Batman may have to drop the lone vigilante thing, try to work with others and maybe, just maybe, learn to lighten up. > Maumee, OH Movies > Fallen Timbers 14 + Xtreme Showtimes & Tickets Fallen Timbers 14 + Xtreme Showtimes & Tickets Which movies do you want to bring to Fallen Timbers 14 + Xtreme? Kings of Leon & Deerhunter Dru Hill with Next, Kelly Price, Bobby Brown




Foreigner, Cheap Trick & Jason Bonham's Led Zeppelin Experience Kings of Leon & Nathaniel Rateliff and The Night Sweats The shops at Fallen Timbers Schedule Claim this venue profile on eventful: Manage your venue info, images and keep your venue's schedule up to date on Eventful. Report offensive content on this page at SeaGate Convention Centre Glass City Wine Festival Af... Glass City Wine Festival Ev... Pro Home And Garden Advance... Kalamazoo Wings at Toledo W... Brampton Beast at Toledo Wa... Cirque Du Soleil - Ovo Norfolk Admirals at Toledo ... Full Map and Directions‘The LEGO Batman Movie’ is mashup that just clicks. Batman, voiced by Will Arnett, in a scene from 'The LEGO Batman Movie.' Like a miniature universe made entirely of millions of tiny plastic bricks, The Lego Batman Movie looks and feels like it could only have been put together by a roomful of mad geniuses, moving in a ballet of well-choreographed creativity: It’s simultaneously epic and humble.




From the pew-pew-pew that accompanies the animated movie’s make-believe gunfire — the same serviceable but phony-as-heck sound effect that your 6-year-old might use when firing his (or her) finger at bad guys — to the roster of deliriously ecumenical villains recruited from every corner of pop-culture literature for this clever mash-up of comic books and construction toys, the new animated film is the definition of fantastic. What’s more, it is that rare sequel that outdoes the original (no small feat, considering that the 2014 The Lego Movie has a 96 percent “fresh” rating on the Rotten Tomatoes Tomatometer). ‘The Lego Batman Movie’ Directed by Chris McKay. Screenplay by Seth Grahame-Smith, Chris McKenna, Erik Sommers, Jared Stern and John Whittington. A Warner Bros. release playing at Franklin Park, Fallen Timbers, Levis Commons, Bowling Green, and Mall of Monroe. Rated PG for rude humor and some action. Running time: 104 minutes. Voices: Will Arnett, Michael Cera, Rosario Dawson, Ralph Fiennes, Zach Galifianakis, and Conan B’Brien.




Give credit where credit is due: The movie was directed by Chris McKay (known for his work on TV’s subversive Robot Chicken and Morel Orel), from a screenplay by Seth Grahame-Smith, Chris McKenna, Erik Sommers, Jared Stern, and John Whittington that is simultaneously snarky, sweet and encyclopedically quick-witted. The screenplay they have devised — one that punctures the tired pretensions of superhero movies even as it celebrates their guilty pleasures — is characterized by the satirical gaze of the slightly superior outsider and the irony-free devotion of the true believer. OFFICIAL TRAILER: ‘The Lego Batman Movie’ Although the movie opens with the voice of Batman (Will Arnett), riffing on the tropes of Batman movies — black screen; the solitary, brooding hero; and a last-minute rescue — it is not all archly self-aware deflation of cliche. There is a plot, too, and a point, having something to do with Batman’s unhealthy tendency to work alone and the efforts of the Joker (Zach Galifianakis) to get under his skin.




It’s also something of an origin story, with Robin (Michael Cera) just establishing himself as the Caped Crusader’s earnest Boy Wonder, protege and thorn in the side of his pompous mentor. Other members of the excellent voice cast include Rosario Dawson as new Police Commissioner Barbara Gordon/Batgirl and Ralph Fiennes as Alfred the butler. Additional villains — and what is a Batman movie without an army of them? — include such franchise favorites as Riddler (Conan O’Brien) and Two-Face (Billy Dee Williams), along with such extracanonical reinforcements as Voldemort (Eddie Izzard) of Harry Potter and the Daleks from Doctor Who. Never heard of them? “Ask your nerd friends,” cracks Batman in one of the movie’s frequent asides addressed to the audience. Like a bratty child, Lego Batman keeps setting up a structure of bricks, only to kick down the fourth wall with destructive delight. Other crossover cameos feature Dracula, the Gremlins from Gremlins, a flying monkey from The Wizard of Oz, King Kong and Sauron from The Lord of the Rings. 




(“Ow, my eye!” he cries, when he takes a hit in his giant glowing peeper.) There are explicit allusions to every Batman movie, as well as to the 1960s television series with Adam West. You may not catch every one — they fly by as fast as throwaway jokes in a Simpsons episode — but it’s not necessary. Who, other than Batman nerds, recalls “that time with the parade and the Prince music” (a reference to a scene in Tim Burton’s 1989 Batman film with Jack Nicholson as the Joker)? It’s icing on the cake if you do. Notwithstanding the long lineup of villains, The Lego Batman Movie is more about the evil within Batman than any external corruption. The film has a message about selfishness that adds substance to the satire. That’s one vice that no one can accuse the filmmakers of. A touch of self-absorption, maybe. But there’s a spirit of collaboration that characterizes all the best play. It’s a story with heart, heady humor and action — parts that snap together, with a satisfying click, like, well, you know what.

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