the lego movie just dance

the lego movie just dance

the lego movie june sets

The Lego Movie Just Dance

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Looking for movie tickets? Enter your location to see which movie theaters are playing I Hope You Dance: The Power and Spirit of Song near you.Hollywood, discovering that something is popular and seeing the door “opened” by The LEGO Movie (without realizing the amount of talent and skill that went into that picture), has now jumped on the bandwagon, and next year we’ll be getting The Emoji Movie. In the film, T.J. Miller (Silicon Valley) voices Gene, an outsider emoji who’s abnormal because he can display more than one expression. Gene “teams up with his handy best friend Hi-5 and the notorious codebreaker Jailbreak on an epic adventure through the apps on a teenager’s phone,” and because this movie is all about branding, expect to see “cameos” from Candy Crush Saga, Dropbox, Instagram, Just Dance®, Spotify, Twitter, YouTube, Crackle, Facebook, Shazam, Snapchat, and Twitch. There’s the potential for this to be wry and clever, but there’s also the potential for it to go horribly wrong.




The first trailer is less than encouraging. Rather than sell the plot or even the main character, this trailer introduces us to Mel Meh (Steven Wright), the “Meh” emoji who’s also Gene’s father (I really don’t want to know how emoji procreation works). Perhaps some people will find it cute, but I assume others will respond with the “baffled” emoji, or, in an old-fashioned twist, question mark punctuation. Check out The Emoji Movie trailer below along with the first images. The film opens August 4, 2017. Here’s the official synopsis for The Emoji Movie: The Emoji Movie unlocks the never-before-seen secret world inside your smartphone. Hidden within the messaging app is Textopolis, a bustling city where all your favorite emojis live, hoping to be selected by the phone’s user. In this world, each emoji has only one facial expression – except for Gene (T.J. Miller), an exuberant emoji who was born without a filter and is bursting with multiple expressions.




Determined to become “normal” like the other emojis, Gene enlists the help of his handy best friend Hi-5 (James Corden) and the notorious code breaker emoji Jailbreak (Ilana Glazer). Together, they embark on an epic “app-venture” through the apps on the phone, each its own wild and fun world, to find the Code that will fix Gene. But when a greater danger threatens the phone, the fate of all emojis depends on these three unlikely friends who must save their world before it’s deleted forever. Directed by Tony Leondis. Written by Tony Leondis & Eric Siegel and Mike White. Produced by Michelle Raimo Kouyate. Here are some of The Lego Movie Videogame glitches that have been encountered. Note that these might get patched by TT Games, but I think we all know that TT Games NEVER EVER FIX GLITCHES… THANKS FOR NOTHING TT GAMES!! So yes, you might encounter the here-under listed glitches for yourself in the meantime. I guess we’ll have to comfort ourselves by hugging Unikitty or something.




Miranda CosplayTifa CosplayLara Croft CosplayPokemon Trainers Index of The Lego Movie Videogame Guides: Location: When you’re climbing up or down ladders anywhere in the game you can get stuck in them with no way out. Solution: No solution found yet, except restarting the level you’re in. Here’s footage of the glitch in action at The Old West’s “Level 3: Flatbush Gulch”: There are other objects you can get stuck behind too like this railing: Location: During a transition scene in The Old West’s “Level 3: Flatbush Gulch” you can “fall through” the ground and go out-of-bounds into a white “Netherworld”. The image of the gulch was visible on the upper portion of the screen, however, by the time recording started, the scenes had passed by. It sounded as if the game was continuing to play. The downside to this is that, in this scene, you are not a character who can fly, so there’s no control over your character. Here’s the full glitch video:




Location: At Octan Tower, when you’re standing on the Legs Machine as Lord Business, you can switch to President Business before you’ve bought him and play as him too. Solution: Go back to the character select menu and switch back to Lord Business. I’m sure there are many more, let’s hear it in the comments section and help each other out. Glitches discovered by: Legamop, CoolGamingDude, TheWife & HeroSmash. Tags: The Lego Movie Videogame Categories: 3DS Guides, Guides, News, PC Guides, PS Vita Guides, PS3 Guides, PS4 Guides, Videos, Wii U Guides, Xbox 360 Guides, Xbox One Guides Meet FFXV's CindyE3 Goes Zelda CRAZY!The Last Guardian Preview GalleryKingdom Hearts 2.8 Goes HD on PS4Tales of Berseria's Revealing RevealGravity Rush 2 To Be SHOCKING FinaleGears of War 4 Looks Badass In 4K!Xbox Onesie Models PhotoshootDOA5: Last Round - Who's Best Dressed?Life Is Strange FanartCloud Returns!Bravely Second Sees The Return of... Mortal Kombat X WallpapersGrand Theft Auto 5 WallpapersThe Witcher 3: Wild Hunt Wallpapers




Dragon Ball Xenoverse WallpapersDmC: Devil May Cry WallpapersMetal Gear Solid 5 WallpapersThe LEGO Movie: The Videogame (PS4) Review: Is Everything Awesome for the Game Too? The LEGO Movie: The Videogame is exactly as crazy as it sounds. Actually, it’s more crazy than it sounds. It is an excellent movie tie-in, perhaps one of the best ever. The cutscenes are ripped straight out of the movie, so the plot follows perfectly in line with the film. Restrictive source material is often a problem in movie tie-in games, but The LEGO Movie is so bonkers that it allows its game to be much more unique than past LEGO games. Like the film, The LEGO Movie: The Videogame has a bizarre story. The star of the show is Emmet, who finds “The Piece of Resistance”, which leads to him being dubbed “The Special.”  “The Piece of Resistance” is supposed to be used to stop Lord Business from using the “Kragle” to end the world on “Taco Tuesday.” That might sound strange, but the strange part is how all of it gets justified in the narrative.




It is a joy to watch the plot unfold, and it makes the game completely worthwhile to play. Over the course of the campaign, you meet and control a wide cast of characters, including Shakespeare, Cleopatra, Batman and Unikitty, and they get put in sometimes hilarious, fish-out-of-water situations. You get to see Batman survive Cloud Cuckoo Land, for instance, in one of the game’s most humorous segments. The one criticism I have, however, is that there doesn’t seem to be any humor added specifically for the game, so the jokes get repeated frequently and start to get old. If you have played a LEGO game before, you know how this game plays out. Each character attacks in a slightly different way, but you are primarily mashing the attack button with absolutely no consequence for dying. In that regard, it is perfectly suited for its primary audience, children, but it did leave me wanting more depth. Just like in past LEGO games, a second player can drop in and out at any time. Similar to the combat, puzzles in The LEGO Movie: The Videogame are simplistic.




Most of the time, the game only requires the player to determine which special ability is needed to progress. The visual cues associated with said puzzles, however, can get lost in the hectic nature of the stages. Several times I cleared a room completely only to wander about for the next few minutes desperately looking for a button prompt.  It didn’t happen often, but it was obnoxious when it did. I am not intimately familiar with the LEGO franchise, so I can only assume past games have included mini games of different sorts, but the mini games in The LEGO Movie: The Videogame come out of nowhere and left me cackling for minutes on end at their sheer absurdity. By the end you will have played the most bland rhythm game in existence and a ludicrously simple Pac-Man clone to name just a few. Their infrequent use made the simplicity bearable, and it was always fun to see what developers TT Games came up with next. There is a lot to do in The LEGO Movie: The Videogame.  Each stage can be replayed with any character, or you can simply relive the story as you did the first time.




There are several hub worlds that have some hidden goodies, and characters to buy with your collected currency. Each hub is small but has enough character to add to the overall game world. I finished the main story at 25% completion in about six hours. Each stage has extremely well hidden items to find, which then can be used in the free form “Bonus Room” after the game is completed. Most of the percentage is collectibles, but because they are so well hidden, finding them is rewarding. Visuals are sharp and smooth on the next gen platforms. The cutscenes are straight from the movie, and look great, but the animation of the game looks only different in style. There were no framerate drops, and it just ended up looking incredible. The music is bonkers and fun, but the theme song comes up way too often and is about five seconds long, so like the jokes, it gets old quickly. The voice acting, however, is strange. The LEGO Movie is filled with big name celebrities, and as such the cutscenes in the game are too.

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