the lego movie mug

the lego movie mug

the lego movie mobile movies

The Lego Movie Mug

CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE




for joining the Redbubble mailing list Thanks for signing up! Receive exclusive deals and awesome artist news and content right to your inbox. Free for your convenience.THE LEGO® BATMAN MOVIE Batman™ Up-scaled Mugproduct_label_list_price_accessibility 0123451FIND MORE PRODUCTS LIKE THISTHE LEGO® BATMAN MOVIEEnjoy a refreshment with the Dark Knight!Awesome Kitchen StuffCool KitchenTaco ShredsGrate TacoShell CheeseNeatly ContainedTech Food27 ProductsQuesadillaForwardA “taco shell” cheese grater that keeps the shreds contained until you’re ready to dump them out. 27 Products That Are Almost Too Clever To UseLEGO® → System → Minifigures 71002 << 71004 >> 71005 The LEGO Movie Series $2.99 €2.49 £2.49 $4.99Additional prices: 71004 The LEGO Movie Series is a series of Minifigures released in January 2014. It includes characters from The LEGO Movie. 16 all-new, special minifigures from the new THE LEGO® MOVIE™, is now part of the LEGO® Minifigure Collection.




Each minifigure comes in a sealed “mystery” bag with one or more accessories, display plate and collector’s booklet. Inspired by The LEGO Movie this collection includes: William Shakespeare, Abraham Lincoln, Panda Guy, Marsha, Queen of the Mermaids, Velma Staplebot, Scribble-Face Bad Cop, Wild West Wyldstyle, Hard Hat Emmet, Gail the Construction Worker, "Where Are My Pants?" Guy, Mrs. Scratchen-Post, Wiley Fusebot, President Business, Calamity Drone, Taco Tuesday Man and Larry the Barista. Every minifigure comes with one or more accessories and a display plate. Fun new characters from THE LEGO® MOVIE™ for your LEGO® Minifigures collection. Calamity DroneGail the Construction WorkerAbraham LincolnLarry the BaristaPanda GuyVelma StaplebotWilliam ShakespeareTaco Tuesday Guy“Where are my Pants?” GuyWiley FusebotPresident BusinessWild West WyldestyleHard Hat EmmetScribble-Face Bad CopMrs. Scratchen-PostMarsha Queen of the Mermaids Bad Cop/Good Cop | Radio DJ Robot |




Alfie the Apprentice | Frank the Foreman | Gail the Construction Worker | Garbage Man Dan | Ice Cream Mike | Larry the Barista | "Where are my Pants?" DC Universe: Aquaman | Deep Sea Diver | Original Characters: Abraham Lincoln | El Macho Wrestler | Garbage Man Grant | Ice Cream Jo | Marsha Queen of the Mermaids | Taco Tuesday Guy | characters from other themes Conductor Charlie | Gandalf (The Lord of The Rings/The Hobbit) | Green Ninja (Ninjago) | Johnny Thunder (Adventurers) | Michelangelo (Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles) | Milhouse (The Simpsons) | NBA Player 1 (Basketball) | NBA Player 2 (Basketball) | Professor Dumbledore (Harry Potter) | Red Classic Spaceman | Shaquille O'Neal (Basketball) | Speed Racer (Speed Racer) | The Swamp Creature (Monster Fighters) | "The Man Upstairs" | Fred the Demolition Guy | The LEGO Movie Action Cups are now available at McDonald’s and I’ve managed to collect all 8 cups. The action part of the cups is the lenticular feature that they have.




Each cup features a portrait of a character in the movie with their names as well as a scene that changes. If you haven’t seen the movie yet (what are you waiting for?), the some scenes on the cups may contain spoilers. Emmet’s cup shows him smiling and holding a hammer. The scene shows him falling into another brick dimension. Batman switches from normal to angry expressions and holding his Batarang. The scene shows him arriving in his Batmobile to rescue Wyldstyle and Emmet. Bad Cop switches to Good Cop and he holds a microphone. The scene shows Bad Cop’s flying police car and the 4×4 SWAT car chasing Wyldstyle. You also see Sheriff-Not-A-Robot. MetalBeard’s portait doesn’t really show much. It just shows him raising his cannon arm and his other shark-attached arm. His scene shows the Sea Cow being attacked by Super Secret Police Dropships. **Spoilers Ahead** Vitruvius’ cup shows his young version as well as his older blinded version. The scene shows him and Emmet looking at a bird imagined by Emmet.




President Business’ portrait shows him smiling with his coffee cup while his Lord Business version shows him in his menacing outfit. The scene him riding a mech that I don’t remember seeing in the movie. I could be wrong though. Wyldstyle’s cup shows her winking and holding a stick of some sort. The scene shows her rescuing Emmet in the Super Cycle. The final cup is Unikitty. Her portrait shows her changing into Angry Kitty. **Spoilers ahead** The scene shows the Dog Colisseum being attacked by a tennis ball although the movie shows a golf ball flying in. The background shows a few LEGO characters including Cleopatra, Batman, Lizard Man, Forestman, and Benny. Overall, the Action Cups are some decent collectibles. They have some nice artwork and the cups themselves are some good hard plastic. Are they worth $1.99 each? To me, the cups are worth about $1.50 or less but if you’re a fan of The LEGO Movie, then you’ll probably end up getting them anyways. Again, you do not have to buy the food to get the cups.




You may have to go to different McDonald’s restaurants to find all of them since some sell out quickly while others still in boxes and aren’t open yet. Your mileage may vary a lot. I recommend picking them up if you can find them. They do make a nice addition to your LEGO Movie collection.Dir: Chris McKay Starring: Will Arnett, Rosario Dawson, Michael Cera, Zach Galifianakis, Mariah Carey, Billy Dee Williams, Ralph Fiennes (voices) U cert, 104 min Don’t tell Ben Affleck – he seems sad enough already – but the actor has just been made surplus to requirements by one and a half inches of moulded plastic. Of course I mean Lego Batman, whose debut solo feature, spun off from a propitious extended cameo in The Lego Movie three years ago, arrives in cinemas almost everywhere next week. Followers of the current batch of live-action DC Comics films may not be stunned to hear it’s immeasurably more stylish, spectacular, deftly written, thematically rich, visually ravishing and generally delightful than anything yet to feature the latest, Affleck-essayed incarnation of Actual Batman.




Oh, and it’s funny too. Frantically and relentlessly so, in that way you can feel your brain lurch and grab at punchlines as they whistle past your head. While it never achieves, or even reaches for, The Lego Movie’s unexpected profundity and emotional bite, in purely logistical terms, The Lego Batman Movie is a thing of wonder. There are around four (great) films’ worth of action and jokes here, crammed into a story so streamlined it might have been assembled in the Lockheed wind tunnel. It also offers a fresh and arguably topical spin on its title character. Voiced again with gravelly self-importance by Will Arnett, here Batman is a spoilt hereditary-billionaire narcissist with a persecution complex, whose self-styled tough stance on law and order has kept Gotham mired in perpetual chaos. Things change with the appointment of a new police commissioner, Barbara Gordon (Rosario Dawson), who immediately unveils a progressive criminal justice policy agenda that threatens to make the Caped Crusader redundant.




(There is a slyly hilarious sequence in which Batman attempts to mansplain, or perhaps Batmansplain, how crime works to the female chief of police.) Then enter The Joker (Zach Galifianakis), who uses Batman’s subsequent Bat-huff to get one over on his age-old foe, largely because their goodie-baddie relationship’s ongoing lack of exclusivity, in a world not short on C-list evildoers, has started to hurt. “I don’t currently have a bad guy,” Batman feebly explains to him, before adding, with a twist of the knife: “I’m fighting a few different people.” This sets the stage for a catastrophe the like of which it’s fair to say Gotham has never seen before, although to reveal exactly who’s involved would give away the film’s single most joyous barrage of comic surprises. (As you watch, listen out for some inspired voice casting that only enriches the joke.) But even from the start, the film’s rogue’s gallery is impressive: almost every Batman villain you can think of puts in a fleeting appearance in its luxuriously OTT opening set-piece.




Writers Seth Grahame-Smith, Chris McKenna and Erik Sommers have plumbed the Bat-catalogue for lesser-known nemeses, from unlikely kid-friendly versions of noirish fiends such as The Red Hood and March Harriet to half-forgotten loons like the 1960s TV series’ King Tut and The Eraser, a man disguised as a rubber-topped HB pencil. In fact, the whole film dives deep into Batman lore without ever losing its lightness. Tableaux from every previous Batman film are recreated in Lego form, as is an exhaustive array of historical Batsuits and Batmobiles – although some of the, ahem, snazzier costumes both admired and modelled by the completely adorable pair of Robin (Michael Cera) and Alfred the Butler (Ralph Fiennes) are all-new. Director Chris McKay plainly knows what he’s doing: as well as serving as director of animation on The Lego Movie, he worked on the stop-motion pop-culture comedy series Robot Chicken, with which The Lego Batman Movie shares a knack for low-key absurdity.

Report Page