the lego movie paper

the lego movie paper

the lego movie pants

The Lego Movie Paper

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Bricksburg, The Old West, and Cloud Cuckoo Land all have 3 Instruction Pages hidden throughout the world. Finding these will allow a Construction character to build at the platform in the world. This will also result in unlocking a Red Brick. These Instruction Pages cannot all be found at the start of the game, as some are hidden in spots that only certain characters can unveil. These characters are progressively unlocked while playing through the main story. The first and easiest Instruction Page to find is in the construction site. After entering through the gate, go to the left and there you will hear a character saying he forgot his drill. Near him there is a marking on the floor denoting that it can be broken with a drill. Use a Construction character to drill through the marking on the floor. The Instruction Page will be in the hole. The second Instruction Page can be found near Emmet's home. Facing Emmet's house, look at the right side of the town square. You will see a pink fence.




Break this fence and use it to build a surface for a female character to climb. Wall jump up to the roof. Here you can flip a switch and open a door so male characters can come up as well. (While up here you can also break the bench and rebuild the billboard, another side mission in Bricksburg. Also behind the fence on the right, there is a cat that needs to be returned to Mrs. Scratchen-Post). Jump down onto the yellow and white overhang. Then have Vitruvius throw his staff into the hole on the building to the left so a female character and jump across and grab on and make her way to a balcony. The Instruction Page will be there. The third Instruction Page can be found inside a restaurant near the ice cream truck. This cannot be accessed until either President Business or Lord Business is unlocked. Once either of them is, switch to this character and walk over near the construction site gate. Do not enter, but look to the right. You will need to destroy the dumpster by the camera post to build a platform, then use it to make President/Lord Business taller.




Once you have done this, walk back over to the restaurant and look to the right. There will be a large tree and on the ground there will be a marker. Walk over to it and press Circle/B to activate the switch. This will open the doors in the restaurant, allowing you to walk inside and grab the Instruction Page. (There is also a cat found here, which is needed for Mrs. Scratchen-Post's sidemission). The first Instruction Page is found near an aggressive horse found on the right as soon as you enter The Old West. Vitruvius is needed in order to get this, as other players see the horse and refuse to  approach it. The Instruction Page is in the middle of the fenced area. The next Instruction Page is on the roof of the saloon. To get up there you will need a female character. Upon entering The Old West, go straight up to a building, that is the saloon. Then, head towards the building on the left. Climb the netting to get onto the balcony. Walk to the other side then jump and grab hold of the bar to work your way up to the roof.




From here, follow the coins and jump across the roof to the building straight ahead. Keep following the coins and jump to the building on the right. Here you will see a structure. Destroy this structure and walk into the rubble, the Instruction Page will be there. (Once up there you might as well continue to explore the building as a one of the Gold Thieves is hiding out in the building). The last Instruction Page in this world cannot be found until you unlock a character that can fire lasers, like Bad Cop or Superman. With an appropiate character, head towards the saloon. Then walk over to the right and you will see the sheriff's building. Next to it is a gold jail cell. Use a laser on the jail cell and knock down the door. Inside is the third Instruction Page. The first Instruction Page is hidden inside a building in the upper left part of the main cloud. Once you enter Cloud Cuckoo Land, head straight and slightly left. You will see a target on the second floor of the building between the silver door and rainbow stairs.




Throw something at this target to break the wall. Then, as a female character, use the bar to get up to the hole and collect the Instruction Page. The second Instruction Page is found through the silver door on the left. Using a character with explosives, destroy the door and head forward. On the first cloud, use a Master Builder on the green circle to put together a stair case. With a female character, walk up the stairs and across the tight rope and the Instruction Page will be in the middle of the room. If you have a character with flying abilities, you can also just fly directly up there and collect the Instruction Page. (A Red Brick can also be found here right next to the Instruction Page). The last Instruction Page requires a character that can shoot lasers. Upon entering Cloud Cuckoo Land, head up and towards the right until you see a gold door. Destroy it and proceed forward. Once you get to the next cloud, look at the tower. There is a hook for a character like Batman to latch onto and pull the tower down.




Then, you will need a female character to jump up and into the tower. The Instruction Page a clearly visible in the middle of the room. Alternatively, if you have a character with flying abilities unlocked you can just fly to the top of the tower and collect the Instruction Page. (Up here there is also a Uni-Kitty In A Box to be found which can be opened by a Construction worker).All important movies start with a black screen,” intones the titular character of The LEGO Batman Movie. “And logos—really long and dramatic logos.” And so continues our narcissistic hero, mansplaining every crucial component to a great film’s intro and sounding self-important, even when he pronounces his studio’s name “Warner Bras.” With that, The LEGO Batman Movie already feels like a promising spinoff of 2014’s surprisingly entertaining The LEGO Movie, even though not one of the filmmakers involved in the original had a hand in creating its follow-up. This crew—the helmer and five (!) scripters—isn’t even well-versed in the film world, but earned their chops working in television: Director Chris McKay is best known for Adult Swim’s Robot Chicken while the writers bear credits such as Crank Yankers, Community, and American Dad.




Collectively, however, they’ve captured the wit, silliness, and parodic spirit of The LEGO Movie note-perfectly.The LEGO Batman Movie sets up its storyline early: Batman/Bruce Wayne (Will Arnett, returning and just as terrific as in the first go-’round) is lonely. When the Joker (Zach Galifianakis) mentions to his nemesis early on that he’s his greatest villain, Batman bristles like a typical commitment-phobe: “Batman doesn’t do ’ships,” he says. “I like to fight around.” Yet after he saves Gotham City once again (and a cheering fan mentions how great it must be to be Batman), Bruce returns to his literal island, heats up a dinner-for-one, and watches TV alone in the cavernous Wayne Manor. After losing his parents—Bruce is famously an orphan, of course—he’s afraid of letting anyone in.  But during a lovestruck moment (one not unsimilar to what Emmet Brickowski experienced in the original LEGO Movie), Bruce unthinkingly agrees to adopt a puppyish orphan (Michael Cera) who follows him around.




The love interest is Barbara Gordon (Rosario Dawson), who’s taking over as police commissioner after her dad (Hector Elizondo) retires. And though everyone at the orphanage calls the boy “Dick,” (“Well, kids can be cruel,” Bruce remarks), he’s renamed Robin—and we all know what happens there.Though the Joker is, in fact, the main villain here, he’s brought along pretty much everyone in the DC universe to help him destroy Gotham, from Superman to Harley Quinn to Godzilla. Warner Bros. fantastically allows itself to be mocked, with not only knocks on its superhero flicks (Suicide Squad is a slow-moving target, as is Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice; there’s even a quick reference to Zack Snyder) but also romantic properties such as Must Love Dogs. And if you’re not familiar with the history of Batman, you may not catch the flurry of homage to former Batmen down to pre-Adam West days, along with their attendant styles or, in West’s case, goofiness. The re-created look of Christopher Nolan’s trilogy is particularly brilliant.




As with The LEGO Movie, the jokes come too rapidly here to catch them all—at least in the first half. Batman has more flat moments than its predecessor, but when it hits, it’s hilarious: Batman’s dark-soul personality is consistent throughout (when Robin and the Joker exchange a “Namaste” greeting, Batman responds, “Gross”), and a protracted, nearly silent scene involving Bruce and his microwave may leave you laughing until you tear up. Yet the requisite heart of an animated film is still there. The themes of family, togetherness, teamwork, and even gender parity (“If you call me ‘Batgirl,’ can I call you ‘Batboy?’”) are highlighted, and the movie has an odd fixation with Michael Jackson’s “Man in the Mirror.” Though he does melt a little, Batman’s self-aggrandizing nature remains charmingly intact and may remind viewers of this not-so-great characteristic IRL, with the disillusioned wishing that a pro-superhero sign in the film could come true: “Batman for President.”

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