the lego movie production cost

the lego movie production cost

the lego movie poem

The Lego Movie Production Cost

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Easy "To The Invisible Jet!" achievement Go to the following location in Cloud Cuckoo Land in Free mode to destroy the Invisible Jet and get the "To The Invisible Jet!" achievement. Accomplish the indicated achievement to get the corresponding number of Gamerscore points:(20 points): Complete Prologue - The Prophecy. Lets Get Craaazzzyyyy (20 points): Complete Level 1 - Bricksburg Construction.(20 points): Complete Level 2 - Escape From Bricksburg.(20 points): Complete Level 3 - Flatbush Gulch.(20 points): Complete Level 4 - Flatbush Rooftops. Rest In Pieces (20 points): Complete Level 5 - Escape From Flatbush. No Frowny Faces (20 points): Complete Level 6 – Welcome to Cloud Cuckoo Land.(20 points): Complete Level 7 - Attack On Cloud Cuckoo Land. You Can't Build 'Em All At Once (20 points): Complete Level 8 - Escape From Cloud Cuckoo Land.(20 points): Complete Level 9 - The Depths. This Bedoubled Land Couch (20 points): Complete Level 10 - Infiltrate The Octan Tower.




See You Later Alligator (20 points): Complete Level 11 - Put The Thing On The Thing. Found Your Pants, Series Is Over (20 points): Complete Level 12 - Broadcast News.(20 points): Complete Level 13 - Back From Reality.(20 points): Complete Level 14 - Bricksburg Under Attack. You Can Still Change Everything (20 points): Complete Level 15 - The Final Showdown.(30 points): Collect all pairs of Pants (Single Player). You Are The Special (30 points): Achieve The Special in every level (Single Player). Welcome To Bricksburg (30 points): Collect all of the Red Bricks (Single Player). Build Things Only You Can Build (30 points): Collect all Golden Manuals. Including, But Not Limited To (20 points): Purchase all Master Builders. The Special People In Your Life (40 points): Purchase all Characters (Single Player).(30 points): Complete all Instruction Builds in Story Mode. Midas Touch (20 points): Complete all Golden Instruction Builds. Business Business Business (50 points): Earn 1,000,000,000 studs.




(100 points): Achieve 100% completion.(20 points): Destroy 50 enemies as MetalBeard. The Opposite Of Happiness (20 points): Defeat 20 enemies as Rage Unikitty.(20 points): Kragelize 10 people with the Kragle gun. Building Bad (10 points): Attempt a Master Build-It with a Non-Master Builder.(20 points): Defeat 30 enemies as Emmet Cowboy.(5 points): Defeat 20 enemies as Sheriff Not-A-Robot. I Could Sing This Song For Hours (20 points): Score 21 awesome dance moves in the Construction Site dance mini game. No Way, This Is My Jam. (20 points): Score 21 awesome dance moves in the Kragelizer dance mini game. Firestarter (20 points): Make a Fire.(20 points): Complete an Instruction Build without losing any studs. I Am The Computer (20 points): Collect all studs in any hacking mini-game.(5 points): Customise your character. A House Divided (5 points): Play as Abraham Lincoln and Lady Liberty.(10 points): Complete all Master Builds in Server Room as Benny.




I Super Hate You Right Now (10 points): Play as Superman and Green Lantern. It's Just Business (5 points): Use Lord Business Legs Machine.(10 points): Switch from Vitruvius into Ghost Vitruvius.(10 points): Shoot Emmet with Robo Skeleton.(10 points): Use the Kragle Gun to shoot Ma and Pa Bad Cop in the Relic Room.(20 points): Find and destroy the Invisible Jet. Grrrg! (10 points): Smash a chair as Bad Cop.(10 points): Switch from Good Cop (Scribble Face) to Bad Cop.It was one of those moments when you have to stop and remind yourself that you get paid to do this job. At an away-day in Covent Garden, the Warner Bros marketing department and PHD got together to build Lego, immerse ourselves in that world and discuss how to launch The Lego Movie. While Lego is a much-loved brand, it wasn’t (yet) synonymous with big-screen entertainment. So we wanted to combine the warmth, playfulness and creativity of Lego with the excitement and talkability of a big movie release.




Many ideas were explored but one particularly excited everybody: the idea of taking a "normal" advertising break and recreating it in Lego. This was a break that would take viewers into their own Lego world to prepare them for the full movie experience. We started by identifying the right placement for the break. To maximise impact, we wanted a one-off break in a family-friendly TV programme. It had to be a show with a large enough audience to justify the production cost of converting the spots into Lego. and Dancing On Ice were shortlisted. Ratings tipped us towards the latter. ITV provided the break and the flexibility to lengthen or shorten it as demand required, as well as agreeing to introduce it as "a very special ad break". We looked for Lego-friendly brands with well-known characters in their advertising to create instant recognition among viewers, and focused on recent spots to give the break a modern feel. We approached brands directly or via their agencies.




The idea captured people’s imaginations and the conversations quickly revolved around practical issues. How easy is it to build? Will people recognise the ads? Do we need rights and talent approvals? Do we have a suitable length of time to do it? and Premier Inn (pictured below) signed up. This meant that, for four different brands, we’d be recreating four spots that had been created by four ad agencies and would be bought by three media agencies. We’d also have to co-ordinate them into a single ad break, PR launch, YouTube roll-out and social media strategy. The complexity of this collaboration was, at times, mind-boggling and every day seemed to bring a new and (often unforeseen) challenge. We got the green light for the concept in October, but the production didn’t begin in earnest until late December and early January. The last couple of weeks were particularly hairy but there was strong momentum behind it and determination to see it through from all parties.




ads, shot for shot) and Bricksports, Brotherhood Workshop, Drum and The Moving Picture Company (which handled the Premier Inn and BHF spots). ITN’s head of corporate video, Simon Baker, says: "Our first task was to identify the UK’s best Lego animation talent. ’s Brian the Robot. "Everything you see on screen (other than Brian) was made out of stock Lego pieces with attention paid to small details – in the kitchen shot of the BT ad, a tiny Lego cup was filled with water by pipette. "During five days of filming, specialised software was used to line up the stop frame with the live-action commercial, so each frame matched lens, depth of field and movement, to retain the production values of the original without losing any Lego charm. "The ads were shot on a DSLR in stop motion with a macro lens. For the sake of time and quality, facial animation was added in post-production – initially illustrated and animated in 2D, then projected on to an invisible 3D cylinder and tracked on to footage, while colour-grading toned down the primary colours of the set build to match the original ads."

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