the lego movie sets commercial

the lego movie sets commercial

the lego movie secret codes

The Lego Movie Sets Commercial

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LEGO Batman Movie Set TV Commercial, 'Help Batman!' SpongeBob SquarePants on Nick Toons - past 2 weeks About LEGO Batman Movie Set TV Commercial, 'Help Batman!' Transform Bruce Wayne into Batman, and leap into action to fight The Joker. The LEGO Batman Movie sets feature the Batmobile, the Joker's Lowrider and more. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest LEGO Batman Movie: The Joker Notorious Lowrider, LEGO Batman Movie: The Batmobile, Warner Bros. Animations The LEGO Batman Movie, LEGO Batman Movie: Batcave Break-in We’ll give you a glimpse of more of our powerful real-time ad analytics. Ready for the big time? Request a trial of the iSpot TV Ad Analytics platform. You've hit your data view limit. Time to upgrade to the full iSpot TV Ad Analytics platform. At least one social/website link containing a recent photo of the actor. Submissions without photos may not be accepted. Voice over actors: provide a link to your professional website containing your reel.




Submit ONCE per commercial, and allow 48 to 72 hours for your request to be processed. Your Email (used for confirmation) Killer Croc Tail-Gator Set I saved the city again. It was off the chain Never laughs at Harley Quinn’s jokes.LEGO The LEGO Movie Play sets TV Commercial, 'The LEGO Movie' Kickin' It on Disney XD About LEGO The LEGO Movie Play sets TV Commercial, 'The LEGO Movie' Bring the LEGO Movie home and save LEGO City with the LEGO Movie play sets! You can use your imagination to turn ordinary vehicles into heroic machines to help you save the day! LEGO The LEGO Movie Trash Chomper, LEGO The LEGO Movie Ice Cream Machine, LEGO The LEGO Movie Castle Cavalry, LEGO The LEGO Movie MetalBeard's DuelYou can buy sets that build things in the movie. But that doesn't make the movie a commercial, per se. The movie glorifies the fun one can have with LEGO Sets, especially if one builds and rebuilds, changing as one goes.  And that will drive sales.




Don't over think this. It's a GREAT movie. Just go see it and stop worrying.There is actually an important message for parents in the movie. I can't tell you what it is without spoiling the plot though.This movie is MAGICAL. Here is more, from my good friend Jake McKee *After  a night of thought and consideration, I find myself awed by "The LEGO  Movie". The movie was amazing and powerful, sure. But it's a movie that  marks the fruition of an idea planted back in 1999 about what LEGO  should be, and what its relationship should be with builders, of all  ages. It's a movie that simply couldn't have been made, or embraced even  a few years ago, much less 15. The company machine simply wouldn't have  allowed it exist. The machine didn't understand. The machine would have seen too many things as "outside the operating model" and expelled it.  Being part of the team that helped bring LEGO back to its roots (and  more importantly evolving them) makes me very proud. Being part of a  movement that enables my 7 year old daughter to experience LEGO like I  did (or probably even more deeply) makes me incredibly proud.




I've  always felt privileged to work with  Brad Justus Tormod Askildsen Pall Walton ... But today, even more so. It was a difficult, grinding assignment,  but hearing Bridget talk after the movie yesterday, it was all totally  worth it.  In my work/career, I hope to continue creating value  for the world and doing amazing work. But I'm not sure I will ever  again have the ability to impact the world and my daughter in the same  way I did at LEGO. I'm fine with that. The LEGO Group is a different company than it was 10 or 15 years ago. It figured out what fans have known all along. LEGO elements are magical.*a post on facebook he made recently.You could say so. But it has great elements of a highly entertaining movie too. And it does not shy away from poking fun at itself. Which is why it works as a movie although the set up unmistakably screams 'commercial'. I am quoting from my review of the movie below, in case you are wondering why I think so.When a company’s name is so blatantly dominant in a movie title like Lego’s is in The Lego Movie, it is easy to be cynical about how the film is going to be just a giant 90 minute ad for said company’s products.




And while The Lego Movie undeniably is set up to take product placement all meta it is still an incredibly fun, loopy and zanily eccentric ride that grips you and locks you in not unlike the little yellow interlocking tiles the eponymous Danish company of the title manufactures.The Lego Movie sidesteps the idea of cashing in on the toys angle and smartly and entertainingly sells you the imagination angle. But most importantly what makes all things childhood so beautiful and memorable is the penchant to not take yourself too seriously and finding it ok to be crazy. The Lego Movie breaks a lot of other norms and does so with a lot of chutzpah but it follows those instructions to a T and the mix turns out to be an absolute delight.The full review is at The 25th Frame - Movie Reviews, Rambles and Rants | Everything in "The Lego Movie" is, indeed, awesome.Awesome as in imagine if "Toy Story" were spoofed by Mel Brooks after he ate magic mushrooms while reading George Orwell's 1984.Awesome as in the sort of silly yet wily kid-appropriate PG-rated performance by Will Ferrell that you've been waiting for ever since "Elf" came out more than a decade ago.




Awesome as in geeking out over the sight of a grim little Batman hitching a ride on the Millennium Falcon piloted by a smart-ass little Han Solo—with a suavely plastic Lando Calrissian in a flash of a cameo. To be honest, my enthusiastic reaction might be slightly skewed by the fact that "Everything Is Awesome" is both the title and most insidious lyric of a catchier-than-a-Norovirus musical number whose sweeping camerawork over a Lego-ized cityscape is almost as impressive as the opening sequence of "West Side Story". Somehow, the dastardly ditty has taken up permanent residence in my brain, snaking into the cubby hole previously occupied by the Pee-wee's Playhouse TV-show theme. Normally, I oppose the trend of plaything-based moviemaking, especially when the results are as brain-numbingly awful as "Transformers", "G.I. Joe" and "Battleship". But if those uninspired efforts had featured not just Michelangelo the Teenage Mutant Ninja but also Michelangelo the ultimate Renaissance artist as they fight for the greater good of interlocking mankind, maybe they would have changed my mind, too.




Besides, with so many animation powerhouses settling for easy-money sequels lately (we mean you, Pixar, DreamWorks, Universal and 20th Century Fox), it is exceedingly cool that a major-studio family film refuses to simply capitalize on merchandising spinoffs by offering an oppressive 100-minute commercial. Instead, "The Lego Movie" manages to be a smartly subversive satire about the drawbacks of conformity and following the rules while celebrating the power of imagination and individuality. It still might be a 100-minute commercial, but at least it's a highly entertaining and, most surprisingly, a thoughtful one with in-jokes that snap, crackle and zoom by at warp speed. This surreal 3-D computer-animated pop-cultural cosmos overseen by directors/co-writers Phil Lord and Chris Miller, the talented team behind 2009's "Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs", takes off from those countless amateur fan-produced stop-motion films found online before concluding with rather ingenious live-action interlude.




For once, an overly familiar plot is intended to be overly familiar as this action comedy lampoons nearly every fantasy-sci-fi-comic-book-pirate-cowboy movie cliché that has been in existence at least since George Lucas and Steven Spielberg turned Hollywood into a blockbuster-producing boy-toy factory. Our unlikely hero is Emmet (earnestly and engagingly voiced by Chris Pratt of TV's "Parks and Recreation"), an unremarkable construction worker who is perfectly happy with his staid generic existence as an ordinary citizen of the metropolis of Bricksburg. As is the custom among his peers, Emmet doesn't just avoid overthinking. He barely thinks at all. But after dawdling on a work site after hours, Emmet finds himself tumbling into an underworld where a wise Obi-Wan Kenobi-type wizard named Vitruvius (Morgan Freeman, mocking his history of movie mentorships) mistakenly declares him to be the Special, the greatest Master Builder of them all. Unfortunately, special is exactly what Emmet isn't and he appears to be ill-equipped to battle the monstrous foe at hand.




That would be Ferrell's President Business, a maniacal manipulator whose looming overlord alter-ego is a sly nod at the actor's despot in "Megamind". The minute that a swivel-headed henchman named Bad Cop/Good Cop starts spouting menacing threats in Liam Neeson's Irish-inflected rumble, you know that a "release the Kraken!" joke can't be far behind. And "The Lego Movie" does not disappoint, as Ferrell's control-freak villain aims to glue all the pieces of the city in place permanently—no freeform deviations allowed.From there, Emmet and would-be love interest Wyldstyle—a tough-chick cross between "The Matrix"'s Trinity and Joan Jett blessed with Elizabeth Banks's vocal spunk—enter a surreal hodge-podge universe where Lord of the Rings-style warriors, Star Wars and Harry Potter characters, superheroes, Abraham Lincoln and even basketball star Shaquille O'Neal (a legacy of an actual 2003 NBA-sanctioned Lego set) join forces to foil President Business's nefarious plan.It isn't fair to reveal what happens next, other than to say that it continues to be, yes, awesome despite a paucity of female characters (toothache-sweet Unikitty who presides over Cloud Cuckoo Land doesn't quite count) and maybe a bit too much crash-boom bombast.

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