the lego movie sign

the lego movie sign

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The Lego Movie Sign

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The LEGO Movie Videogame - 3 years ago There are three Octan billboards found around Bricksburg that can be changed into a "Question Authority" billboard by Master Builders. Finding and changing all three of them will result in the unlocking of a Red Brick. EditBillBoard #1 The first billboard can be found in the residential square. Looking at Emmet's house, head over to the right. Here you will find a pink fence. Destroy it and create a surface for a female character to wall climb with (This will already be done if you found the Instruction Page or Cat up here. The door to get up here however, needs to be re-opened every time the world is loaded). Once on the roof destroy the red bench. This will reveal a green circle on the ground. Stand on it and aim at the billboard. EditBillboard #2 The next billboard can be found on top of the train station, above the restaurant near the ice cream truck. Head up the stairs to the top floor with a female Master Builder. On the right there will be netting that a female character can climb.




Head over to the billboard and destroy the dumpster right in front of it. You will now have access to the green spot on the ground. Aim at the billboard. EditBillBoard #3 This billboard requires Vitruvius to be unlocked. Using him, head towards the building to the left of the construction site entrance. On the sidewalk you will find a marker. Stand on it with Vitruvius to perform the secret knock. Enter the hole in the wall. When you walk out you will find yourself on the roof. Destroy the barrel and use it to create a small bridge for Vitruvius to walk across. While over here don't forget to head over to the crane and activate the lever with Circle/B. Jump down (go to the right so you won't hit the electrical wires) from this roof onto the roof below. Head over to the left and enter a half built room. Destroy the small pile of Legos to unveil a green spot. Stand on it and target the billboard beneath you (While on this floor it is also beneficial to activate the crane on this floor with a Construction character.




You can then push the Legos the crane drops into the correct spot on the fountain and unlock a Red Brick). See All Top Contributors » Need assistance with editing this wiki? Check out these resources: Beginner's Guide to Wikis The LEGO Movie Videogame Wiki Guide The Piece of Resistance The LEGO movie follows Emmet, who is on an epic quest to stop an evil tyrant from gluing the universe together, a journey for which he is hopelessly and hilariously underprepared. Will Arnett, Elizabeth Banks 1 hour, 40 minutes Available to watch on supported devices. When renting, you have 30 days to start watching this video, and 24 hours to finish once started. By placing your order or clicking “Watch Now”, you agree to our Terms of Use. Sold by Amazon Digital Services LLC. Additional taxes may apply. Most Recent Customer ReviewsSearch Customer Reviews Check out our 2 cheats & codes for The LEGO Movie Videogame. Or read the IGN Guide.




2 CheatsSubmit a Cheat.ign_cheatsPant CodesAt the oversized LEGO box in Bricksburg, you can enter the codes below to unlock the corresponding pants for your character (which you otherwise must find and unlock over the course of the game). 6LK78NN9 or HVLH63VL - Angry Kitty & Construction Pants 6LKMNDHR or HVLLRX6R - Blacktron Fan & Musical Pants 6LK3FRL6 or HVL4TQT4 - Johnny Thunder & Super Secret Pants 6LK3RRY4 or HVL4TB94 - Robo Pilot & Astro Pants ammex_2048earthpalmsCharacter Unlock CodesAt the oversized LEGO box in Bricksburg, you can enter the codes below to unlock the corresponding character (who is otherwise made available over the course of the game and then unlocked using collected studs as payment). F3VG47 - Abraham Lincolin FNHLTK - Emmet (Clown) UOOAQY - Emmet (Lizard) HJ4C21 - Emmet (Pajamas) NIHX2B - Emmet (Old West) FXP9AN - Gallant Guard OSSVNI - Green Ninja A76DN7 - Lady Liberty K7TDXJ - Larry The Barista




KGJ4DU - Lord Vampyre UP7HJQ - Mrs. Scratchen-Post NG73OM - Panda Guy GFH2F8 - Robo SWAT (Laser) BID12F - Swamp Creature BC2XJ5 - Vitruvious (Young) At the oversized LEGO box in Bricksburg, you can enter the codes below to unlock the corresponding character (who is otherwise made available over the course of the game and then unlocked using collected studs as payment). You must be Logged in to submit a cheat. The LEGO Movie Videogame E10+ for Everyone 10 and older Xbox One, PC, PS3, Wii U, Xbox 360, PS4, iPhone, Mac, 3DS Games You May Like Ys: Memories of Celceta LEGO Batman 3: Beyond Gotham Resident Evil Revelations 2 Call of Duty: Black Ops DeclassifiedThe Tomatometer rating – based on the published opinions of hundreds of film and television critics – is a trusted measurement of movie and TV programming quality for millions of moviegoers. It represents the percentage of professional critic reviews that are positive for a given film or television show.




From RT Users Like You! Fresh The Tomatometer is 60% or higher. Rotten The Tomatometer is 59% or lower. Certified Fresh Movies and TV shows are Certified Fresh with a steady Tomatometer of 75% or higher after a set amount of reviews (80 for wide-release movies, 40 for limited-release movies, 20 for TV shows), including 5 reviews from Top Critics. Audience Score Percentage of users who rate a movie or TV show positively.Still courtesy of Warner Bros. Picture The Lego Movie had so much going against it. First off, it’s a movie inspired by a system of interlocking plastic blocks. Second, it’s a branded entertainment—an ominous category if ever there was one, all but guaranteeing a clamorous action infomercial shoddily intercut with a formulaic “human” story. I’m going to level with you: I went in hoping at best for something intermittently amusing, not too visually and sonically assaultive, and over soon. But Chris Miller and Philip Lord, the creators of Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs and 21 Jump Street, along with the highly regarded but short-lived animated series Clone High, have gone and done it.




They’ve made a clever, vividly imagined, consistently funny, eye-poppingly pretty and oddly profound movie … about Legos. Miller and Lord do not grovel before their corporate overlords, and at times even appear to be conveying the subversive message that, when it comes to Legos, less may be more (or at least that a random bucket of unsorted blocks may be preferable to a brand-new boxed set). The Lego cosmos as envisioned in this story is divided between two sets of principles. On the one side, there’s order, conformity, and stasis, as embodied by the perfection-obsessed, freedom-stifling President Business (voice of Will Ferrell). On the other, there’s chaos, individuality, and change, represented by the rebel movement that’s attempting to find a mysterious lost object called the Piece of Resistance, which will stop President Business before he can unleash the Kragle, a weapon that threatens to freeze the dynamic Lego universe into a perfected but lifeless tableau. But the majority of the inhabitants of the eternally-in-construction city of Bricksburg live their lives blissfully unaware of this ideological divide: They’re interchangeable molded-plastic working stiffs, square pegs in square holes.




Squarest of all is Emmet Brickowski (voice of Chris Pratt), a go-along-to-get-along construction worker who’s naively psyched to repeat the same dull day over and over again, building the same brick towers while obediently bopping to the same state-mandated No. 1 pop song (Tegan and Sara’s irresistible ode to vacuity “Everything Is Awesome”) and buying the same overpriced cups of takeout coffee. (A running gag about the ever-rising price of that commodity is one of the movie’s many jabs at consumer culture.) When Emmet accidentally comes into possession of a strange item that seems to come from outside the Lego universe, resistance member Wyldstyle (a sort of Goth biker-chick minifig voiced by Elizabeth Banks) becomes convinced that the thoroughly unremarkable Emmet is the Special—a long-awaited figure of prophecy, who will be “the most important, most interesting, greatest person of all time.” Half against his will—though he is, understandably, bewitched by the tough and glamorous Wyldstyle—Emmet gets swept up in the rebels’ plan to disarm the Kragle and take down President Business’s reign of spontaneity-crushing terror.




Joining Emmet and Wyldstyle on their mission are Vitruvius, a glowing-eyed wizard figure voiced by Morgan Freeman, whose dubious nuggets of wisdom and muttered expressions of annoyance are priceless sendups of the long Morgan Freeman-as-shaman voiceover tradition; the square-headed pink kitten Unikitty (voice of Alison Brie), whose bubbly optimism conceals a deep well of repressed rage; a blustering pirate figure (voice of Nick Offerman); and a chipper ’80s-era spaceman slightly dinged from wear (voice of Charlie Day). When he can drag himself away from his Star Wars buddies, they’re also joined by Wyldstyle’s boyfriend, Batman (voice of Will Arnett), hilariously conceived as a post-Christopher-Nolan “bad boy” bent on impressing the world with his death-metal songwriting and brooding cool. But President Business—who, as the minifigs’ journey takes them through a sprawling Lego multiverse Emmet never knew existed, reveals himself as the even more diabolical Lord Business—has some fierce allies on his side, including the fearsome Bad Cop/Good Cop (voice of Liam Neeson), who enacts both sides of the familiar law enforcement dichotomy simply by rotating his head to alternate between scowling and happy expressions.




All this precisely orchestrated silliness unfolds against the background—or sometimes, given the crisp-looking 3-D, in the foreground—of a lovingly imagined, insanely detailed, and kaleidoscopically colorful universe made up entirely of Lego pieces. Nearly 4 million unique bricks were used in filming, and though the stop-motion animation is liberally augmented with computer effects (to a degree that it’s impossible to tell where one technique leaves off and another begins), there’s a chunky sense of real-world volume to the moving shapes and figures onscreen. There’s also a lot of Lego-based humor that you don’t have to be a 10-year-old collector to appreciate—gags, for example, about the inefficiency of those C-shaped claw hands, which can clutch only cylindrical foods like chicken legs or sausage links. The overall sensation (enhanced by Mark Mothersbaugh’s playful electronic score) is one of being whisked from one trippy Lego environment to the next—the trippiest of all being Unikitty’s homeland, a conflict-free pastel Shangri-La known, in what I’m going to wager will be the only Aristophanes reference in a toy-based movie this year, as “Cloud-Cuckoo Land.”

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