the lego movie star wars

the lego movie star wars

the lego movie special

The Lego Movie Star Wars

CLICK HERE TO CONTINUE




Lego Star Wars: The Yoda Chronicles Lego Star Wars: Droid Tales LEGO Star Wars: The Empire Strikes OutWhen Christopher Miller was an intern at Lucasfilm, he was asked (and geekily accepted) to step into a Stormtrooper costume for one of George Lucas’ Special Edition Star Wars movies. Now, in a paraphrasing of Darth Vader’s immortal words, a circle is about to be complete. Miller and his partner Phil Lord, the duo behind The Lego Movie and the hit Jump Street films, are tackling one of the Star Wars anthology projects as their next directing vehicle, sources tell The Hollywood Reporter. The filmmaker team, who write, direct and produce, are stepping up to helm a movie that will focus on a young Han Solo, according to sources. Lawrence Kasdan and Jon Kasdan are writing the script with the project, now set for a May 25, 2018, release. The new film is not the same as the one that was to have been directed by Josh Trank. Trank parted ways with the project in May amid a cloud of issues stemming from his Fantastic Four shoot.




That film, rumored to be an origin story of the intergalactic bounty hunter Boba Fett, is still searching for a director. Disney and Lucasfilm had no comment. Unclear is how their commitment to the Han Solo origin story will impact Lord and Miller’s schedule. The duo became a hot property following their witty take on the buddy cop genre with 21 Jump Street, and hotter still with 2014’s Lego Movie, which included a spectrum of geek icons from Batman to Star Wars. They were to develop a Flash feature for Warners as a directing vehicle, but now that is likely off the table. As is a third Jump Street movie. However, they could stay on as writers or producers on those projects. They were also developing an animated Spider-Man project for Sony, writing a treatment and producing, but since they were not intending to direct it, that could be less impacted. The pair also would remain involved in the Lego franchise they helped launch. July 7, 1:21 p.m. Updated with release date and screenwriter information.




The next adventure in the Anthology series of Star Wars films will be directed by Christopher Miller and Phil Lord, whose credits include the critically acclaimed The LEGO Movie and Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs, as well as 21 Jump Street and 22 Jump Street. Among the most sought-after filmmakers working today, the two have proven a formidable duo on the multiple films they’ve collaborated on and are looking forward to applying their unique creative chemistry to the Star Wars universe. “This is the first film we’ve worked on that seems like a good idea to begin with. We promise to take risks, to give the audience a fresh experience, and we pledge ourselves to be faithful stewards of these characters who mean so much to us. This is a dream come true for us. And not the kind of dream where you’re late for work and all your clothes are made of pudding, but the kind of dream where you get to make a film with some of the greatest characters ever, in a film franchise you’ve loved since before you can remember having dreams at all.”




The screenplay is written by Lawrence Kasdan and Jon Kasdan. The story focuses on how young Han Solo became the smuggler, thief, and scoundrel whom Luke Skywalker and Obi-Wan Kenobi first encountered in the cantina at Mos Eisley. Lawrence Kasdan, the writer and director known for Raiders of the Lost Ark, The Big Chill, and Grand Canyon, is familiar to Star Wars fans for having co-written the screenplays for The Empire Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi, and The Force Awakens. His son Jon Kasdan wrote and directed The First Time, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and In the Land of Women, as well as writing for the television series Freaks and Geeks and Dawson’s Creek. “We’re so excited to be working with Chris and Phil, who will bring a fresh new dimension to the Star Wars universe,” said the Kasdans. “They’re two of the smartest, funniest and most original filmmakers around, and the ideal choice to tell the story of Han Solo, one of the coolest characters in the galaxy.”




Kathleen Kennedy, who will be producing, says she can’t wait to discover what’s in store from these two extraordinary teams of directors and writers. “It’s not just any filmmaker who can tell the story of such a beloved icon like Han Solo, and I’m excited to say we’ve found the perfect team to handle the task. Larry and Jon know all there is to know about the character, and Chris and Phil will bring their wit, style, energy and heart to tell Han’s story.” Slated for a May 25, 2018 release, the film will be executive produced by Lawrence Kasdan and Jason McGatlin and co-produced by Will Allegra. . All Star Wars, all the time.This weekend I finally got around to watching The Lego Movie. My watching it was long overdue, I was a Lego fanatic as a kid, and the movie had been recommended to me countless times since its release. Of course I loved it, it’s a really good movie. The kids love it because it’s a kids movie, the adults love it because of it’s social commentary on corporate conformist culture, but to me the movie is really about the issues of copyright and how it controls our culture.




The premise of the film is that the antagonist, Lord Business, wants every Lego piece to be in its proper place, in accordance with the provided Lego instructions. To his mind the Lego universe should be divided into realms (the city land of Bricksburg, the Old West, Pirates Cove, Vikings Landing etc.) with barriers between each realm so that each piece stays within its proper realm. The hero of the film, Emmett, works with a team of Master Builders who specialize in using their creativity to combine pieces from different realms to create powerful new creations to combat Lord Business. At their home base, Cloud Cuckoo Land, there are no rules and characters from all realms mingle peacefully together in an environment made from a mishmash of different pieces from across the universe. Of course this all happens underground, hidden from Lord Business, who’s army of minions known as “micro managers” would disassemble the world and return each piece to it’s proper realm it they had the chance.




In one of my favorite scene’s (see above) Emmett addresses a council of master builders in Cloud Cuckoo Land that includes, Batman, Superman, Shaquille O’Neal, Gandalf, Milhouse, Robin Hood, Wonder Woman, Abraham Lincoln, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle Michelangelo, Dumbledore and others. The meeting between all of these disparate characters is what makes the scene, and the movie as a whole, so funny. Some of the movie’s funniest moments are when Dumbledore is arguing with Gandalf, or when Batman cons Hans Solo and his Millennium Falcon crew. The idea of this motley crew fighting the evil corporate overlord, who sees only ugly chaos in their ways, lies at the heart of the movie. The master builders with their creative mashups are the good guys, while corporate interests that wish to overreach and dictate how each piece can or cannot be used are the bad guys. Turn now to our modern society. Youtube artists are widely celebrated in our culture, but corporate interests often take down their videos, or dictate their videos’ uses, using the power of our current copyright law.




Online musical and video mashups exist only in so far as large media companies allow them to, or exist to the extent that creators and fans evade the law through the use of technology. Many pieces of our culture can only legally be used with corporate permission, and corporate permission is never given for uses that they see as frivolous or out of step with their corporate message. Remix artists are our master builders, and large media companies are our Lord Business. Some of the most exciting and innovative areas of art and culture have been pushed underground to avoid being shut down by “micro managers” who don’t think art or culture should be done that way. Which is why it is so amazing that the Lego Movie exists in the first place. Ironically the same copyright issues that the Lego Movie discusses apply to the movie itself. In a mind bending layered-ness, the same system of control imposed Lord Business, is what the Lego Movie creators had to navigate to make their movie in the first place.




With one major difference. While the master builders built the creations they dreamed up and worked to destroy the system of control, the Lego Movie creators went around begging for corporate permission and crafted their movie in accordance with the wishes of the large media owners. To be clear the Lego Movie was only able to be made because of the existing friendly relationship between Lego and their corporate partners. Lego has a unique monopoly on this type of mashup movie because it’s likely that no other filmmaker could convince such a wide array of companies to lend her/him the rights to their characters. This exactly what Lego Movie Director Chris Miller meant in a recent interview with I Am Rogue when he said, in regards to the Lego Movie’s diverse characters, …it was something you could only do in a Lego movie Miller goes on to comment on the legal hoops they had to jump through to be able to include many of the characters… …behind the scenes it was a total legal challenge




This seemed especially to be the case when it came to super heroes in the movie. When asked about why no Marvel comic book characters appeared Miller said… …a lot of legal wrangling. They’re estates and properties that have a lot of rights holders and everyone has to sign off on things. And in the case of Superman, Director Phil Lord notes… Superman was a big part of the movie then he was completely out of the movie… We couldn’t have Superman in the movie for like a year and then suddenly all the legal stuff got figured out and he was back in. But we had to come up with a more sideline story for him… When asked if it was difficult to get permission to use Star Wars Legos in the movie. We’re not really allowed to talk about that… All of these legal fights and corporate deals were to make the movie appear organic in the way that real world children (and adults) play with Lego. We wanted the movie to feel like it was written by an eight-year old and it was from the mind of a child.




Like the way a lot of kids, my son included, when they’re building Legos they put Batman, Chewbacca and a cowboy all in the same spaceship together. It seemed like it was really fun. In order to create a mainstream movie that attempted to mimic the way our own actual culture and imaginations work, a powerful brand like Lego had to negotiate with media conglomerates, and only use characters in ways that were allowed. Why is it that we have to ask permission to make a movie that depicts our own cultural icons? Why are we allowed to play creatively with Lego, but not allowed to share our Lego imaginations with others through stories or video? Why will The Lego Movie probably be the only movie I ever see in theaters that includes two of my favorite wizards, Gandalf and Dumbledore? The answer to all of these questions is our copyright law. Lobbied and amended over the years it has become of tool of “micro-managing” our culture, of telling creators what they can and cannot build. However, like Emmet and his fellow master builders we can rise up and fight this system.

Report Page