Disney has released a new trailer for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story as the US celebrates Thanksgiving. Much of the minute-long teaser is familiar from previous trailers and TV spots, but there are flashes of new footage and some funny moments featuring the film’s deadpan droyd, K-2SO. The eagerly-anticipated spin-off film, which stars Felicity Jones as mercenary Jyn Erso, opens in the UK on December 15. It then hits US screens a day later on December 16. Check out the latest photos from the film here. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story also stars Riz Ahmed, Ben Mendelsohn, Forest Whitaker and Diego Luna. It has been confirmed that the film will end 10 minutes before the original 1977 movie Star Wars: A New Hope begins. However, it has also been revealed that Rogue One will be the first Star Wars film not to feature the franchise’s iconic “opening crawl”. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story Trailer (Official) Watch the official trailer for Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, in which a group of unlikely heroes band together on a mission to steal the plans to the Death Star, the Empire’s ultimate weapon of destruction.
Rogue One: A Star Wars Story arrives in theaters December 16, 2016. Rogue One: A Star Wars Story is the first in Disney’s planned “Anthology Series” of spin-off films. The series will continue with the currently untitled Han Solo prequel movie due in 2018. It was announced in July that rising star Alden Ehrenreich has been cast as a younger version of the character made famous by Harrison Ford. A third Anthology Series film will follow in 2020, Disney has since confirmed. In May, it was reported that Disney had ordered weeks of costly reshoots on Rogue One: A Star Wars Story. According to The Hollywood Reporter, “the goal of the reshoots will be to lighten the mood” as right now Rogue One has the “feel of a war movie”. READ MORE: ‘Rogue One: A Star Wars Story’ – Release Date, Trailers, Cast And Everything We Know So FarDue to constant abuse from this IP range, all interactive traffic is blocked. If you are running a legitimate crawler/robot, ensure that it properly identifies itself via the user agent with a contact site or address.
Sean Spicer is still terrible at Twitter First Aquaman footage shows Jason Momoa bobbing around Atlantis Professor Steve Austin explains the science behind a Stone Cold Stunner Why are there so many TV shows about time travel right now?is an interlocking plastic brick construction toy brand that can be used to assemble a variety of objects. The Lego Group founder Ole Kirk Christiansen began making wooden toys in 1932, two years before launching the Lego toy company. In the late 1940s, Lego began producing plastic interlocking bricks called “automatic binding bricks.” Since then, the company has sold a variety of different building sets, including themes for cities, space, pirates, animals, the ocean and several different time periods. Robotics sets have also been released, with the first line titled “Mindstorms” sold in 1998. was launched, which provides product descriptions, games, videos and an online store. On July 10th, 2000, the website Brickset was created, serving as an online database for LEGO collectors.
On February 11th, 2006, the Lego Wiki was launched, which accumulated over 24,900 pages in the first eight years. On December 9th, 2007, the official LEGO Facebook page was created, garnering upwards of 5.19 million likes in the next six years. On March 23rd, 2008, the /r/LEGO subreddit was launched, which received over 45,100 subscribers in the first five years. On September 21st, 2008, Redditor noname99 submitted photographs of a giant LEGO battleship (shown below) to the /r/pics subreddit, where it gained over 1,700 up votes and 170 comments prior to being archived. On May 27th, 2010, YouTuber horseattack uploaded a video of a printer built out of LEGO parts (shown below, left). In the following four years, the video accumulated more than 4.79 million views and 4,100 comments. On December 21st, 2012, YouTuber danmovproduction uploaded a stop motion parody of the game League of Legends using Lego pieces (shown below, right), which gained upwards of 1.57 million views and 3,200 comments in eight months.
Bionicle is a line of toys created by the LEGO Group in December of 2000, which initially launched in Europe before being released in Canada and the United States six months later. A significant following for the sets grew online, with several fan-sites launching for custom creations, fiction and artwork. The franchise was moderately successful and continued on for the next decade before it was halted in summer of 2010 to make way for a new franchise “Hero Factory.” Following the discontinuation of production, the story was continued by head writer Greg Farshtey on a offical Bionicle website known as BioncleStory in the form of web series and podcasts. A custom LEGO creation is referred to as “My Own Creation” (MOC) and MOC creators are known as “MOCcers.” Some MOCcers paint, remold or even create custom parts and masks in order to make better looking sets. The MOC database MOCpages was launched on February 4th, 2003, where users can share their own custom LEGO sets (shown below).
Brickfilms are movies made with LEGO bricks that are produced using stop motion animation techniques. On January 28th, 2014, Google launched Build With Chrome, a website where users of Google’s web browser can digitally construct scale models of objects and buildings with LEGO bricks. Created in collaboration with LEGO as part of the Danish toymaker’s marketing campaign for the upcoming 3D animated feature film Lego: The Piece of Resistance, Build with Chrome also allows its users to geotag their creations to a real location in the world, share them publicly and browse creations made by others through its integration with Google Plus and Google Maps. “I Hope You Step on a ” is an expression often used as a retort in rage comics and reaction images to express resentment towards someone who deserves punishment or ill-fortune, such as accidentally stepping on a LEGO brick. On January 8th, 2016, the LEGO Star Wars II-Core Facebook page was launched, featuring image macros referencing the 2006 action-adventure video game Lego Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy.