the lego movie aurora il

the lego movie aurora il

the lego movie auburn me

The Lego Movie Aurora Il

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1505 North Bridge St. Regular Admission PricesMatinee** (Fri - Sun from Noon until 6pm) $6.00Adult $8.00Student (with valid ID) $6.00Senior* / Child* $6.00Tuesdays** (All day for most shows) $5.00Real D 3D $2.00 additional per ticketXtreme Screen movies $2.00 additional per ticket for non-3D films $4.00 additional per ticket for Real D 3D films*Ticket purchase is required for all ages. The age limits are as follows: Seniors 55 and older. Children 12 and under. **Offer Not Valid on 12:05am special showings. Additional charge for 3D and Xtreme filmsBe the first to add a photo!Hi there!54321Click to RateShare Review06/14/2013muy buenoes mui buno no es caro y lomejor esta serca de mi casaShareFlag03/20/2013the picture and sound was excellent. the atmosphere was awesome the felicities are clean and comfortable. the food was superb.ShareFlag12/05/2009City of lightsLots of movie rooms graet sound and the games to play befora and after the movie, also the times of showing were pretty flexible overall great theater.




ShareFlag01/25/2008Provided by Citysearch - Fair price, decent qualityThe projection quality is decent, sound systems are probably okay but they tend to crank the volume too loud for some films resulting in distortion. For most this isn't a problem, but I'm a bit picky. Can't be beat as far as price goes. Join us in our Cafe for this lively philosophical discussion group led by Batavia Chamber of Commerce Chair Roger Breisch. Discussion is based on inquiry and is open to the public. » More about this event » Add to calendar Your Friend's Email Address : Your Personal Message : Your Email Address : * Indicates Required Field » Map & Directions Email addresses will not be stored or used for any promotional purpose. See our Privacy Policy. Join us for our weekly Storytime. We will read stories about our favorite characters, both old and new. Stay after the stories for a coloring activity or chalk art! Storytime is appropriate for children ages 8 and under.




We'll see you there! Goodnight, Goodnight, Construction Site Storytime As the sun sets behind the big construction site, all the hardworking trucks get ready to say goodnight. One by one Crane Truck, Cement Mixer, Dump Truck, Bulldozer and Excavator finish their work and lie down to rest so they'll be ready for another day of rough and tough construction play! Join us for Storytime featuring Goodnight, Goodnight, Construction Site. Join us for our weekly Storytime! Story time is appropriate for children ages 8 and under. From the #1 New York Times bestselling children's book creator Matthew Van Fleet comes a laugh-out-loud, jazzy story of a little baby chick who learns how to dance from a friendly band of animals who know all the right moves! Don't miss out on our Storytime featuring the title Dance. The LEGO Batman Movie Event At the finale for our three-month celebration of The LEGO Batman Movie, kids will be able to help Batman protect Gotham from the Joker by making their very own LEGO Batman Speedwagon!




Kids can also collect the final two limited edition trading cards featuring characters from the movie. Join us for this fun LEGO Make & Take event (while supplies last). See our Privacy Policy. Plenty of movie franchises run into trouble on the second go-round, when a sequel tries to recapture the precise magic of an original and fails to find its own niche. "The Lego Batman Movie," the first spinoff of the wildly successful and inventive surprise that was 2014's "The Lego Movie," is absolutely distinct from its predecessor. In escaping the specific gravity of "The Lego Movie," though, it has wandered into the orbit of other Batman movies in ways that make it less radical, and less of a delight, than the movie that originated it. One of the unique joys of "The Lego Movie" was the extent to which the movie genuinely felt like the creation of a child's mind. It was a hodgepodge that repurposed everything from Krazy Glue, recast as a superweapon the characters refer to as "the Kragle," to the chewed-on stick from a Tootsie Roll pop that serves as the sorcerer Vitruvius' (Morgan Freeman) staff.




Writer-directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller didn't bother to dress up their story with fancy titles; Vitruvius' prophecy refers to "the Special," who will defeat the fiendish "Lord Business" (Will Ferrell), who turns out to be a stand-in for the detached father to the very real little boy, Finn (Jadon Sand), who is telling himself the story that we are watching. Magical kittens and Han Solo (Keith Ferguson) and Gandalf (Todd Hansen) and Batman (Will Arnett) all occupy the same fictional universe, their stories bleeding over into each other. Wyldstyle (Elizabeth Banks), the heroine of the movie, makes her entrance in the film with the breathy line "Come with me if you want to not die." "The Lego Movie" had ideas, too, namely about the way corporations profit by enforcing homogeneity and convincing consumers that they have genuinely distinct preferences rather than the tastes corporations have engineered for them. Specifically, the Octan corporation produces everything in hero Emmet Brickowski's (Chris Pratt) world, including "music, dairy products, coffee, TV shows, surveillance systems, all history books, voting machines."




But even that idea has its catchiest expression in "Everything Is Awesome," a perfect earworm that sounds like what the result might be if a smart 10-year-old wrote the lyrics for a song with music by Max Martin. "The Lego Batman Movie" by its very nature lacks that childlike looseness and improvisation. It's a highly referential parody, which means it requires the perspective that generally comes with being alive to watch pop culture evolve. There are references to tropes in "The Lego Movie," like the head-spinning Good Cop / Bad Cop voiced by Liam Neeson, but they're asides rather than the loose, wide-ranging substance of the movie. "The Lego Batman Movie" works best if you understand not merely how the depictions of Batman have evolved over the decades, but how those depictions, from Adam West's TV turn as "Batman" to Zack Snyder's much-derided "Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice," have been received. The movie is absolutely arch and funny, but it lacks the anarchic goofiness that made "The Lego Movie" such a delight.




"The Lego Batman Movie," unlike "The Lego Movie," plays out in a hermetically sealed universe. The third act of "The Lego Movie" reveals to us that Finn's father, known as the Man Upstairs, is the creator of Emmet's universe; he's a tie-wearing middle-aged man who has built a perfect, formulaic Lego metropolis in his basement and forbidden Finn and his sister to play with it, on pains of gluing the whole thing together so they can't change anything at all. Emmet's adventures are the result of Finn's monkeying around with the Legos without his father's permission. The anti-corporate, pro-creativity message of the movie is as much a neglected son's bid for his father's affection as anything else, and lends a specific emotional weight to the ways in which Lord and Miller defied expectations for what a movie based on a toy could be. For all "The Lego Batman Movie" comments on the tradition of which it is a part, specifically on the relationship between Batman and the Gotham police, it lacks a device that would allow it to reframe its own message in a similar way.

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