the lego movie munich

the lego movie munich

the lego movie msn

The Lego Movie Munich

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TO VIEW THE SITE PLEASE ROTATE YOUR DEVICE Error 500: Technical Difficulties Please be patient while we put ourselves back together. Thanks for using Fandango. FINE DINING & A MOVIE In the irreverent spirit of fun that made 2014's »The LEGO Movie« a worldwide phenomenon, the self-described leading man of that ensemble - LEGO Batman (voiced by Arnett) - stars in his own big-screen adventure in this 3D computer-animated action comedy. But there are big changes brewing in Gotham, and if he wants to save the city from The Joker's (voiced by Galifianakis) hostile takeover, Batman may have to drop the lone vigilante thing, try to work with others and maybe, just maybe, learn to lighten up. Fresh, fun and exhilarating, this spin-off devoted to the caped crusader boasts eye-popping visuals with a tactile edge, slapstick humor for children and killer genre satire for adults.The LEGO® Movie™ 4D A New Adventure Exclusively at LEGOLAND, "The LEGO® Movie™ 4D A New Adventure" follows a new journey for Emmet, Wyldstyle, Unikitty, Benny and MetalBeard after they receive a mysterious invitation leading them to a new theme park where all of the rides are based on the characters' adventures in "The LEGO Movie."




But not all is as it seems as the heroes are once again thrust into the middle of an evil secret plot, only this time, it will be up to the audience to use their Master Builder skills to help save them! Using elements such as wind, water, smoke and special lighting effects, the larger-than-life experience brings the film's main characters, Emmet and Wyldstyle, back together with their friends for another awesome adventure. For today's showtimes, download our app! Bring a LEGO Minifigure or purchase one at our retail stores to trade with any Model Citizen. All you have to do is ask! Trade again and again throughout the day.Available every day the Park is open. Minifigure must be complete with head and body. LEGO Friends to the Rescue Heartlake Hall is gearing up for Andrea's big performance, but when all doesn't go as planned, it's up to the other LEGO Friends to come to her rescue! Character Meet & Greet Meet one of our loveable LEGO Costume Characters, you never know who you will run into - a heroic knight or a pirate, perhaps!




Locations vary throughout the Park. Meet Emmet and Wyldstyle Meet Emmet and Wyldstyle from The LEGO Movie. Take your picture with your new found friends and be sure to see them on the big screen in The LEGO Movie 4D A New Adventure at the LEGO Show Place theater. LEGO® NEXO KNIGHTS™: The Book of Creativity A brand new 4D movie experience, exclusive to LEGOLAND. Enter the 4D kingdom of Knighton with Merlok 2.0 and join the heroic NEXO KNIGHTS as they battle it out against the evil Jestro and the Book of Monsters! LEGO Friends Meet & Greet Make some new friends at one the coolest cities anywhere! Park Guests can enjoy daily autograph sessions with your favorite friends in Heartlake City! Pop Badges are limited edition collectable badges. Our Pop Badges can be collected by completing event challenges, trading with an employee and more. Click here to learn more! SEA LIFE Aquarium Shows and Feedings Your child's first interactive guide to the life of the sea, SEA LIFE Aquarium combines active hands-on learning with fascinating educational talks and up-close encounters with sea creatures including sharks, octopi and rays!




View Shows and Feeding Schedule * Included in SEA LIFE and Resort Hopper Admission only.Explore the new place to be for little ones aged 2-5! Can you touch the stars in our LEGO® 4D cinema? Watch while our 3D film changes before your eyes to a 4D cinema experience with rain, wind and even snow, all under one roof! Come and experience one of our 4D cinema movies – Spell Breaker, Clutch Powers, The LEGO® Movie™ 4D: A New Adventure, and LEGO® Nexo Knights™: The Book of Creativity. Which of your favorite LEGO characters will you see? ANYTHING ELSE I NEED TO KNOW? Maximum one person per seat PG for mild action and rude humor. Running time: 100 minutes. Four stars out of four. “The Lego Movie”: Merely a great film, or the greatest film ever in the history of cinema? I asked this question — jokingly, rhetorically — during our What the Flick?! review, but the more I think about it, the more in awe I am of the way “The Lego Movie” works on every level for every possible viewer.




“Everything Is Awesome” isn’t just an insanely catchy theme song, one that will be stuck in your head for days if not weeks afterward (and may even drive out “Let It Go” from “Frozen,” if you’re lucky). It’s a statement of fact. It may even be an understatement. That’s not a typo at the top — I really am giving this movie four stars. You know that old cliched response after walking out of a movie or a play: “I laughed, I cried”? This time, it’s really true. I laughed my ass off — and then I cried. A 3-D, animated movie about a bunch of tiny pieces of plastic made me cry. And you guys who have read me for a while know that I’m cold and soulless and not usually susceptible to the power of tearjerkery. But that’s one of the many reasons I loved “The Lego Movie” so much: It kept surprising me. Actually, my husband, Chris, and I ended up liking the movie even better than Nicolas did — and he’s the one who was super-pumped to go see it, inspired by the ubiquity of marketing all around town.




(Warner Bros.: You guys sure know how to reach your target audience of 4-year-olds.) It moves so beautifully, it has such irresistible humor and irrepressible energy, but always feels effortless. It’s jammed with affectionate, cheeky pop-culture references but never seems hacky or strains for the laugh; so many of the jokes fly by at such a giddily frenzied clip, you’ll probably have to go see the movie a second time just to catch them all. And you probably won’t mind doing that; “The Lego Movie” is the rare film based on a toy or a game that truly feels like its own unique universe rather than a shameless, extended infomercial. Did we mention the voice cast? We haven’t even gotten to the exceptional voice cast yet. So often with animated movies, the A-list stunt casting serves as a distraction and takes you out of the narrative. Here, it provides one of the many opportunities for directors and co-writers Phil Lord and Christopher Miller to take established genre conventions and turn them on their heads, similar to their inspired version of “21 Jump Street.”




Morgan Freeman, for example, plays a blind mystic whose prophecy sends an ordinary guy on an extraordinary hero’s journey. But in doing so, he knowingly pokes fun at his propensity for playing God-like figures, his rich voice providing both gravitas and goofy laughs. The increasingly endearing Chris Pratt provides the voice of Emmet, a regular construction-worker drone who always follows the rules and does what’s expected of him in his incessantly perky, if regimented, Lego town. Much of the humor comes from the way in which the characters’ world mirrors ours, with its overpriced coffee, crowded commutes, idiotic sitcoms and overplayed radio tunes. Everything is awesome, as the song goes, but every day is exactly the same. But one day, Emmet stumbles upon a random piece of red plastic that’s unlike the rest of the interlocking bricks that surround him. It is the Piece of Resistance, a crucial component of the prophecy that Freeman’s character, Vitruvius, told of at the beginning.




And in finding it, Emmet becomes known as The Special — the one who will save the Lego universe from ultimate destruction. He gets help from a ragtag band of strangers including a bad-ass Goth chick who goes by the name Wyldstyle (an adorable Elizabeth Banks); Batman (Will Arnett, doing a Batman version of his pompous “Arrested Development” character, Gob); a makeshift pirate captain called Metal Beard (Nick Offerman); and the unflappably happy Unikitty (Alison Brie) which is — you guessed it — half unicorn and half kitty. They must outsmart and outrun the evil President Business, better known as Lord Business, who wants the piece for himself to maintain order and separation between all the Lego realms. So yeah, he’s kind of a fascist tyrant. But in the hands of Will Ferrell, he’s also hilariously self-serious. President Business’ right-hand man is the two-faced Good Cop/Bad Cop (Liam Neeson), who dons whichever persona he must to get the job done and keep everyone in line.




“The Lego Movie” message of thinking for yourself and trying new things may sound a lot like theme of  “The Croods” last year, but it presents this notion in a much more lively and clever manner. A great deal of that has to do with the look of the animation, which is beautiful in its crudeness. While the images are computer-generated, they have the intentionally jumpy, rough-hewn look of stop-motion animation — as if the effects team had moved brick by brick painstakingly by hand to create the sensation of motion. Everything is made of Legos, from the people and vehicles to water and bullets. It is an endless joy to watch, and the fact that some of the pieces and characters’ faces have a chip or a smudge here or there adds to the charm. Just when you may start feeling like this zippy thrill ride of a movie is exhausting you, it takes a third-act turn that you probably never would have seen coming. I wouldn’t dream of giving anything away about it. But I will say that it’s daring, profound and emotionally powerful in a way that caught me completely off guard — especially sitting in the theater with my 4-year-old son curled up in my lap.

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